Bed Prep-Planting For The Future



As a professional, when I get hired for an installation of a new landscape, I want the environment the plants are being installed into to be in the best possible condition. A good soil mix of compost, topsoil and a little sand would be perfect. This will aid in the water and nutrient holding capacity of the soil, faster and easier root development into the surrounding soils and drainage, by allowing water to move away from the plants.

Oh yea, and one more important thing. The prep makes for very, very easy digging.

When you can install a new landscape into these conditions, you're beginning the process for a long and successful landscape.

Our reputations are built from the ground up

Our reputations as professionals are built on our past performances. When you take time to prep your planting beds, you guarantee success to your clients and to your professional career. Happy clients and healthy gardens speak volumes to everyone.

I recommend these processes to all of our clients, trying to drive home the point that doing things right in the beginning, will result in a healthier and brighter future.

Nine times out of ten though, it comes down to the almighty dollar and the soil prep is the one thing that usually gets discarded as not necessary.

Clients would rather have the bigger plants, heck; we can worry about the soil later. Big mistake.

Amending the Soil

If you can afford to amend the soil in your garden, do so. This is the most important thing you can do to guarantee the future health of your garden.

When you amend your soil before planting your landscape, you will be rewarded with; Read this and then read again. I know I already said it once, but this is so important;

Better water and nutrient holding capacity in your soil(more efficient fertilizer usage and watering time for you), faster root development into surrounding soils ( plants will establish themselves faster, grow healthier with less effort from you) and help with better drainage by allowing water to drain away from the plants.

When soils stay wet, plants struggle and die. Most soils in our area have a descent amount of clay in them. Clay soils will hold onto water, draining very slowly. Soil that drains slow stays wet longer. When soils stay wet, plants die. AMEND YOUR SOIL!

Amend your soil like this

If you have a heavy clay soil, spread 3" of compost on top of your beds and till to a depth of 12". This should help tremendously. The compost will help loosen the soil, creating more space for oxygen and helping with drainage.

A heavy duty rear tine tiller from a rental shop will do a great job. Let the machine do the work for you. This size tiller should have very little problem getting thru any soil.

If you have a sandy soil, water runs right thru. Use a 50/50 mix of topsoil and compost and cover beds to a 3" depth then till. Follow the same steps as above. The topsoil and compost mixture will help with the water and fertilizer holding capacity of your soil, allowing more to stay around the root zone longer.

Figuring out material

To figure out how many yards of compost you need(measure the length x width of your garden) to get square feet-->example 20 feet long x 10 feet wide= 200 square feet---- now you want to figure out how deep you want to put the compost. We said 3" of compost on top of the soil before we till--- take 3" divide by 12" to get the factor to multiply with the square footage of bed space. 3/12=.25--- 200x.25=50.00--- now divide 50/27 which is the cube factor----50/27=1.85 cubic yards of compost. Order 2 yards.

Practice with different depths of compost till you get good at the calculations.

When the prep is complete, make sure to grade the soil away form any buildings to allow for proper drainage.

I don?t think I need to amend my soil

If you can't afford to amend your soil, don?t worry, most plants will survive (survive not flourish) in the poorest of soils, as long as the soil doesn?t stay wet all the time. Wet soils limit oxygen to the roots and most plants end up suffocating and dying.

When you dig in wet soil, it has a fool odor and makes a sucking sound when you pull out the shovel. Amend this with compost or change the plans

Plants installed into soil that is not amended, will survive and grow, but nowhere near as fast or healthy as in soils that were amended.

Root systems will struggle to expand into hard clay soil and dry out faster from lack of water in sandy soil. Fertilizer will get held up in wet clay soil, never getting to the roots, or flow right by in the sandy soil because there is no holding capacity.

You have two choices.

Amend the soil before you plant and reap the rewards of doing things right or plant into the existing soil and baby-sit your landscape as it struggles to mature.

This article courtesy of  http://www.landscape-4u.com.
You may freely reprint this article on your website or in
your newsletter provided this courtesy notice and the author
name and URL remain intact.
 

 

Advertise here!


Sign up for our landscape   newsletter here!

Enter Email Address Here:


 

http://www.landscape-4u.com is an information web site focused on Landscape. http://www.landscape-4u.com does not represent or endorse the accuracy or reliability of any of the information, content or advertisements contained on, distributed through, or linked, downloaded or accessed from any of the services contained on this website. Any complaints should be directed to the individual businesses. Mention of and links to third party companies and products are for informational purposes only and constitute neither an endorsement nor a recommendation and are not intended to suggest any affiliation unless expressly stated. http://www.landscape-4u.com reserves the right in its sole discretion and without any obligation to make improvements to or correct any error or omissions in any portion of the Service.