Jump to content

No till garden: Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
m added ISBN to book
redirect
Tag: New redirect
 
(15 intermediate revisions by 3 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
#REDIRECT [[No-dig gardening]]
{{db-nocontext|help=off}}
'''Not Dig, Not Till, Garden, Farm, Less Watering, Methods.''' Just planting, seeding, harvesting, after ´some´ preparations. <br>
With [[mulch]] (hay, straw, leaves, grass clippings, [[wood chips]], every green ´wastes´) <ref>[[Ruth Stout]]</ref><ref>[https://www.motherearthnews.com/organic-gardening/ruth-stouts-system-zmaz04fmzsel motherearthnews.com Ruth Stout's System for Gardening ]</ref>. [[Biodegradeable]] materials. <br>
Not dig, to interfere, into the soil structure, when the soil is healthy, is one point of this method, not to destroy this structure. <br>
This means: already existing good (healthy) soil just needs regular mulching. <br>
In all other cases ´good soil´ life has to be brought to into the soil. This can be done with [[dung|dung (disambiguation page)]], [[compost]], [[Terra Preta]], EMs ([[effective microorganisms]]), at least the first year, but also some more years. Without the need to be mixed, just as layers possible. <br>
(Even cardboard can be used as layer. Quote "... cardboard may be composted ..." <ref>[[Cardboard#Recycling]]</ref>, or/and paper, for example news-paper, and so on.) <br><br>
'''Referring to Wikipedia Articles''' <br>
[[Regenerative agriculture]], (Quote "... philosophies like permaculture, ...") <br>
[[Sheet mulching]] (Quote "composting in place"), (redirect from ´Lasagna gardening´), <br>
[[Hügelkultur]], <br>
[[Organic horticulture]] (redirect from ´Organic gardening´), <br>
[[No dig gardening]], <br>
[[No till farming]], <br>

[[Terra Preta]] (Charcoal, dung (human or/and animal). Discovered at the Amazonas. Since more than thousand years.) <br><br>

'''Further more''' <br>
[[Soil fertility]] <br>
[[Carbon farming]] <br>
[[Soil food web]] <br>
[[Biosolids]], (Quote (1)"... solid organic matter recovered from a sewage treatment process and used as fertilizer". Quote (2)"Some municipalities, states or countries have banned the use of biosolids on farmland".) <br>
[[Reuse_of_excreta]], Quote "Reuse of excreta refers to the safe, beneficial use of animal or human excreta, ..." <br>
[[Forest gardening]] (redirect from ´Food forest´), Quote "[[Forest_gardening#Seven-layer_system|Seven-layer_system]]" by [[Robert Hart]] <br><br>

'''Books''' <br>
[[Franklin Hiram King]] in, (1911), ''Farmers of Forty Centuries, or Permanent Agriculture in China, Korea and Japan'', <br>
[[Ruth Stout]] in, (1955), ''How to have a Green Thumb without an Aching Back: A New Method of Mulch Gardening'', (Quote from ´Roots of ...´ "In the Spring of 1944") <br>
[[Masanobu Fukuoka]] in, (1975, to english 1978), ''The One-Straw Revolution'', Quote "1947 he took up natural farming again with success, using no-till farming methods to raise rice and barley" <br>
[[Julius Hensel]], ''Bread from Stones. A New and Rational System of Land Fertilization and Physical Regeneration''. Translated from the German. A. J. Tafel, Philadelphia, 1894 <ref>[[Regenerative_agriculture#cite_note-8]]</ref> <ref>https://archive.org/details/breadfromstones00hengoog</ref> <br>
[[Patricia Lanza]], (1998), ''Lasagna gardening: A new Layering System for bountiful gardens: no digging, no tilling, no weeding, no kidding''. Emmaus, PA. {{ISBN|978-0-87596-795-0}}. OCLC 733752184. <br>
[[Robert Hart]] (1976) ''Forest Farming: Towards a Solution to Problems of World Hunger and Conservation'', co-authored with James Sholto Douglas, Rodale Press (1976). {{ISBN|0-7224-0142-6}}. <br>

(<sub>''By Author: expandable''</sub>) <br>

'''''Reasons for this article''''' <br>
So many (no dig) methods are being recovered, that I want a summary of ´No-Dig, No Till, Garden, Farm, Less Watering, Methods´ as a one own topic. But this as title for a wikipedia article is just too long.
(Meant for as ´development history´ and ´methods collecting´, under these term.)

== References ==

Latest revision as of 18:33, 10 June 2020

Redirect to: