this post was submitted on 21 Jan 2024
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Soil Science

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Long story short - I moved from a country where there’s an abundance of black soil to a country with a dry climate and not much black soil. Not only that, I moved from an apartment to a house with plenty of land. I believe strongly that growing my own produce is the way to go, but sadly I lack a lot of skill.

What I want to do is to plant a few plants, bushes and trees to get started with gardening, but I’m not sure whether the types that I want to plant will take well to the soil.

So the first logical step in my mind is to figure out what kind of a soil I’ve got and what it’s well suited for and can I make it work for some things that it might not be ideal for.

That’s why I was super hyped when I found this community, but it looks like people here are mostly posting articles and the discussions are more on the specialist/scientific side, so I hope my question doesn’t stick out as unwanted.

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[–] [email protected] 4 points 10 months ago* (last edited 10 months ago) (1 children)

you can always use raised beds

edible acres is an accessible and easy source to start with

search for "edible acres raised beds" to see all of his related videos on google video

[–] auzas_1337 1 points 10 months ago (2 children)

I’ve always wanted to try raised beds and I was planning to use those in the garden in front of the house. There the soil is screwed completely and barely anything grows. For the back I would prefer just stickin’ everything in the ground, but I’ll see. It will be a year for experiments.

Thank you for the link!

[–] [email protected] 1 points 10 months ago
[–] [email protected] 1 points 10 months ago (1 children)

I don't know much about gardening, and this is something that just came to mind, so take this as the half formed idea that it is.

I wonder how well using the soil from a raised planter would be at making the garden soil better. For example, if you used raised planters for a year or two, then mixed the soil from them into the soil in the garden. Maybe doing a section of the garden at a time and completing it over a number of years. Any compost you make would help too.

I know that obviously putting nutrients into the soil is going to be good for growing plants, but I don't know how helpful it would be if you could only do part of the garden at a time.

[–] auzas_1337 2 points 10 months ago

Hm, wouldn't it make more sense to mix the regular garden soil with the soil in the raised beds? My thinking is - if plants take the nutrients from the soil and a raised bed is essentially a closed system then dumping that soil into the garden would create less fertile patches.

But this is from one person who doesn't know much about gardening to another 😅