San Diego Union-Tribune

AFTER SUMMER GROWTH, AMENDMENTS FEED SOIL FOR FALL

Add aged manure, compost to nourish new season’s plants

- BY JEANETTE MARANTOS Marantos writes for the Los Angeles Times.

So you likely spent a bundle on preparing your first victory garden last spring, with organic potting soils, compost and manures. Why should you have to go out to buy more for your cool-weather garden this fall?

Because the veggies you planted last spring devoured those beneficial microbes, said master gardener Yvonne Savio, creator of GardeningI­nLA.net, and your depleted soil needs another jolt to feed the greens and other goodies you want to grow this fall.

“The plants you grew this summer sucked up the energy and nutrition you put in your soil, just like it sucked up the moisture you put in the ground,” Savio said. “It’s like asking, ‘I ate dinner last Sunday. Why should I have dinner again this Sunday?’ ”

Like most garden experts, Savio preaches the benefits of feeding your soil, not your plants. In other words, forget about fertilizer­s and concentrat­e on building a healthy, nutrient-rich soil.

Bottom line: When a new season comes along, you need to invest in good soil amendments to make sure your other investment­s in plants and time don’t go to waste.

Amendments not only add beneficial microorgan­isms to the soil, Savio said, but keep it loose and well drained, an important considerat­ion during the winter when heavy rains can make soils soggy and drown your plants.

Here are six steps for preparing the soil for your fall garden:

1. Out with the old

Pull out your tired old summer plants and clean up any old mulch or plant debris (put it in your compost pile unless it’s harboring disease or a serious insect infestatio­n). Removing that plant litter will discourage pests and diseases from wintering in your garden to attack future crops.

2. Feed the soil

For every 8-by-4-foot garden space or raised bed, Savio recommends the following amendment recipe:

—A 2-cubic-foot bag of compost, if you don’t make your own. (Pro tip: Here’s a good time to start your own compost pile for the spring.)

—A 2-cubic-foot bag of aged steer manure (never fresh, since that can burn roots and potentiall­y spread diseases). Some people prefer chicken manure because it’s more potent, Savio said, but it’s also easier to overdo with chicken manure and kill your young plants. If you must use aged chicken manure, Savio recommends using a much smaller amount, about half a cubic foot, and incorporat­e it well into the soil and other amendments.

—A 5-gallon container of used coffee grounds and/or tea leaves for an extra shot of nitrogen. Savio provides 5-gallon buckets to her local coffeeshop­s and trades them out weekly to add to her garden soil. (Don’t worry if your stash includes used coffee filters or tea bags; those can decompose in the compost pile.)

3. Grab a fork

Layer the amendments on the soil and mix them in using a garden fork or spade. (Pro tip: Forks are much better at mixing amendments into the soil, easier on your back and an indispensa­ble tool for turning your compost pile.)

4. Stand down

Once you thoroughly mix in your organic amendments, take a breather and let the newly enriched soil sit for a week or two. This is important, Savio said, because the microbes will start heating up the soil as they decompose, much the way a compost pile heats up as its ingredient­s (kitchen scraps, leaves, grass clippings and other organic matter) break down.

5. Take the temperatur­e

Put your hand in the freshly amended soil after a few days and it will feel uncomforta­bly hot — a heat that can spell D-E-A-T-H to seeds and young transplant­s (which probably weren’t cheap, not to mention the time it took you to put them in the ground).

6. Get planting

Once the soil feels comfortabl­e to your hand, it’s likely OK for your plants. After they’re planted, cover the soil with 3 or 4 inches of mulch, such as straw or fallen leaves, to keep warmth and moisture in the soil and break down as further food for the soil.

Amendments are worth their weight in a healthy fall and winter crop of greens, broccoli, potatoes and berries. And they’ll pay dividends going forward by giving your garden a more crumbly, loamy soil — the kind any plant would be happy to call home.

 ?? STEPHANIE DEANGELIS FOR THE LOS ANGELES TIMES ??
STEPHANIE DEANGELIS FOR THE LOS ANGELES TIMES

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