If so, please help me out here. We moved into a 1-yr-old home in Santa Fe, and the lot had no improvements except streetside landscaping. In our neighborhood, we have adobe soils, which are great for building houses from and not so hot for building gardens. Adobe sheds water rather than absorbing it, compacts easily, and if it DOES get saturated will not drain, it just slowly dries into, well, adobe brick.
Most people who landscape lots in new subdivisions here spend the vast bucks needed to hire a professional firm to (essentially) plop a 'landscape' on top of the lot, and then shell out the further bucks needed to maintain and replace said 'landscape.' The pros come in and dig big holes to plant a couple of trees, with chemically-amended topsoil for fill, then dump more chemically-amended topsoil on the planting areas and put in perennials and annuals which require constant replenishment of the chemical amendments because the topsoil layer never really bonds into the adobe it's dumped on. Then they gravel-mulch over everything except a little square of grassy stuff or a couple of small bark-mulched areas, and that's it. Fooey. Not for me.
Being a gardener, the first thing I concentrated on was, 'how do I turn this adobe stuff into REAL soil?' It can be done, I know from seeing some wonderful gardens around here.
A column in the local paper started me on sheet mulching. This guy's recipe/instructions went like this:
1. Wet down the area and spread some kind of organic soil-builder/starter nutrient in a thin layer, scratch it in with a rake.
2. Wet THAT down, then put a layer of cardboard or newspaper 20-25 pp thick down, with ends overlapping completely, and water it.
3. Spread a 2-3-inch thick layer of composted manure on top of that, and water it.
4. Put down a 6-8-inch layer of straw and water it, and tread or roll it down and water it again.
5. Thereafter, water it often enough to keep from drying out altogether.
According to this guy, in a year or so everything will have composted itself into a friable soil bonding and penetrating into the adobe, and starting off the transformation of the adobe into a living soil.
What did I know? I'd never tried this before, I took his word for it, and did the above in two areas of the lot in mid-April. Shame on me for not doing more homework. Sheet-mulching experts will have already figured out the flaw in this method:
Yep. I'm guessing these nice grassy weed seeds were in the manure, but they could easily have been in the straw, too. Either way, I'm stuck with them now and worried. I want to do something to stop 'em before they set seed and the problem never goes away!
I dug down to check the progress of the composting:
The cardboard appears to be totally decomposed in spots and thin and mushy elsewhere. What I'm wondering is, can I just turn the whole lot over now, as deep as a spade will go, and then lay a nice thick layer of composted bark mulch over the top and let it "finish" over the winter? Will it continue to compost and make real soil that way?
Thanks for any insight or experience anyone can offer!
frustratedly,
Bright