[Farmall] O/T...but serendipity
szabelsk at gdls.com
szabelsk at gdls.com
Tue Nov 20 06:37:08 PST 2007
Queen Ann's Lace, chicory, sounds like my acreage. We have an ample supply
of wild strawberries, thistle, dandelions, maybe a dozen and a half of
different grasses, etc. All without adding anything to the soil. Once the
clay is bare it does take a little while for all of these to fill in, but
they do. I have noticed that the trees take a little long to take root and
start maturing, but once they do, they seem to grow normal. Seed from the
bird feeders seems to take root easy too, including the corn. I would
think that adding anything on top of the clay can only help. Even a good
covering of straw or hay that would help with the germination.
One more thing that I just remembered, and it probably is a little late
for you, but they sell wild flower mats that you just lay like sod. Don't
know what they cost or where to get them. You could lay these mats down
and then add the seed you already have to thicken up the growth. The mats
should help the seed germinate and take root. Also would keep the birds
from eating up all your efforts.
Another idea. Does anybody in your area do hydro-seeding? Maybe you could
get them to hydro-seed your wild flower seed. The paper holds the seed in
place and helps with moisture control. My brother had his yard
hydro-seeded and the grass grew on everything that got sprayed, even the
side of his house. Basically all hydro-seeding is is mixing seed,
fertilizer, and ground up paper together. Maybe you can figure out how to
make and spread your own.
Carl Szabelski
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