Flowering blue Hyacinth
I love these flowers and there great smell
I love these flowers and there great smell
Building long compost piles to serve as vegetable beds on rubble for spring planting.
Expanding our thriving vegetable garden on rubble for more self sufficiency.
We strive to become mostly self sufficient when it comes to our food. We established a lot of garden beds on rubble last spring. We made raised beds and filled them with normal soil we had bought. Buying the soil was needed to have a decent start in growing our own food and planting the fruit trees we had purchased. We just are not very fond of it, since there is no life in the sifted soil and the nutritional value is also very low. Although, after a growing season, these beds are getting better and are filling with life, we prefer to try out new ways of creating soil to expand our garden area. After seeing a video about the “Ruth Stout no work gardening method“ I suggested to just roll out a straw bale in the fall and sow in there next spring. Well rolling out a big round straw bale is not that easy and we do not really have soil (mainly rubble) underneath for the plants to grow in, so we decided to give it a little different approach. Mulching is not enough we need to build up soil for the plants to grow in and this is how we started.
We are starting of with a bunch of round bales which have been sitting on the round site of the bale. Normally you do not store round bales like that, but we actually pressed these bales to compost for soil for growing vegetables and had used these bales as a “fence” and windbreaker around the children’s playground last winter. Here’s the post about that. We where hoping that if the bales sit like that, moisture goes in and in the bales the decomposing process will start. This did not happen and the bales did not really start to decompose, so we decided to use the straw as it is and see if the straw decomposes better if we spread the bales out.


We have 3 beds we want to build with these straw bales. We used our wheel loader to pick them up and divide them on the 3 rows we want to build up new garden beds.


After removing the netting we used the wheel loader with grabble to loosen the bales and make a row with the straw.


This was done last July and after a bigger saw project we divided the sawdust that came together over the 3 rows as well.


After a while the dogs had flattened and compacted the straw by playing over it and we found that the new garden beds had too little material, so we rolled one hay bale per bed out over the beds. This we just let sit over winter and hoped the material would decompose in time to plant in the spring.
Meanwhile we know this was not sufficient and we give the beds a different working to get the soil we need in time for spring planting. With time we will see what works better. I will document this in a separate post. So if this interests you, stay tuned for what’s next.
If you want to see what we did, here’s a video for you.
I finally brought myself to make an overview of my gardens and mark out all of the different fruit trees, Berries, Herbs and other perennials I have planted. Somehow these things, on paper, always tent to disappear, so now I am posting my garden layout, so I will always find them again.
My Gardens are in line from Nord to South starting with the Orchard, then Garden 1 (which we have not set up jet), followed by Garden 2, Garden 3 and Garden 4.
These where planted in the fall of 2021

Following trees are divided over the gardens 2, 3 and 4 and where planted in the spring of 2022

| Plants | Garden 2, Plant bed |
| P1: Peony “Coral Sunset” | IV |
| P2: Peony “Full Moon” P3: Peony “Cora Louise” | X |
| P4: Hydrangea blue | XII |
| P5: Jerusalem Artichoke | XVI XXIII |

| Plant bed | Crop |
| III | Yellow winter onion set “Shakespear”, 2 rows Leaving space in between two rows to sow carrots |
| IV | Spelt/ Dinkel, First half of plant bed |
| V | Red winter onion set “Rote Winter”, 2 rows Leaving space in between two rows to sow carrots |
| VI | Strawberries |
| VIII | Garlic rosa “Germidour” |
| X | Onion “Snowball”, left side, 1 row Onion “Senshyu Yellow, right side, 1 row Leaving space in between two rows to sow carrots |
| XII | Emmer, First half of plant bed |
| XV | Rye/ Roggen, Front side of plant bed is a little space free for flowers |
| XVIII | Strawberries |
| XIX | Strawberries |
| XX | Wheat/ Weizen, Left side Winter hedge onion/ Winterheckenzwiebel, Right side |
| XXII | Einkorn |
| XXV | Garlic white “Messidor” |
Some side notes
