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Stickman's 2018 Soil Mineralization Glog

Hi all! Now that the new year is here, it's time to swing into gear and get ready for the next season of growing chiles! I'll be starting my seeds in a few weeks, and after rotating the crops in my raised beds to get rid of the Pepper Maggots that showed up in 2016, I'll be able to plant a lot more this year. In the meantime, I thought I'd share what I do to prepare my garden soil for the start of the season. I've grown chiles in pots and in-ground, and for me at least, I seem to do better with the plants grown in the soil.
 
To start with, my garden soil is sandy, so I have to add lots of compost in the top six inches of soil to hold moisture and prevent nutrients from leaching away. Soil microbes break it down in just a few years though, so keeping it topped up is a yearly necessity. We compost our kitchen waste to that end, but there's never enough, so we also buy it from a local outfit that produces it commercially. I was put onto adding biochar as well by brother Scott (Devv.)  The biochar does the same things that humus does but it lasts longer and  helps the environment by sequestering carbon in the soil. I've also been reading about how amending with Montmorillonite clay can increase fertility and help with soil structure, but more on that in a future post.
 
At the end of each growing season I take soil samples from my various gardens and get them tested at Logan Labs in Ohio. They do a more thorough job than our UMass extension by testing for Cobalt, Molybdenum and Silicate levels as well as he usual suspects. :)    I'm taking a "Build and Maintain" approach toward soil nutrients because I want my plants to have the best organic nutrition available to them, and at the small scale I'm planting, it's affordable for me. http://nevegetable.org/cultural-practices/plant-nutrients  
 
Here's my last soil test, taken the end of November. It's the starting point for figuring what amendments I'll need when I prep my beds for planting in the spring. The pepper garden is bordered in yellow.
fall2017soiltest.png

 
In my next post I'll cover the math I use to figure that out. Cheers!
 
Hi Rick,
 
Congrats on the huge score at the fair ;)
 
I know one type of Onion I planted is a Walla Walla, and the other is a Yellow, unknown at the moment because it pouring again. I would have to go out and look. Glad they're under the porch roof. 18+ inches since Labor day, and now probably close to 19"s.
 
The fans gave me a chuckle, mainly because I've been there with a "pepper kitchen".
 
Devv said:
Hi Rick,
 
Congrats on the huge score at the fair ;)
 
I know one type of Onion I planted is a Walla Walla, and the other is a Yellow, unknown at the moment because it pouring again. I would have to go out and look. Glad they're under the porch roof. 18+ inches since Labor day, and now probably close to 19"s.
 
The fans gave me a chuckle, mainly because I've been there with a "pepper kitchen".
Cheers Scott. [emoji4] Sounds like you're getting the rain we had at the end of August. My onion skins were so wet for so long before I harvested, that they had rotted where they came in contact with the soil. Now I know that I shouldn't leave them out so long when the tops die in those kind of conditions...

The sauce came out well, it was mostly my TS Yellow varieties and Douglahs with a few PDN x Bondas to make it an even 3 pounds of pods. The sauce is so thick I put it in wide-mouthed bottled to make it easier to spoon it out. It has a nice clean pepper flavor and a truly wicked creeping burn. [emoji48]

Next up is making up a triple batch of Jerk Rub tomorrow and packing it into 8 oz freezer containers to put away for the winter.

Cheers all!
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Sent from my SM-S327VL using Tapatalk
 
Oh yeah, way to much rain this September. I'm afraid it has hampered any chances of a fall crop, 21.5"s so far since the 3rd..
 
Watch out for mold setting in on the Onions during a wet harvest time. We've had that the last 2 seasons. They pull up so much water, and a month later the mold starts growing.
 
The last 2 years we've been running them through a food processor and freezing them, just so they don't go bad.
 
+1 Shane!

Hope you had a great season, Rick.
Didnt get to check in much this year,
but will do better next season.

Maybe next year will be a little drier
 
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