Your garden looks great Gary!
All that work looks like it is paying off for ya bigtime!
I dig that thick mulch! It should really cut down on your weeding time!
Great work man!!
Kevin
Thanks! I do love the hardwood chips...not only does it help with the weeds, but it also with maintaining uniform moisture in the soil and preventing erosion on these tall rows of sand. But most importantly, there's some crucial biological benefits from the presence of rotting hardwood for good soil-building. Years ago I was fighting root knot nematodes in my tomato patch, and ran across a long-term study by some Canadian scientists who were trying to restore soils ravaged by the slash-and-burn agriculture of Central Africa. It completely changed the way I think about soil, and gave me a new understanding of why virgin river valleys have such wonderful dirt. I don't think this is the original paper I found back then, but I'm pretty sure it's the same group of scientists:
http://www.hydrogeochem.qc.ca/brf/ramial_chipped_wood_2007_11_27.pdf
Saturday I potted up 8 Queen Laurie and 6 Birgit Locoto into the intermediate pots I use before going into the main garden. Those guys are robust as all heck and growing fast!