Gardening With Straw Saves Time, Money, and Sanity!
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Thank you very much for publishing this kind of article. I like your article very much.
I'm so disappointed that a Farmer's 蜜桃恋人 article would get such a basic distinction between hay (alfalfa) and straw (the left over plant body from small grains). They are two totally student kinds of plants.
Please fact check before you continue posting this page.
Alfalfa hay unless it's Bermuda or Fescue, or mixed grass
Alfalfa is a legume, not a hay. It is commonly referred to as a hay because it is harvested similarly to how grass hay is harvested. Hays are fescue, timothy, orchard, Bermuda, etc.
Straw is the stalks leftover from harvesting wheat, barley, and oats. There will be some seeds left in the straw after bailing, because it is nearly impossible to make sure all of the grain has been harvested. There just will not be as many seeds left over as there are in hay. Also note that horse manure should be composted before using in any areas where you do not want hay seeds to sprout. Most of the seeds survive the digestion process in a horse, however I am not sure about cattle, since they have multiple stomachs.
Exactly! Hay has nothing to do with straw.
I am very interested in trying this method with newspaper and straw... we have lots of extra straw on the farm and I would love to try to use it in order to cut down on weeding time! However, I am very nervous as to how it will hold up to any amount of wind? Any thoughts? We live in Wyoming, and even though we don't get a lot of wind where I live, we do get some storms that will bring wind from time to time. Thanks!!
A thick layer seems to hold itself together. I've never had a problem with wind, and I live an area where it gets very gusty. After I apply the straw, I soak the area throughly to keep it from blowing. After that, I don't to a thing.
Can u clearify the potato in the straw planting? So u plant just in the straw or in the ground? I love the idea!!! Next year is my first veg garden!!!
Plant potatoes 4-6 inches deep in the soil. As sprouts with leaves appear, bury them with straw. Keep doing that until you have a straw layer at least 18 inches tall. Higher will produce more potatoes. Always leave the top two sets of leaves on each stem unburied so they can use sunlight for photosynthesis.
Will either straw or hay kill nut grass? I was told planting sweet potatoes would, but it didn't work. Help!