Possibly a dumb / Let Me Google That For You question, but it's gotta be asked.
This is in relation to soil/ compost/ organic matter, any granularish "growing medium" you add to your raised bed/ garden, which for brevity I'll just call soil.
Does the mass/ volume of soil decrease each season as you grow veg/fruit/flowers? Say if you had a raised bed, filled it evenly to the brim to grow in, by the end of the year does the level of soil drop quite a bit?
Asking because i'm thinking, I have X amount of space in beds, and if I keep composting garden/ kitchen scraps etc every year and add it to the beds, will I eventually end up with an overflowing mound in the beds? But then again, surely all those nutrients used by the plants must take up some kind of physical space in the world, you can't make something out of nothing..... but then again it's not like the even lawn in your garden will keep sinking lower and lower each year (since we don't add compost to lawns).
THis is today's procrastination-instead-of-working question. Thoughts from all you seasoned growers?
This is in relation to soil/ compost/ organic matter, any granularish "growing medium" you add to your raised bed/ garden, which for brevity I'll just call soil.
Does the mass/ volume of soil decrease each season as you grow veg/fruit/flowers? Say if you had a raised bed, filled it evenly to the brim to grow in, by the end of the year does the level of soil drop quite a bit?
Asking because i'm thinking, I have X amount of space in beds, and if I keep composting garden/ kitchen scraps etc every year and add it to the beds, will I eventually end up with an overflowing mound in the beds? But then again, surely all those nutrients used by the plants must take up some kind of physical space in the world, you can't make something out of nothing..... but then again it's not like the even lawn in your garden will keep sinking lower and lower each year (since we don't add compost to lawns).
THis is today's procrastination-instead-of-working question. Thoughts from all you seasoned growers?
Comment