Greetings All,
I started a raised bed of asparagus last year and I was wondering if there were any beneficial 'companion' plants (e.g. green manures) which could be used to 'undercrop' (if that's the correct turn of phrase) the plants.
Obviously growing asparagus leaves a fair amount of bare soil which is prime real estate for weeds (in our garden its wood sorrel, amongst others, that fills that gap) and I'd rather cut down on weeding to minimise disturbing the asparagus' shallower roots. I'm not looking to grow any crops per se, as I'm sure the asparagus plants wouldn't welcome the competition, but I was wondering whether there were any low or matt forming nitrogen fixers which might serve the asparagus plants well (i.e. put more nitrogen into the soil than they take out?) whilst simultaneously squeezing out the weeds (I love the taste of wood sorrel, but it's a bugger to weed once it's established, and it gets everywhere in our garden).
I'm rather new to gardening, so I'm net entirely au fait with nitrogen fixation and green manure. I know that green manure strategies typically involve growing a nitrogen fixer such as red clover in the off season and then digging the plants in. However, do nitrogen fixers have a NET beneficial impact whilst growing as well? This was my reasoning for the above.
I started a raised bed of asparagus last year and I was wondering if there were any beneficial 'companion' plants (e.g. green manures) which could be used to 'undercrop' (if that's the correct turn of phrase) the plants.
Obviously growing asparagus leaves a fair amount of bare soil which is prime real estate for weeds (in our garden its wood sorrel, amongst others, that fills that gap) and I'd rather cut down on weeding to minimise disturbing the asparagus' shallower roots. I'm not looking to grow any crops per se, as I'm sure the asparagus plants wouldn't welcome the competition, but I was wondering whether there were any low or matt forming nitrogen fixers which might serve the asparagus plants well (i.e. put more nitrogen into the soil than they take out?) whilst simultaneously squeezing out the weeds (I love the taste of wood sorrel, but it's a bugger to weed once it's established, and it gets everywhere in our garden).
I'm rather new to gardening, so I'm net entirely au fait with nitrogen fixation and green manure. I know that green manure strategies typically involve growing a nitrogen fixer such as red clover in the off season and then digging the plants in. However, do nitrogen fixers have a NET beneficial impact whilst growing as well? This was my reasoning for the above.
Comment