Just idly thinking aloud here Feel free to join me!
I've been digging docks out of a woodchipped path and the soil in the path is better than that in the adjacent bed.
I could either
1. put the soil from the path on the beds,
2. walk on the bed and grow in the path
3. do nothing.
4. probably summat else that eludes me.
This made me wonder how much growing space is given over to paths and whether it needs to be.
In a way, paths are ground lying fallow. Could they form part of the bed rotation? Walked on one year but be cultivated next year?
Could they grow green manures - and be walked upon?
Do we really need paths?
So tell me, please,
How much of your plot/garden is given up to paths - rough %?
Do you need all these paths?
Can you think of ways to make paths more productive?
PS You didn't expect anything sensible I hope
I've been digging docks out of a woodchipped path and the soil in the path is better than that in the adjacent bed.
I could either
1. put the soil from the path on the beds,
2. walk on the bed and grow in the path
3. do nothing.
4. probably summat else that eludes me.
This made me wonder how much growing space is given over to paths and whether it needs to be.
In a way, paths are ground lying fallow. Could they form part of the bed rotation? Walked on one year but be cultivated next year?
Could they grow green manures - and be walked upon?
Do we really need paths?
So tell me, please,
How much of your plot/garden is given up to paths - rough %?
Do you need all these paths?
Can you think of ways to make paths more productive?
PS You didn't expect anything sensible I hope
Comment