First up we must ready our ground. Chop down old crops and the rest, at the roots. Roughly is fine, ironing it out isn’t required. I’ve just harvested the no dig potatoes from this bed so needed to smooth the little piles of compost out. And because the worst thing you can do to soil is leave it bare and vulnerable, I’m sowing the greencrop right away.
Scatter sow the seed over top of the soil. Be generous and please don’t try to evenly space those wobbly balls. We want a wild thicket.
Good soil contact makes a difference. No matter what seed you sow give it a reassuring pat with your hands to connect it well with its new home. In the case of a whole bed, you can pat away all day with your hands, or do as I do, and tamp it down with the flat end of your nail rake. If your soil is dry then give it a good sprinkle. My soil is perfectly moist so I can skip this step today.
A lovely layer of mulch is all you need now. Sprinkle it on top of the seed in a thickness that disappears the seed from sight, same as you’d do were you covering it with soil. Bear in mind if its freshly harvested like my home made mulch, it’ll shrink pretty smartly.
This beautiful brew is buckwheat, yarrow, meadowsweet, parsley and dandelion, and took me all of five minutes to collect from my herbal border. Free, 100% organic and bursting with nutrients – the Queen of all mulches. Toss a birdnet over top.
In the absence of mulch or presence of birds, peg shadecloth or hessian on top the seed and leave it there as long as poss – it’ll keep growing! Peel it away once the crop is up and away.