This is our fourth
article about how to create and maintain a healthy soil at HCF which will be
resistant to and resilient in climate change. Here we will deal with the issue of
keeping the soil covered
throughout the year.
Maintaining cover can be achieved
in at least three different ways, with many different, but beneficial outcomes:
1. Leaving crop residues such as
roots in the soil and stems etc on the soil.
In a typical Highbridge Community Farm field
the soil is often bare for around six months of the year. Research shows that bare soils lose
organic matter as the bacteria use the oxygen and the organic material
for respiration and produce carbon dioxide. Cultivated soils should be planted with another
crop as quickly as possible to avoid them losing organic matter. If you can see the soil then it is losing
carbon! As soon as a plant crop is harvested and the cover is removed
the soil begins to deteriorate. This is
a big issue for us at HCF, as possibly 90% of the organic matter in the manure
and compost that we add goes up into the atmosphere as CO2. However, there are
several ways of combatting the problem. So basically,
when we are clearing beds we shouldn't allow them to lie fallow. Even for a few
days.
When changing over from one crop
to the next, the general practice at HCF has been to remove all crop residues
including roots. This is disadvantageous for two reasons: first, the soil
around the roots always has the best soil structure (tilth or physical condition of the soil)
so why break it up? Around the
rhizosphere, the area where the roots grow, the soil forms good aggregates
(small soil clumps about 1 cm diameter held together by the soil glue
glomalin). The moisture content, degree of aeration, rate of water infiltration
and drainage are also good in the root zone as it is where the
majority of the microbial activity – therefore nutrient release and biotic glue
secretion (aggregation) takes place. So consider leaving the roots and maybe the
stems in place after removing the parts of the plant you want to eat!
Second, and very significant, roots
of mature crop plants go on producing root exudates even after the stems or
stalks, leaves, flowers or seed heads have been removed. Actually the shock of
being decapitated causes them to put out a large pulse of exudates giving up
much of its stored sugars to the next generation. So when one
crop is nearing its end in your plot there are several ways to ensure
continuity of plants:
1. Leave root residues in
the soil. Cut off the tops- take the part of the plant you want to eat but
leave the root residues in the soil. The crop root residues will
go on feeding the mycorrhizal fungi, which you want to be in the soil to help
the next crop get established.
2. Intercrop your plant so that
when one crop is being harvested its roots can be left to feed the other crop as
the mycorrhiza take the exuded sugars from the crop that has been harvested and
moves them on to the other crop. In this way the mycorrhiza remain alive
and functioning effectively and so continue building up soil organic matter and
humus.
We know that brassicas such as cabbages,
calabrese and cauliflowers do not form mycorrhizal associations with fungi, so
if they are planted alone the fungi will starve and die in the soil. Brassicas
such as these when sown early may be ready to harvest by July. So it may work
well to plant alternate rows of a member of the brassicaceae and a member of
the chenopodiaceae such as beetroot, spinach, swiss chard or spinach beet, which
will keep the mycorrhiza alive in the soil for the season. Then when the
brassica is removed in summer it can be replaced by seeds of French or Runner
beans if the date is before mid-July or pot grown French or runner beans if the
date is later.
If a vegetable is planted in the spring
that needs nearly all the season to grow, such as parsnip, celeriac, courgette,
leaf beet, butternut squash or sweetcorn there is little time at the end of the
season to grow another vegetable in the same ground after it, but it may be
possible to companion plant your
desired plant with other plants which will exploit different niches (e.g. plant
sweetcorn and squash together). Alternatively as the season is coming to the
end for some of the above long season plants then plant another crop in late
summer or autumn along-side it and this will stand throughout the winter, and
give harvests in the hungry gap the following year (e.g. garlic, spring onions,
spring cabbage, broad bean or spinach). If
garlic has been autumn planted then carrots and beetroot can be sowed between
the rows of maturing garlic the following spring and will take over as the
garlic goes yellow in June.
2. An alternative to intercropping and companion
planting is relay cropping. As one crop is pulled out the next one is
ready to go in and take its place. The day you remove the flowers, fruits or
leaves of one crop put in some substantial pot grown seedlings of the next crop
along with a little organic mulch on the surface to maintain a supply of living
roots in the soil.
3. If you have to clear a bed or even just a single row, and have no
crop to plant in that space then put on a top dressing of an organic mulch such as compost, crop
residues, comfrey leaves, coffee grounds or sweetcorn stalks and then cover
with a plastic sheet. This will give the earthworms and microbes something to
feed on to tide them over for the period the soil is not growing anything. It
will also improve the soil tilth by encouraging worm and microbe activity close
to the soil surface and it will slow down, but not stop the loss of organic
matter, since no other foods are entering the soil.
2. Sowing
cover crops during winter months. The aim of this is to eliminate
long fallow periods where possible. The negative impact of long fallows on soil
organisms is particularly important, especially the impact on mycorrhiza fungi.
Mycorrhiza need the sugars from living plant roots to survive, and if there is
a period where there are no growing plants, the mycorrhiza will reduce in
numbers. This can be partially offset by sowing a legume like field beans or the broad bean Aquadulce. There
would inevitably be a few weeks delay before the new seeds got going, but the
cover crop can be chopped down to ground level in the spring and left on the
ground as a mulch and their roots left in the ground to feed the next crop. It
is important to be able to remove the cover crop at the right moment and
replace quickly with the new spring crop at exactly the right time for the new
crop to go in.
Paul Dibden has proposed sowing a
cover crop of 80% black oats, 5% brown mustard and 15% oil raddish over the
winter of 2019-20.
Cover crops give the following
benefits to soils
·
Suppressing
weeds
·
Protecting
soil from rain/runoff/reducing erosion
·
Increasing
soil aggregate stability
·
Adding
SOM and increasing SOM
·
Reducing
surface crusting
·
Breaking
hardpan
·
Fixing
nitrogen and scavenging soil nitrogen
·
Suppressing
soil pests and diseases
·
Increasing
availability of nutrients
Mulching broad beans with sweetcorn stalks at HCF |
A
variety of mulches and coverings are available, although not all are currently used
at HCF, including; compost, coffee grounds, comfrey leaves, sweetcorn stalks,
straw, grass clippings, leaves, newspaper or cardboard, black plastic, Mypex (woven weed barriers) and woodchip.
Some of these mulches will have different effects, so the merits and debits of
each should be considered carefully.
In
this article hopefully we have learned that fungal mycorrhiza are important for
soil health and maintaining soil structure and water holding capacity. They
need roots for continued life and growth, but don't survive when the soil is
bare for even a few months or when only brassicas are being grown. There are
ways of ensuring that roots will be present in the soil throughout the year by leaving
crop roots in soils, intercropping, companion planting, relay cropping and
sowing winter cover crops. If all else is impossible, use a good mulch or
covering, preferably of organic material.
In the next post we will look at a couple more practices that we might focus more on at
HCF.
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