Thursday, September 11, 2025

Putting Raised Beds To Bed

 As we are now most of the way through pulling out vegetable plants, I am also prepping the beds for winter.   About half of them had leaf mulch in them already, but some of the heavy producing beds (Sweet Corn, Beans etc) did not have mulch, or in the case of the Beans, relied instead on living mulch in the form of Marigolds or Lettuce.  

My favorite winter cover is shredded leaves, but if you just fill them up with shredded leaves, a good portion of those blow all over in the winter winds.  In the past, we had an Oak tree just to the west of the garden and the west wind would dump almost all of those leaves right inside the fence.  We took that tree down last year and last fall we had a MUCH easier time rounding up fallen leaves in the garden.  But we still use the blowers a little to clean things up so having loose leaves on top of the beds is a bit self defeatist.



So what I do is put down a layer of leaves and then seal it in as best I can with a layer of compost.  The compost pile that I dumped out of the tube in March has been turned throughout the summer to finish it and was ready to sift and use.  At this point most of the worm activity had moved from the compost pile over to the fresh scraps in the compost tube which is verified by the worm juice coming out of the bottom.  These compost tubes function more as a worm farm than a hot compost pile.


There were still a handful of worms left in the bottom of the cold compost pile.  I sifted the compost one day and then loaded it in the wheel barrow to use the next day and found that the worms had taken the hint and relocated overnight.  As you can see, they congregate in the cracks of the pavers.  I wonder if they have a worm highway under there that leads six feet over to the fresh food?

While sifting the cold compost, I found quite a bed of worms red wigglers

There were still a few worms left over mixed in with the compost but they got shoveled into the raised beds where they can feast on leaves and leftover roots all winter.  On a positive note, for the first time in about three years I encountered no Asian Jumping Worms anywhere in my landscape.  I wonder if the constant snow cover helped to kill off the eggs over the winter.  I have never seen them in the raised beds or the compost area, but I was finding them fairly often in the landscape and Dahlia beds,

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