What the heck...let's do something a bit different, if not down right radical...yes right here in Lynden.
Why not convert 140 square feet of lawn into a garden? And not just a regular ole garden...but a "lasagna" garden. Some call this a "sheet mulch" garden.
"So what is this," you ask? Precisely this type of garden is one that layered by various organic materials at different levels, creating what looks like a "lasagna" meal ready to go into the oven. Not exactly, but you get the point...the organics, layered provide a series of "sheets" of mulching that puts huge amounts of composted or soon to be compost in a concentrated area.
Purpose:
1. Provide a strong and sustainable soil environment that is rich in fertility for garden vegetables (worms, beetles, bacteria and fungi...love things undisturbed)
2. Reduce if not eliminate the need to rototill or disturb the soil community (saves work, energy and expense).
3. Reduce weeding (every kid forced by mom and dad to weed the garden now sing praises!).
So with that as reasons for converting from conventional gardening to lasagna gardening...why then on the lawn?
"Why not!" I ask.
Lawns need fertilizer, weed killer from time-to-time...and during the summer constant mowing...more so in Lynden, where the perfect lawn awaits glorified recognition.
Somewhere I read that all the energy consumed in the US
just on lawns exceeds the total energy requirements for the whole country of India. Well, that got my attention. What's wrong with this picture?!
So in a modest way, and for the fun of it, and with a little philosophical framing -- wahlaa -- a lasagna garden takes over a lawn. We win one for the Gipper!
Below are pictures of the site before starting the transformation.
[Click on pictures to zoom]


Now here is the sequence in the process to develop the garden bed.

1st layer is cardboard. This seals off the grass.

2nd layer is straw.

3rd layer is municipal compost.

4th layer is S & W Rock Product compost.

5th layer is straw.

6th layer is Smit Compost.

7th layer is straw.

Final layer (for now) is Smit Compost.
The final depth of the bed is around 12 inches. This will settle with decomposition and natural compaction.
Labor time: Driving to and fro getting the various materials, and unloading -- 3 1/2 hrs.
Cost: Straw and compost -- $39.
There you have it:
Lynden Washington's very first "Lasagna Garden"!More to follow in subsequent posts.
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