• Alfalfa Pellets ?

    From T@T@invalid.invalid to rec.gardens.edible on Sun Jul 21 15:16:19 2024
    From Newsgroup: rec.gardens.edible

    Hi All,

    I caught a gardening show on the radio. They recommended
    using alfalfa pellets after harvesting garlic and onions
    whilst the soil was awaiting the next planting.

    Make sense to me, but I do not know what I am doing, so I
    am asking here.

    By any change, do I risk alfalfa plants sprouting up
    like weeds?

    -T
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  • From T@T@invalid.invalid to rec.gardens.edible on Sun Jul 21 15:17:24 2024
    From Newsgroup: rec.gardens.edible

    On 7/21/24 15:16, T wrote:
    By any change
    By any chanCe

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  • From T@T@invalid.invalid to rec.gardens.edible on Sun Jul 21 17:14:07 2024
    From Newsgroup: rec.gardens.edible

    On 7/21/24 15:16, T wrote:
    By any change, do I risk alfalfa plants sprouting up
    like weeds?

    Also, it occurred to me that since these pellet are
    also sold as rabbit food, that I be attracting
    their unwanted attention
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  • From songbird@songbird@anthive.com to rec.gardens.edible on Sun Jul 21 20:15:49 2024
    From Newsgroup: rec.gardens.edible

    T wrote:
    Hi All,

    I caught a gardening show on the radio. They recommended
    using alfalfa pellets after harvesting garlic and onions
    whilst the soil was awaiting the next planting.

    Make sense to me, but I do not know what I am doing, so I
    am asking here.

    it is higher nitrogen worm food, basically it's green
    manure. you can grow your own cheaper than buying it
    in pellet form if your conditions allow for you to sprout
    and grow it without having to water it.

    a nursery crop like buckwheat will give it some shade
    and protection while it gets going. after the first
    year it will grow very well. i've grown it mixed in
    with birdsfoot trefoil and the trefoil would mostly
    crowd it out, but both alfalfa and trefoil are good
    nitrogen sources and good green manure crops to grow
    if you have the space for it, but they both need to
    be weeded because they provide habitat for weeds
    under and around them.

    By any change, do I risk alfalfa plants sprouting up
    like weeds?

    yes, but don't worry, they don't grow fast enough to
    be an issue and even if they do grow you can chop and
    drop them for extra worm food.


    songbird
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  • From songbird@songbird@anthive.com to rec.gardens.edible on Sun Jul 21 22:01:19 2024
    From Newsgroup: rec.gardens.edible

    T wrote:
    On 7/21/24 15:16, T wrote:
    By any change, do I risk alfalfa plants sprouting up
    like weeds?

    Also, it occurred to me that since these pellet are
    also sold as rabbit food, that I be attracting
    their unwanted attention

    you can bury them a little (especially if you want
    them to be worm food) and that will probably keep
    most of the problems away of attracting critters.


    songbird
    --- Synchronet 3.21d-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From T@T@invalid.invalid to rec.gardens.edible on Sun Jul 21 20:08:30 2024
    From Newsgroup: rec.gardens.edible

    On 7/21/24 17:15, songbird wrote:
    T wrote:
    Hi All,

    I caught a gardening show on the radio. They recommended
    using alfalfa pellets after harvesting garlic and onions
    whilst the soil was awaiting the next planting.

    Make sense to me, but I do not know what I am doing, so I
    am asking here.

    it is higher nitrogen worm food, basically it's green
    manure. you can grow your own cheaper than buying it
    in pellet form if your conditions allow for you to sprout
    and grow it without having to water it.

    a nursery crop like buckwheat will give it some shade
    and protection while it gets going. after the first
    year it will grow very well. i've grown it mixed in
    with birdsfoot trefoil and the trefoil would mostly
    crowd it out, but both alfalfa and trefoil are good
    nitrogen sources and good green manure crops to grow
    if you have the space for it, but they both need to
    be weeded because they provide habitat for weeds
    under and around them.

    By any change, do I risk alfalfa plants sprouting up
    like weeds?

    yes, but don't worry, they don't grow fast enough to
    be an issue and even if they do grow you can chop and
    drop them for extra worm food.


    songbird


    Thank you!

    --- Synchronet 3.21d-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From T@T@invalid.invalid to rec.gardens.edible on Mon Jul 22 23:41:23 2024
    From Newsgroup: rec.gardens.edible

    On 7/21/24 15:16, T wrote:
    Hi All,

    I caught a gardening show on the radio.-a They recommended
    using alfalfa pellets after harvesting garlic and onions
    whilst the soil was awaiting the next planting.

    Make sense to me, but I do not know what I am doing, so I
    am asking here.

    By any change, do I risk alfalfa plants sprouting up
    like weeds?

    -T

    I found it comes in meal form too. Looks like I can
    just water it in. Less work than digging it in.

    Am I missing something?
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