Rossdale Farm | Conserving water and drought resistant gardening

Rossdale Farm: I have seen a lot of posts on Facebook gardening groups with concerns about water for the upcoming gardening season. With declarations of droughts already in place before the growing season even starts, and warnings about how severe the wild fire season will be, I understand the concern about having enough water to grow a garden.

I have a game changing tip for anyone gardening in an area struggling with drought…….move away from traditional gardening to no till growing!

We are already doing it in agriculture, farmers grow their cash crops using low or no till methods, so why are gardeners still heavily tilling their soils?

Snow and top soil remain in place in a no till ag field. The stubble holds the snow/moisture on the field and protects the soil from eroding. On the right, it is easy to see the soil eroding from the field and the snow washing down hill to the ditch! We need the moisture where the crops grow!

Tilling soil causes any moisture in that soil to be turned over. This increases evaporation of that moisture from the soil. In other words, every time you till your soil, you lose water from it.

Tilling soil always destroys soil structure, this is the little lumps and bumps or aggregates that exist in healthy soil. The more aggregate structure there is in healthy soil, the more that soil has room to hold water. These aggregates don’t fit tightly together and the space in between them results in a pore space where water can exist. How do you get more pore space? Reducing tilling as it breaks the aggregates down into smaller and smaller pieces resulting in compacted soil – or soil that has very little pore space.

Soil aggregates create pore spaces in the soil. These do not sit tight against each other so water has space to sit in soil! Organic matter in the form of compost helps to stick these soil aggregates together.

Tilling can also rip up the plant’s vast root system and bring weed seeds that naturally exist in our soils to the surface. When these seeds that have been lying dormant in the dark of the soil are exposed to sunlight near the surface, they germinate. Isn’t that wild? We till to combat the weeds but the very act of tilling brings more weeds to the party!

The next step is to add mulch; leaves and grass clippings shredded up by a mulching lawn mower, well aged straw or wood chips work as effective mulches. Many of us on the prairies have very dark soils. Dark soils heat up super fast in the summer sun – think of wearing dark clothing versus light clothing on a hot day. If we put mulch over our soils, the soil can’t heat up. This means our plant’s roots are much cooler and the plant is not working so hard to cool itself through the hottest part of the day. Why is this important? If the plant is working at cooling itself, it isn’t working at producing us vegetables! In addition to that, the warmer the soil, the faster the water evaporates from it! Think of a pot of boiling water, if we put a lid on it, that pot doesn’t boil dry! Mulch is effectively putting a lid on evaporation of soil moisture! This allows us to keep the moisture right where we need it!

Bare soil heats up with the ambient temperature which can increase evaporation of moisture of the soil. The high, sustained winds we experience on the prairies can contribute to drying out of the soil. We water our gardens only to have the warmth and wind dry it out. Mulch stops this!

Climate change is affecting how we receive rain on the prairies, instead of gentle rain falls that last for days, we are getting more severe storms that are dropping 1″ of rain in 20 minutes. The water is moving very fast and if our soils are dry or crusted from lack of moisture, fast moving water isn’t slowing down to soak in. Mulch will help prevent that soil crust and it will help slow that water down so it stays where we need it most, on our gardens instead of running off to the side!

Heavy rains create rivers in my traditional garden. These rivers washed away my garden seeds which happily grew at the bottom of the garden in a thick mess of plants!

The use of compost in our gardens can also aid in retaining moisture in our gardens. Compost is organic matter and this serves as the “glue” if you will that helps bind soil particles together into those lumps and bumps or aggregates that create pore spaces! If you have poor soils damaged by erosion, heavy tilling or high clay or sand soils, additions of compost are going to help improve the damage or quality of the soil.

Cool soil full of moisture is found underneath the mulch on the left. The soil on the right was not covered with mulch, it was hot, dry and blew away easily on the wind.

This isn’t an overnight fix as it takes time for the soil to build up aggregate structure. The first year I converted, I water far less than I did with a traditional garden. The second year, I only had to water my celery which requires a lot of water. By the third year, I didn’t water a single time and that was the first year of drought in my area. By the third year of the drought, so my fifth year in a no till garden, I could still pull back the mulch and ball up my soil as it had so much moisture in it.

My garden is now drought resistant! It grows solely on the moisture that falls as snow or rain without any attention from my watering can!

My drought resistant garden that produces thousands of pounds of vegetables with no additional watering other than what falls as rain or snow!

If you are interested in learning how to successfully convert no till growing, follow my facebook page or send me an email to learn about upcoming classes near you!

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    Rossdale Farms | Weeds in no till gardening

    Rossdale Farm – One of the best parts of no till gardening is weeding!! In my 26,000 sq ft garden, I spend roughly 1 hour every two weeks weeding! Contrast that weeding all day, everyday all summer before I switched to no till gardening! Before I finished the whole garden, the weeds were already back again!

    In no till, the mulch suppresses the growth of annual weed seeds. These reproduce by seeds and the mulch block the seeds from germinating so the only time you will get annual weed seed growth is if your mulch is too thin.

    Perennial weed seeds are a bit more of a challenge as these grow by vegetative growth. This means they reproduce by rhizomes which can grow up through the mulch. The only way to prevent this is to put a very heavy, 12″ layer, of mulch down. It can be harder to work with such a thick lawyer of mulch in your garden but if you have quack grass or thistles in your garden, this will help to combat these types of weeds!

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      Rossdale Farm | Growing broccoli on the prairies

      Rossdale Farm – Broccoli, cauliflower, cabbage, kale, radish and kohlrabi are all members of the Brassicaceae family. Another member of this family is canola. Plants in the same families are susceptible to the same diseases and insects.

      What does this mean as a gardener on the Canadian prairies? The insects and diseases that affect canola will infect the broccoli, cauliflower, cabbage, kale, radish and kohlrabi in your garden. These vegetables are also susceptible to flea beetles and cabbage moths (which are technically butterflies!).

      In order to grow these vegetables in your garden chemical free, they need to be grown under insect netting. Add in consistent watering and improved soil fertility from no till and these cool season plants will thrive on the Canadian prairies!

      Below is an example of the same variety of broccoli plant, planted on the same day that experienced the same growing conditions with the exception that the plant in back was grown under insect netting! You can start to appreciate the challenges of growing brassicas on the Canadian prairies when you see this image!

      Same variety, planted on the same day but the plant behind was grown under insect netting and did not experience insect pressure. The difference is significant.

      Rossdale Farm is a distributor for AgFabric in Canada. This is heavy weight insect netting that will last season after season, even with the high sustained winds we experience here on the prairies. This insect netting will prohibit cabbage moth and flea beetles from attacking all of your brassica plants. This insect netting can also protect your crops from grasshopper damage.

      It is preferred to construct hoops over the plants and drape the insect netting over the hoops rather than floating the netting on top of the plants. The moths can still get their ovipositor through the netting so if the plants are touching the netting, the moths could potentially become a problem inside the netting. To avoid this, build simple hoops that will support the 10′ wide insect netting. You can use gas line or electrical conduit to build these. Simple wires may not support the weight of this insect netting through the summer. Tuck the bottoms of the netting into your mulch to prevent them flying free in the wind.

      The insect netting is 10′ wide and available in custom lengths. Be sure to include extra to tie off the ends over the hoops. Send an email via the contact page to place an order. Insect netting can either be picked up at the farm or mailed via Canada Post’s flat rate boxes depending on the length ordered.

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        Rossdale Farm | What it took for me to switch!

        Rossdale Farm – No till gardening is weird and very different from what we all grew up learning about gardening. Covering your soil with mulch? Not tilling and keeping the same rows year after year?

        I finally decided to try one small corner of my garden. I hauled mulch out in my mini van to my garden, spread it around my strawberries and then left for winter.

        The next spring it was really hot/dry – no rain and hitting 30C in April. The soil was hot, dry, crumbly and it hurt my wrists to dig in it with my garden shovel.

        I had taken new strawberries out to the garden as I had developed a new strawberry bed to fill in. I decided to go back and fill in some of the strawberries that had winter kill. I moved the mulch, and hit the soil with my garden trowel bracing for the impact on my wrist……except it didn’t come. The soil was cool, soft and I could see the moisture in it. It felt like I was digging in soft butter. I was blown away.

        I had my daughter take this photo for me as it was really the turning point for me. I sat there holding two handfuls of dirt, one from traditional gardening and one from no till, looking over my entire 26,000 sq ft garden thinking about all the work it would take to convert it.

        That took six weeks in the spring of 2019 – I haven’t looked back since then! In fact, when I was encouraged to start a traditional garden to compare nutritional density of my veggies and size to my no till garden, I absolutely refused!

        There are so many more benefits to no till than just the soil, click on the category “no till benefits” to learn more!

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          Rossdale Farm | Why I love farming.

          Rossdale Farm – I grew up on a mixed farm; beef and grain. I grew up riding on the open air swather asking my dad if he ever got bored riding over the same land, multiple times a year, year after year. His response surprised me.

          How could I ever be bored Kim? Look – they just turned on the jets at the golf course. Look, a family of deer was laying over there. Look at that hawk diving for it’s lunch. The leaves have their backs to the wind again. I looked around, felt the hot prairie winds in my hair as we inched across that field. It was the field that is right beside my garden so it shares the same view that I have come to know like the back of my hand.

          He was right. How can you ever be bored watching the land your family has farmed for more than 100 years?

          Farming means you get to watch plants grow. It means you get to watch the land shift and change over time. It can be stressful. It can be physically demanding but there is nothing else I’d rather do.

          Look at all this bounty and beauty!

          The back forty at Rossdale Farm
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            Rossdale Farm | Fourth or fifth generation?

            Rossdale Farm – I grew up on a farm. Whether I am a fourth or fifth generation farm girl is up for some debate.

            My great great grandfather purchased the homestead that became Ross Farms. He didn’t farm it though. He also purchased a quarter a mile to the west and farmed there. His son began farming the original Ross homestead.

            So while I am the fifth generation in my family to farm in the Mannville area, I am only the fourth to grow on the land that was the original farm. To add further confusion to my story, the quarter that I farm was purchased by my grandfather after I was born. That means I am only the third Ross to farm that quarter.

            Regardless of what number I am in a long line of farmers, I am proud to be a food producer from Mannville, Alberta. Growing food is in my blood!

            Kim Ross of Rossdale Farm
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              Rossdale Farm | Why no till gardening?

              Rossdale Farm – I have always loved growing food. The taste, the time spent outdoors, the individual quirks of each vegetable in the garden.

              But for a long time in my life, I thought I hated gardening. Enter no till. It removes the labour. There is very little weeding as annual weeds are blocked from growing. Each year as the soil health improves, it increases it’s water holding capacity. This means that over time, the need for watering decreases.

              What you are left with in no till gardening is simply the love of gardening. Watching your plants grow, blossom and set fruit.

              And then of course, reaping the harvest and enjoying the full flavours of sunshine that only a garden can produce.

              Rossdale Farm's no till garden in 2019.
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                Mannville, AB