Reddit Reddit reviews No-Till Cover Crop 13-Seed Mix (1 lb. Bag): [50% Clovers Plus Fenugreek, Vetch, Flax, Cowpeas, Buckwheat, Forage Peas, Millet, Lentils, Crimson Clover, Sweet Yellow, White Clover, Medium Red Clover]

We found 3 Reddit comments about No-Till Cover Crop 13-Seed Mix (1 lb. Bag): [50% Clovers Plus Fenugreek, Vetch, Flax, Cowpeas, Buckwheat, Forage Peas, Millet, Lentils, Crimson Clover, Sweet Yellow, White Clover, Medium Red Clover]. Here are the top ones, ranked by their Reddit score.

Gardening & Lawn Care
Soils, Fertilizers & Mulches
Garden Fertilizers
Patio, Lawn & Garden
No-Till Cover Crop 13-Seed Mix (1 lb. Bag): [50% Clovers Plus Fenugreek, Vetch, Flax, Cowpeas, Buckwheat, Forage Peas, Millet, Lentils, Crimson Clover, Sweet Yellow, White Clover, Medium Red Clover]
13 different varieties of THE most popular cover crops in the community in 1 bag = balanced bio-diversityInoculated with Rhizobium; Encourages Mycorrhizal Fungi populations to explode, which literally help deliver nutrients to the roots of the plantsBio-diverse array of cover crop varieties attracts wide variety of beneficial organisms & predators which contribute to soil fertility and humus qualityPerfect for Raised Beds and/or No-Till Container GardeningHigh-Quality, Nitro-Coated, All-Natural Non-GMO Seed Mix, From USA only
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3 Reddit comments about No-Till Cover Crop 13-Seed Mix (1 lb. Bag): [50% Clovers Plus Fenugreek, Vetch, Flax, Cowpeas, Buckwheat, Forage Peas, Millet, Lentils, Crimson Clover, Sweet Yellow, White Clover, Medium Red Clover]:

u/NewGuy41410 · 4 pointsr/NoTillGrowery

or for those that prefer diversity:

https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B07JQC188Q

u/GrowInTheDark · 3 pointsr/NoTillGrowery

We have a gardening bed on the side of our house and I'd like to plant herbs, veggies, fruits, or spices there. But the dirt seems to be very compacted and hard. I have much experience with growing cannabis plants in containers no-till style so I have a broad understanding of the soil food web, I've just never planted in-ground nor have I used compacted soil before.

Do I simply till the crap out of the whole bed to kinda loosen everything up and "un-compact" the entire bed? And then i simply dump my soil on top of that hard clay-like dirt and plant the plants in?

My soil would likely consist of one part homemade earthworm castings, one part aeration component like pumice or lava rock, and one part peat moss. I would be using EWC from my worm bins and would be introducing worms and worm eggs into the beds.

I was thinking of also planting a cover crop seed mix that has a lot of variety as living mulch and as green manure mulch. I also have a bale of straw I could use as mulch. I would keep the topsoil damp for the microbes and earthworms to be happy.

Over time, would the clay dirt underneath the soil become composted and eventually fertile as the worms and other soil life expand into the dirt more?

Does my plan seem like a solid plan to turn the dirt bed into fertile living soil?

u/wewtangclan · 1 pointr/NoTillGrowery

didn't mean crazy in a bad way. but i keep trimming it back everyday because my main plants are not tall enough yet, and i could leave the trim in the pot but i'm dealing with fungus gnats. don't want decaying material for them to eat. i'm putting it in my worm bin instead so it will still get used at some point. i would actually prefer some cilantro or something in there since i am trimming it back daily. i just don't want something that will take over or compete too much, and it needs to have a shallow root system.

https://smile.amazon.com/gp/product/B07JQC188Q/