The soil -- It's ALIVE!

Small plants + live soil = big rewards

By Amy McDowell

A trend has hit the perennial garden scene with a lot of force in recent years. The idea is to focus your money and energy on amending the soil and spend less money and energy on the plants.

After two decades of installing perennial gardens, author Tracy DiSabato-Aust has shown that perennials can double or triple in size during their first season—if the soil has been amended with organic matter. She convinces clients of her Ohio design and installation firm that investing in the soil is the top priority. To offset the expense of soil amendments and site preparation, she plants 4-inch (and sometimes even bare-root) perennials. Believe it or not, her tiny perennials outperform gallon-size perennials within a single season. In following years, the plants are naturally healthier and more robust because of the live soil. Photos documenting the amazing growth are included in her book, “The Well-Tended Perennial Garden”. (Timber Press, 1998)

Live soil isn’t some mushy black matter you can buy in a bag for 99 cents. Live soil has billions of bacteria, millions of fungi, plus protozoa, paramesei and nematodes—all in a single spoonful. Organic matter is the key to live soil, because it provides food for the bacteria, fungi and microbes.

Landscape Architect Terry Guen, who coordinated the design and construction of the 25-acre Millennium Park in downtown Chicago, said they purchased live soil for the park from a site in Indiana. With guidelines for soil handling and storage, they kept it healthy and alive throughout construction. They were careful not to smother or compact it by piling it too deep or driving over it with heavy equipment. As the world’s largest millennium project, planners insisted on large plants for the site, but the care they took on buying and maintaining healthy, live soil is noteworthy.

When building a new bed in your garden, add life to your soil with organic matter. Sprinkle two pounds of bone meal per 100 square feet, then add a 4-inch layer of organic matter such as compost, sphagnum peat moss or leaf humus. Till it in as deeply as the tiller will go, rake it smooth, and you are ready to plant your little ones. Then step back and watch them leap.

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