Straw Bale Gardening is the latest trend in gardening for growing beautiful veggies, herbs, and flowers without using traditional soil. Wells Brothers have all the supplies you need to start your own straw bale garden project: straw bales, conventional and organic fertilizers, trellis hardware, and, most importantly, high-quality vegetable and bedding flowers as well as seed products.
When it comes to thrifty, versatile ways to garden, it’s hard to beat a straw bale garden. It’s inexpensive (we sell it for $10.50 per bale), you can put it wherever you want, and it’ll eventually turn into compost – so what is your garden this year can feed your garden next year. How’s that for recycling?
Pick up your straw bales at Wells Brothers. Once you bring yours home, there are just a few steps you’ll want to take to get it ready for planting. Follow the easy instructions below.
Position the Bale
Turn the bale narrow side up, so the strings holding the bale together are now on the sides (you don’t want those strings to be on top, just in case you sever one while you’re planting). On one narrow side, the straw will be folded over; on the other, it will be cut. Make sure the cut side is up, as the hollow straws will allow moisture to penetrate better.
Condition the Bale
As soon as moisture hits the bale, it will start to decompose, and the inside will heat right up – definitely not a good thing for the plants. The solution? Condition the bale before you plant. This process usually takes around 10 to 14 days. For the first 3 days, simply water the bale thoroughly so it stays damp. For the next 6 days, in addition to watering the bale, use a liquid fertilizer like HASTA-GRO 6-12 6QT to add nitrogen to speed the decomposition. Simply add a capful to a gallon of water and pour it all on the bale. (Another option is to sprinkle a cup of ammonium sulfate on the top of the bale on days 4 through 6, then a half-cup on days 7 through 9. Each time, water the fertilizer in.)
Choose Your Plants
On day 10, return to simply watering the bale, and continue doing that until the temperature inside the bale starts to reflect the temperature outside. Use a compost or meat thermometer to keep tabs; you’ll see the temperature start to rise after the first day or two, spike about midway through the process, then start to come back down. Once it reaches ambient temperature, the bale is ready to be planted. Choose your plants
You can grow just about anything in a bale that you can in the ground — with a few exceptions. Tall plants like indeterminate tomatoes and corn, for example, get too tall and heavy and can start to break the bale apart. (If you wish to grow tomatoes, stick with bush or other determinate varieties.) Running plants like sweet potatoes can be harder to grow in a bale, too. Also, if you live in a very warm, humid part of the country, the bale may begin to decompose more quickly than in other climates, so you’ll want to stick with smaller plants like herbs and flowers, or use it for your cooler weather leafy crops. Whichever plants you choose, space them the same as you would in the ground.
Plant the Bale
Remove straw to form a hole that is as deep as the rootball of your plant (though if you’re planting a tomato, of course, you’ll want to go deeper.) Place the plant in the hole, add some quality potting soil around it for extra nutrients and stability, then fill the rest of the hole in with some of the straw you removed. Water well.
Water and fertilize regularly
Your plants will receive less nutrition from the bale than they would from the soil, so it’s important to fertilize them every week or two. You’ll also want to make sure not to let the bale dry out.
And you’re done! You can create your garden out of as many straw bales as you want, arranged in whatever shape or style you like. Happy growing!
Source: Bonnie Plants