Geo wrote:ekreider is bang on target. Annual rye is an atom bomb of the grasses. Let it grow (convince the neighbors that you're doing an eco-revival on your backyard) and it'll re-seed itself at the end of the year. Do that for a couple of years and I'd wager that your soil will be amended a bit for your efforts.
Geo
I'm definitely looking into this, it sounds like a winner.
sundevilpeg wrote: But please don't worry about it too much. In our current climate, your neighbors are probably just overjoyed that there is a homeowner net door instead of a vacant foreclosed property. Anything you do will be better than the alternative!
Considering that the previous owners had
126 cats, then the house sat abandoned for 2 years overrun with cats and drug addicts, yes, they are OVERJOYED to have us here.
ekreider wrote: If you possibly can, get the soil change done this fall. Then go for a winter cover crop on the portions to be used for plants that are planted in May or later. Do not try a cover crop on areas to be planted with cold-tolerant plants such as onions, lettuce, radishes, turnips or cole crops.
Ideally, this is exactly what I'm hoping to do, it all depends upon the cash flow situation and such. This house needs SO much work that I've been forced to push back my time line for the yard. How would you amend the planting situation if I need to do this in the Spring? I'm planning on putting in several beds for herbs/vegetables, then filling the rest of the yard with peonies, tulips, roses, foxglove, lilac, etc. Nice, fragrant, hardy old fashioned flowering plants/bushes that don't take a great deal of maintenance so that I can devote myself to the veggie beds.
Thanks again to everyone for the great suggestions!
"Baseball is like church. Many attend. Few understand." Leo Durocher