I want to show you something in the garden that made me think about the term "shading out" that we would use on the farm. First, take a look at the cole crop patch below. From left to right (two different varieties of cabbage, cauliflower, two varieties of broccoli, and then kohlrabi, kale and bok choy.
They are growing nicely and are healthy. It is late afternoon and the sun was shining in my face. I walked around to the west side of the garden to take the following photo. As you can see, the rows have about grown together so that it is almost hard to differentiate one row from another. It almost looks like one big swath of green, verdant growth.
That's what reminded me of the term "shading out." About 45 years ago, give or take we were growing soybeans on the Cottongin Road in Oberlin. We weren't using a drill to plant at that time. Instead, we were row cropping. This required getting in the field with a cultivator to turn the ground over between the rows to stay ahead of weed growth. You had to REALLY pay close attention or you'd run over the soybeans. This had to be done until the soybeans "shaded out."
When the young soybean plants grew tall enough that you couldn't see the dirt between the rows, you were very happy! You didn't have to cultivate anymore because the soybean plants had grown together. The shade prevented any sunlight from getting to any weeds under the canopy of soybeans and this prohibited any weeds to grow and compete for nutrition.
As I looked at the winter crops in the garden, it made me happy. Although I don't use a cultivator in my garden, it brought back some nice memories. We've almost shaded out!
If the cows just over the fence could get in the garden, they would certainly "cultivate" my crop with the quickness!
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