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Re: Crop Rotation


Square Foot Gardening List - http://www.flinet.com/~gallus/sqft.html

We've put ours in the same place too for 8 years now, every year I think I
should move them, and every year there they are LOL. But potatoes...some
volunteers came up this spring, and the potato bugs just about literally
loved them to death! I'll rotate them always.
Not into it enough to interplant the herbs I'm afraid but really we've not
had any problems at all, with about 50 plants usually.

Bill, central Ohio, zone 5

> Actually the history of this idea is quite interesting; Rudolf Steiner
> mentions it in his Lectures on Agriculture, 1924, and the idea predates
him,
> even.
>
> John Jeavons also talks about it in How to Grow More Vegetables...and his
> gardeners have been growing tomatoes all over the world.
>
> Crop rotation is an important concept especially on a field scale, and
fits
> in quite naturally to sq ft gardening because of the planning and control
> exercised...
>
> But sq ft gardening and gardening generally allow a much higher use of
> materials and attention per plant by the gardener, than field scale
> production; and we can pack in a lot more biodiversity in a smaller space;
> perhaps those who enjoy success with tomatoes following tomatoes, are also
> interplanting basil and other herbs and plants, which would tend to reduce
> any pest/disease problems also....
>
> Anyway I don't have all the answers here, but the tomato is a mysterious
> plant which thrives under many regimes...the suckering thread should
> indicate that....
>
> Frank---notes that his neighbor's cherry tomatoes under partial shade are
> way ahead of his....and she always grows them in the same place, going on
15
> years now...:-)
>
> >
> >At 10:57 AM 6/25/99 -0700, Neil Hubbard wrote:
> >>Margaret,
> >>
> >> I think your results with your tomatoes may be an exception from
> >>the rule.
> >>
> >Of course that's a possibility, but I'm finding more and more people
> >admitting to growing tomatoes in the same space for years on end.  One of
> >the benefits of my tomato "patch" is that it's bordered by a honeysuckle
> >hedge and a basketweave fence. There's a little shade from these, and
since
> >beet leafhoppers avoid shade, I haven't had any problem with curly top
> >virus in that patch (knock on wood).  But hey, since micorrhyzae (sp?)
are
> >invisible anyway, why couldn't that be the answer? (VBG) Margaret L
> >
> >
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