When we moved to the farm almost seven years ago the area that we now call the “Orchard Meadow” was barren, except for tumble weeds, some cheat grass and burrs. It was pretty sad. Our efforts to reclaim the land, to restore and add fertility and productivity were really quite simple. All land will eventually restore itself and naturally move towards supporting life and fertility within its sphere, we were looking to accelerate that process and add a bit more.
To begin with we mowed down all the weeds and planted trees, mulching them deeply with horse manure, straw and wood chips. The second winter we over seeded the whole thing with drought tolerant pasture grasses and in the spring white clover and sweet clover. We irrigated the entire meadow and let the grass, clover and weeds grow.
Yes, even the weeds. Weeds in the context of reclaiming pasture are not a bad thing. The earth naturally reclaims herself, and what we would call common weeds are some of the first plants that come into an area to help restore, rebuild and nourish. And we had a lot of weeds, big tall lambs quarter and hog weed, and we mowed them a few times and in doing that created a layer of natural mulch. Every year the grass, clovers and good perennial weeds got thicker and the starter weeds became less and less. We added animals in movable pens to eat down the grass and fertilize.
This year our trees are bigger and the grass thicker and greener than it’s ever been. I still have to water at least once a week because the trees are still young (some only a year old, we lost a few to gophers) but soon the plan is to only water every few weeks as needed.
I am starting to do this in my back yard. I’ve been letting the weeds hold the soil in place as I improve it and add organic mulch. I have several spots of clover that just planted themselves and I was happy to see them.