I already told you we are giving this backyard here at the rental a makeover since we will be here for awhile. We brought in a little shed that we will sell when we leave. And we uncovered some limestones from an old bank here in our town. Which are now incorporated into our sidewalk. And we added a fire pit ALL on a budget. (We are at $29, so far) Part of the back yard makeover involves a vegetable garden. I absolutely love being able to walk outside and grab things for meals. We ALWAYS plant tomatoes, cucumbers, onions, cabbage, and all different types of peppers.
For the last several years, we have canned tomatoes, spaghetti sauce, tomato soup, salsa, sweet and dill pickles, etc. Deb isn’t a fond lover of canning, but she sure loves eating it throughout the winter. Last year, our house sold right before canning season, so we weren’t able to do anything, but we still had several cans from the prior year. We are getting low. So… this may be a summer of canning again.
Back to Eden Garden Method
I’m not going to go into all of the science of how Back to Eden works. There are so many articles on the internet and so many great videos all over YouTube. If you are interested or have any questions, watch them. It is very interesting. It has something to do with microbes, bacteria, layering, blah, blah, blah. 😂 I’m not a science guru. Some people love the method and some people don’t. I have had SO MUCH LUCK with it so I’m only going to tell you OUR experience with it, HOW we do it, and WHY it’s the only thing we do.
Note: I’m not an expert at this method and I do things my own way.
How?
Newspapers
Every time we have started a new Back to Eden Garden, we have started in a grassy area of our yard in the SPRING. Most everyone thinks they need to remove the grass and till a garden. I used to do it that way. Again, the science of the Back to Eden Garden Method has to do with layers. So, since we start in the Spring, we lay down a layer of newspapers which helps kill the grass, and it composts into the garden. We choose to use newspapers because they are easy to cut through when we add our plants later. If you prepare your garden in the Fall, which is what I think the method actually recommends, cardboard would work terrific. We’ve done it both ways.
Wood Chips
After we add the layer of newspapers to the land, we add a layer of wood chips about 5-6″ deep. I do want to say that wood chips and mulch are two different things. Mulch is typically treated with a coloring agent, which you don’t want for your vegetable garden. Wood chips are simply that. Trees and branches that are run through a chipper. We get ours here in our own community at the city’s compost site. The YouTube videos will suggest all different guidelines which have a bunch of no-nos regarding certain types of wood, etc. I don’t pay any attention to that…. I just throw down my free wood chips. 🤷🏻♀️
Plants
When it’s time to plant, we simply scoot the wood chips to the side, dig a hole through the newspaper, plant the plants, give it a good drink of water, and move wood chips back around it. That is the only time I water my garden all summer.
Why?
The first reason I love the Back to Eden Garden method is NO WEEDING, due to the thick layer of wood chips. If they do pop up through the wood chips, they are very easy to remove. And, there is NO WATERING. I have only watered the gardens throughout the years ONE TIME and that was because we had a drought that summer. Basically I plant my garden in the Spring and do nothing else but watch it grow.
Tips we’ve learned…
Water the newspapers first so they don’t blow all over the yard. We figured this out real quick. 😂
We started this gardening method and planted all in the same day a few years back. Deb cut the grass in that area really short. I then watered that area making sure the land was very wet. Added the plants right in the grass, laid down the newspapers around the plants, and then added the wood chips. I didn’t water the garden at all that entire summer.
After the first year, we don’t add newspapers anymore unless we had a bunch of weeds pop up over the Winter. We simply add more wood chips around all of the plants.
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If you are keeping track of this backyard on a budget project…. we are still at $29. The bricks for the border, the newspapers, and the wood chips were all FREE.
Let me know any questions that you have in the comments and I will try to answer them. But like I said, there are so many articles out there that explains the entire method. I will be updating this post and adding photos as the summer goes on so you can see the progress of the garden. I cannot tell you how excited I am about this years Back to Eden Garden.
Victoria says
This is so interesting! So you don’t use any type of soil, fertilizer, etc? Also, do you buy your plants already growing I’m assuming? Or do you seed your own first?
Danelle Harvey says
We buy ours already grown. And no. I’ve never used fertilizer, etc.
Elizabeth says
I did some reading and have seen many add compost on top of newspapers then wood chips.. You don’t do this step.. My ground is rather hard.. How do you get your plants into the soil… isn’t it compacted esp. w/ the grass ?
Danelle Harvey says
I have done it both ways and have had success. And, we dig right into the newspaper and the grass and plant. And then scoot the wood chips back around it.
Alexis says
I moved into a rental last fall. It’s been a difficult transition. Your post have given me so much hope that I can make the backyard what I want on a reasonable budget. I’m having trouble finding the stone you used in the shed and grill area. Where did you get your packing stone? I’m planning on using your garden method also! Thank you!
Danelle Harvey says
We got the packing stone from a quarry close to our house…
Marie says
Oh my goodness I’m so excited to see this process!!! I think I’m going to have to try this w my plants!!! They have been struggling for a couple of years!!!
Siciley says
I am so excited to try this! I have a garden bed in my yard that I’ve been wanting to try and do a garden but felt so overwhelmed to try and this is soooooo doable😄 so I can’t wait to try it 🎉 Thanks y’all are the best!
Danelle Harvey says
Yay… keep me posted. It is so easy.. and takes so little work during the season.
Lisa says
Some of the new plants are only 5 inches or less. Its not a problem if the wood chips go up to the top of the plant?
Danelle Harvey says
I pull the chips away a little bit from the plants until they grow a bit. I will be adding several pictures during the process.
Joan says
Where do you purchase your wood chips?
Danelle Harvey says
Our town has a compost so we get them for free.
Courtney says
I have some type of ground covering vine that I can’t seem to remove or kill, because it’s so stubborn. Can I do this method right over a ground-covering plant, rather than a grass?
Jenni says
I was thinking this same thing! I have flower beds that are completely overtaken by daylilies and they’re just starting to sprout now…. maybe I’ll just cover the sucker’s with newspaper and chips and hope they don’t pop through!!! Should have tried years ago!
Danelle Harvey says
It really works for grass… I’m unsure about daylilies because they have bulbs.
Danelle Harvey says
Oh… I have no clue. If you do this, I would use the cardboard… they will compost slower.
Scott says
Very interesting! Although, I could never do that to beautiful grass.
Thanks for writing about this!
lori says
I’m giving this a go too! Want the fresh veg but know i dont have the time for all the ‘proper’ garden prep everyone keeps telling me i need to do. This seems dummy proof that I can’t screw it up. We shall see!!
Danelle Harvey says
Oh you can’t screw it up. You may have to modify it a bit depending on your climate. I’ve heard from people in Texas who use this very method and LOVE it. They may have to water it once or twice, but it is totally worth the upfront work.
Kimberlyj says
I’m going to do this with herbs in an empty spot in my perennial garden. I’ll do the layer of compost since the soil would need to be amended, a lot, in that area. I have chips saved from chipping branches last week. Excited to give it a try. Thanks
Danelle Harvey says
Yay! Keep me posted.
Nancy says
I’m going to try your method, I just need to gather up some newspaper, and find some actual woodchips. Thanks for the idea.
Any says
I love the idea and I remember your gardens from before…always amazing! My husband and I just built 3-16×4 raised garden beds because where we live has sand for soil. I turned over all the grass so roots are facing up. Since you are the experienced g gardner, what is your recommendation on how we proceed? We have 16” to fill! Add topsoil? Compost? Newspapers? Obviously wood chips on top. 😊🥦🧄🥒🥕
Carrie says
Hello!
Do you ever fertilize your vegetable garden?
Danelle Harvey says
I do not.
Michele says
Would this work for Container garden, like the old washtubs? Just add newspaper and wood chips on top of dirt? Would a wash tub need drainage holes? Or maybe rock in bottom?
Danelle Harvey says
It sure would. I’ve heard of people doing that.
Ellen Cousar says
Cardboard is fantastic, but should be done in the Fall as things die. Can’t wait to your garden! <3
Danelle Harvey says
YES… I’ve used cardboard before, too. I’m so excited about my garden.
Rita says
Where we live now, we have a very hard clay. Can’t plant anything in it. Next year, raised beds. Years ago when we lived on the other side of the county, the soil was entirely different. Our first garden there was amazing. I miss digging in the dirt, all the fresh vegetables, and canning.