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In the early 1980s I
went to Sussex, England to study small-scale agriculture at a Rudolf
Steiner center called Emerson College. The course trained people to
demonstrate good gardening methods in third world villages. I learned
three ways to garden: the right way, the wrong way, and the easy way. The
easy way was Ruth Stout's way.
The wrong way was
obvious: industrialized farming, including the use of chemical fertilizers
and poisonous pesticides, leading to the de-naturing of the precious soil.
Everyone knew that this was destructive, and had been the downfall of many
a third world village project. It was a given that a better method was
required.
The right way was, of
course, what they taught us at Emerson. It was a tough row to hoe, because
the instructors were proponents not merely of digging, not just
double-digging, but triple digging. This was a technique based on the
ancient small-scale agricultural practices of hearty Gallic truck farmers
on the outskirts of Paris as well as of terribly finicky, upper-class
British rose growers and formal gardeners. Triple digging is organic and
fanatical. It's done at Wisley and Kew. It involves cutting into the earth
three spits (spade depths) down and systematically inserting various kinds
of material from the most decayed compost – horse manure, preferably
French - to the coarsest new-cut straw. It rebuilds soil and if you
respect the earth and love to work (those with back problems, take
warning) this is a rewarding method over the long haul. Along with
“biodynamic preparations” made from diluted compost, triple digging
promises new, permanent soil vigor after a season or two. Certainly my
teachers thought so. That was the “right way.”
Much as I wanted to be a
good student, I was far more attracted to the "easy way," the less
invasive approach of Ruth Stout – especially after a few weeks of the
grueling physical labor involved in Steiner's soil building technique. The
easy way was the precise antidote to all that physical hardship. American
Ruth Stout called it “no dig, no work.” Even our excessively Euro-centric
teachers gave grudging kudos to Ms Stout and her “permanent mulch” method.
Stout was sufficiently kooky for the Steiner followers (also known as
anthroposophists) to embrace unabashedly. She had a near-religious respect
for the natural environment and, most importantly, believe it or not, her
method does work. With provisos.
Born in Kansas in 1884,
Ruth was a Quaker whose family worked a farm. She lived into her nineties,
died in 1980, and developed a reputation for being brilliant, if
eccentric. She laid claim to having smashed saloons to smithereens along
with temperance queen Carrie Nation. The dates fit and no-one ever proved
otherwise. Her famous brother Rex was also a gardener, entrepreneur and
author. As most everyone knows, he penned the Nero Wolfe mysteries. Wolfe,
who has his own website as though he were a real guy (he wasn’t), was
portrayed by Rex as a morbidly obese highly cerebral solver of mysteries
who raised rare orchids in a penthouse roof garden. In real life Rex
thought his sister crazy for her no-dig technique, calling her yard,
affectionately one assumes, a “garbage dump.” But as one writer has
correctly pointed out, Rex had servants to help him compost, and he was as
strict about his composting as his hero Nero was about schedules for
watering the orchids. Whereas Ruth had only herself and a rather dotty
philosopher/carpenter partner, Richard Clemence, who probably wasn’t the
brawniest gnome in the garden.
So Ruth developed, or
rediscovered, a gardening method that she claims, properly, was invented
by God. For it was God who decreed that each year leaves would fall and
cover the bare earth, and that in the spring, plants germinated under
their blanket of leaves would miraculously regenerate. From this and other
simple observations, Ruth decided that everyone should do what God does,
and cover their garden area with “permanent mulch.” And then, as she had,
they would discover that "There is peace in the garden. Peace and
results."
What, precisely, was she
doing that excited so much dinner table conversation among homesteaders
almost a generation ago? Precious little, by her own report. It was if
anything a kind of deconstruction of gardening as it is generally
understood. Permanent mulch, once built (and continually added to) simply
lies in the garden between and among your plants - permanently. Now often
called “The Stout Method” (though Ruth never named it and attributes the
title to her faithful Richard), the technique ranged from the crude
propagation of potatoes by just throwing them on the ground and leaving
them to fend for themselves, to a rather more sophisticated packing order
for mulch.
For starters, Ruth
opined that any vegetation would make good mulch: hay, straw, leaves, pine
needles, even household garbage without the meat and inorganic stuff.
(When Ruth started her work, in less wasteful times, there wasn't much
inorganic stuff in the kitchen bin.) In response to immediately arising
suspicions that some of these materials might be too acidic (pine needles
and oak leaves come to mind) she responded that if there was a problem of
acidity, you could just use a little lime, offering wood ash as an
example. Already we’ve gotten out of the realm of “no work” and into the
realm of some work, and some understanding and vigilance. But let’s not
second guess the woman who created the system.
She recommended a bottom
layer of household garbage (presumably the “hottest” or most active of the
materials typically available to a small gardener) with a topping of a
combination of leaves and hay. She was quite certain that “spoiled hay”
was the best mulching material one could wish for, practically insisting
on its use above (literally) all others. Whoops, did I mention that if you
don’t have spoiled hay lying around, you’ll have to collect – or purchase
- this staple of the permanent mulch system? And with the mulch needing to
be at least 8 inches deep, that ain’t, if I may say so, hay. It’s another
job of work for the no-work gardener, and though Ruth may have been
correct that there are usually plenty of people willing to part with their
used leaves and rotten hay, finding hay in sufficient quantities will
present a problem and almost certainly an expense (if not a great one).
Ruth recommended
throwing an “armful” of hay on any spot where the mulch looked thin.
Richard, the more accurate of the two, postulated that you’d need a
whopping 25 fifty-pound bales of hay for a garden plot 50 feet by 50 feet
and estimated this to be “about a half-ton of loose hay. That should give
a fair starting cover, but an equal quantity in reserve would be
desirable.”
Ruth always suggested
starting NOW, and not worrying about growing seasons. This is
counter-intuitive stuff; most would assume that mulching is an autumn
task, but Ruth pointed out that if you wait, the sun will have baked your
crop THIS season – she recommended you begin as soon as you finish hearing
one of her talks or reading one of her books (or this article). Run, don’t
walk, to the nearest repository of sour hay.
Grass clippings and
household garbage are two mulch materials most of us have in abundance
even if we don’t farm. Ruth, a thrifty soul, also suggested following
after your local utility workers as they trim tree limbs overhanging the
road, to appropriate the fallen branches they leave behind. If you can get
them before the chipper does (there weren’t any chippers in Ruth’s time).
This activity can be slotted in on your "no-work" schedule between visits
to the neighbors after a wet spell, offering to carry away their moldy
hay.
Ruth has been called an
“evangelist” or a “guru” of gardening and indeed her system sounds quite
inspiring and still attracts “converts.” People who try her method (or one
of the many more modern spin-offs) are generally predisposed to making it
work, and will report that it’s mostly trouble free, that the mulch keeps
the good plants moist and feeds them, while refusing to let weeds grow.
Ruth zealously asserted that weeds wouldn’t grow in hay because they were
under the hay, but if they did, you could just turn the hay upside down.
Yes, yes, this is work, but look at all the work she has saved you. And,
contrariwise, the seeds of vegetables, also under the hay, would grow with
no tending because they were being lovingly sheltered, warmed and kept
moist by the hay. The same hay that somehow disallows the growth of weeds.
This is illogical, you insist – how can the same material both encourage
the good plants and discourage the bad ones? But Ruth was sure it could
and her books may convince you too.
Permanent mulch (not to
be confused with products like crunched bits of rubber and the samey-looking
stones known as rip rap, currently marketed under that name) does require
“feeding.” And more than a little attention, depending on what you’re
using to build your stacks. Hay, which in this day and age is not cheap
and plentiful as it must have been for Ruth, is full of – hayseeds! To
keep them down, one hardy Stoutite lifts, turns and smashes the hay
several times a season, but still cheerfully reports “it’s a whole lot
easier than hoeing or tilling.”
Ruth answered almost
every question about her method with the words “more mulch.” Got worms,
slugs, borers? More mulch. Soil too wet underneath? You need more mulch.
Weeds creeping in? More mulch. Time to plant, time to harvest, time to
prime the soil or put it to rest for the winter? Heap on some more mulch.
Starting in 1953, Ruth
wrote articles for Organic Gardening magazine, whose archives are a
source of information about the method. As her fame grew among hardcore
gardeners and small-holders, people put her ideas to the test under
different conditions and in different climates from those in her chosen
home in Connecticut. Then she was constrained, if not entirely willingly,
to revise her method slightly. On paper, at least.
For instance, she
acknowledged that in the spring after a hard winter, the mulch piles need
to be opened up slightly to let in the warmth of sunlight to create
greater heat for decomposition. In addition, mulch primarily composed of
leaves and hay might consume more nitrogen than it gives out, at least
initially, and the attentive gardener would want to add something to
specifically torque up the nitrogen level. It really isn’t enough to put
just any vegetation on your first permanent mulch; if you want to have
success, you need go by the same rules that successful mulchers use to get
the system working for you.
One chore that would
certainly be eliminated by employing Ruth’s method is composting. She was
one of the first gardeners to envision that you can put the decaying
matter directly where it’s needed and skip the middle and tedious step of
constructing compost piles. I thought this a jolly fine notion after
months of toiling away in gray, chill-to-the-bone English weather creating
and turning steamy heaps of rotting vegetation as part of Rudolf Steiner's
arcane philosophy. Down with compost, I may have muttered. The most a
conscientious Stout gardener would have to do is judiciously recycle,
reserving the good stuff for the bottom layer of the no-work permanent
mulch pile.
Another advantage to the
mulch approach is that your garden area won’t be muddy – or caked dry. No
matter how fat or thin or nitrogenous or limey your mulch may be or what
materials you use to build it, it will almost certainly keep the soil
around your precious plants from flooding or sizzling. And this leads to
advantage three: no watering. If all goes as Ruth planned, the mulch
around each plant will hold moisture in precisely the right quantity to
sweetly dampen without over-watering. Never too wet, never too dry.
Basic and boiled down to
its essence, the Stout Method is no-till, no-dig, no-water, no-weed and
no-composting – but not no-work. It mainly depends on your idea of work.
If you’re just starting out, and have never had a serious back problem,
you might think it easier to scrape the earth a bit and add some seeds,
and then pull up the weeds as they appear. After a few seasons of this,
you may come to realize that scraping often involves the use of costly
machinery and weeding has become the chore you love to hate. Then you may
turn to Stout’s books and articles with a different attitude. You'll find
it easy to become entranced and throw in the trowel. Older gardeners and
those with back trouble swear by Stout, possibly inspired by the image of
Ruth herself scattering armfuls of hay around into her nineties.
Just read her works with
a grain of (organic sea) salt.
Quaker Ruth, who was no
liar, asserted that she had never seen rats or mice in her garden. But
others are not so lucky, and also have moles and voles to worry about.
Smearing your flower beds with gooey household garbage is like setting out
a sign that says “Eat at Joe’s” in rat-speak. Ruth's solution would
undoubtedly have been - more hay.
Being a nature lover and
eschewing inorganic solutions, Ruth would never have allowed plastic in
her garden, but many of us nowadays find that a layer of black landscaping
cloth or its equivalent can be a powerful retardant to weed growth where
you just don’t want weeds, such as around a path, and it isn’t counter to
the system. One devotee of the Stout regimen uses a good, unsullied mound
of mulch where nitrogenous productivity is required and then tops it off
with plastic. The plastic becomes the equivalent of Ruth’s ubiquitous
rotting hay. And may be less expensive.
Success rates for
Stout’s permanent mulching are, as I indicated, somewhat weighted in that
anyone who tries it will likely do what’s necessary to make it function
because of a belief that it should be better than conventional
methods. Most people who declare themselves to be actively engaged in the
inactive non-work of permanent mulching a la Stout have bitter
memories of hoeing baked earth and weeding on hands and knees for sweaty
hours at a time. They sing the praises of new earthworm populations under
the mulch and the quietness of gardening without machinery (while
simultaneously recommending that you run your leaves through a mower
before adding it to the mix).
Ruth Stout had a soul
brother in contemporary Masanobu Fukuoka, a Japanese proponent of no-till
agriculture which he ascribed to traditions of good animal husbandry among
his countrymen. His classic One-Straw Revolution (Rodale 1978) is
the field and farm equivalent of Ruth’s minimalist methods for small scale
home gardening. Both will convince you that no-till or no-dig is natural
and productive - unless you’re just, as my teachers were, determined to
triple dig. Both Stout and Fukuoka have many current-day disciples. It is
not known whether they ever met.
Ruth was a genuine
24-carat eccentric who was known to garden in the nude (though she
generally donned a granny sack dress). She is quoted as having said, "The
un-mulched garden looks to me like some naked thing which for one reason
or another would be better off with a few clothes on." This is the kind of
remark that would have bugged the obsessive Rex and his alter ego, Nero
Wolfe. It’s likely that she enjoyed her role as a gardening gadfly. She
complained with self-deprecating amusement that when she walked in a room,
conversation suddenly turned to the subject of mulch. She could be
somewhat acidic herself. Here’s an answer she gave in an interview about
her method, in FAQs, How to Grow Vegetables and Fruits by the Organic
Method, (Rodale, 1961):
“Now, for the drawbacks.
People have complained to me that mulching does not kill everything. I
just got a letter from someone saying that it won’t kill cockleburs,
morning glories, Johnson grass, nut grass. She left out witch grass. I
know that it won’t kill that and neither will it pick your peas or plant
your seeds. I am just saying (in a friendly, sarcastic way) that just
because it does 100 things for you, should it be expected to do 101?”
Luckily for anyone who
wants to follow Ruth’s dynamic example, she wrote at least a dozen books
detailing her anti-method, including The Ruth Stout No-Work Garden Book,
Gardening Without Work for the Aging, the Busy and the Indolent and
How to Have a Green Thumb Without an Aching Back. She also composed
numerous articles for Organic Gardening between 1953 and 1971.
Remarkably, giving an idea of how great a time-span her life’s work
covered, there is a Ruth Stout video in which she demonstrates her
permanent mulching method. Among her last written works were the
charmingly titled I Always Did It My Way, and Don’t Forget to
Smile, or How to Stay Sane and Fit Over Ninety. All of these materials
are available with a little web searching, though none are currently in
print. It should be said that her no-work method left her plenty of time
to write books. Her writing was human, happy and homespun, belying the
very analytical bent of her excellent mind.
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