(Music: SHE LOVES YOU,
Lennon-McCartney) (info./disclaimers [0]) (glossary [0]) (index [0]) (gardening guide [0])
She dug you, yeah, yeah, yeah, she
dug you, yeah, yeah, yeah
She dug you, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah
You say you lost your tilth, well I
saw it yesterday
But then she chopped you up, turned
you over, you wet clay
You know she dug you, and she dug
you real bad
She double-dug you, and it makes me
oh so sad
She killed much soil life too, disturbed
the earthworms in their homes
Displaced microbes high and low, topped
you with subsoil and with stones
Because she dug you, and she dug you
real bad
She double-dug you, and it makes me
oh so mad -- ooo!
She dug you, yeah, yeah, yeah, she
dug you, yeah, yeah, yeah
When you're dug like that, it makes
me really sad
Where self-sown mustards grew is now
a barren place
Perennial herbs and flowers have
vanished without trace
Because she dug you, and she dug you
real bad
She double-dug you, and it makes me
hopping mad -- ooo!
She dug you, yeah, yeah, yeah, she
dug you, yeah, yeah, yeah
When you're dug like that, it makes
me really sad
When you're dug like that, it makes
me really sad
When you're dug like that, it makes
me really sad
Yeah, yeah, yeah
Yeah, yeah, yeah
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah
Comments: Tilth
refers to that desirable, crumby structure in a soil that results from the
activities of a healthy soil biota and sensitive cultivation practices. Responding
to charges that this song is unfairly onesided, the Beetless have emphasized
repeatedly that double-digging (which involves cultivating the soil to two
spade-depths) can be beneficial in certain circumstances, when done correctly
(see any of John Jeavons' books). However, they point out, it often does more
harm than good. In wet clay soils, any digging can do more harm than good. This
is a true story.
Excerpted from The Beetless' Gardening Book: An Organic Gardening Songbook/Guidebook, copyright 1997 by Chris Roth (info./disclaimers [0]) (glossary [0]) (index [0]) (gardening guide [0])