Ground Covers: Seasonal Plant Lesson

Ground Covers: Seasonal Plant Lesson

Seasonal Plant Lesson: GROUND COVERS

Created for 6/25/25, edited March 2025 for Open Farm Day, led by August

Objective: Discuss the purpose of ground covers in the farm ecosystem and define the benefits for the Skyfarm. Review previous successes and failures of ground covers and how they can be utilized to protect soil microbiome. Currently we steward purslane, yellow moon primrose, frogfruit, wood sorrel, dichondra and clover.

Duration: 1 hour

Introduction (15 minutes)
What is a ground cover: Ground covers are various plants that typically grow low to the ground and spread outward. While you can select and buy seed for ground covers in your farm and garden, we encourage you to learn the offers of the land you keep and see if any of the plants there can be utilized as ground cover. Many ground covers that are locally occurring are native and have additional benefits for the space.
● Benefits of ground covers include: preventing soil erosion, aiding in nutrient cycling, sequester weed growth i.e. allelopathy, ground cover hosts soil microbiome, providing resources for pollinators/bringing pollinators for their services to crops, support beneficial insect predators who will eat farm pests, creates habitat. On the Skyfarm, our ground covers are also helpful in providing the humidity and protection from the sun that many seedlings need before they get well established for the season.

Cover Crops on the Skyfarm (20 minutes)
● Qualities to look for: Consider your site. For the Skyfarm, soil compaction is not an issue because of depth. The soil is lightweight and low in organic matter which means it does not hold moisture. At this height and location, the farm receives a significant amount of wind and sunlight; soil erosion is a concern. How can we create healthy soil with ground covers?

○ Add organic matter/create a nutrient cycle
○ Preventing soil erosion
○ Protect the soil from the sun
○ Discourage weed seed germination

● Diversity: A monoculture of any kind will be more susceptible to diseases. It is important to observe how different ground covers interact with the space in order to optimize the health of the ecosystem. What ground covers grow during what times of year, how much water do they all need, how do they interact with each other and your cultivated plants?
On the Skyfarm, we encourage the ground covers purslane, wood sorrel, clover, yellow moon primrose, and frogfruit. Some of these plants are edible and even medicinal.

● Spreading Seed: As you wait for the cover crops to grow in and become well established, you can occasionally mow them down, especially as they begin to produce seeds. This will ensure that their seeds are spread evenly throughout the area you are working with and will reduce your labor input.

Hands On (20 minutes)
● Field Activity: Take the group out to the farm to look at the different niches of the farm that host the ground covers and discuss how they came to be here.

Q&A and Interactive Discussion (10 minutes)
Encourage participants to share their experiences with growing ground covers and address any questions or concerns of the group.
Materials Needed: none
Outcome: Participants will leave with an in-depth understanding of the benefits of ground cover and how to incorporate them into their garden spaces.

Check out some of our seasonal recipes.

Aloe and Wood Sorrel
Farmer’s Perspective: April 2025

Farmer’s Perspective: April 2025

Farmer’s Perspective: April 2025

Spring has come to us in Houston, lush and green as ever. At the Skyfarm, the fields bloom with all kinds of native wildflowers and medicinal plants alongside our cultivated
crops. The thyme and chives bloom as the first round of tomatoes and roselle are planted in the ‘ground’- three stories up, in Downtown Houston. Our days recently have been intensely windy, as Spring generally is for the Skyfarm, and filled with the quiet thrums of insects coming out of hibernation.

The recent rain, which I anticipate will continue through the month of April, paired with Houston’s never ending humidity has called all manner of plant life to leap up through the soil and toward the sun. At the Skyfarm, Spring is an important season for selective weed pressure and resource renewal. The time that we are not spending planting seed
or harvesting is dedicated to pulling weeds we know to be noxious and making way for those which have value to the pollinators, and us!

The massive accumulation of green, organic matter is paramount at the Skyfarm, where we mow down many plants instead of clearing the fields. This mowing allows for the resources drawn from the soil to be replenished, no nutrients going to waste. The moisture retained in the soil by this green mulch is essential to our preparation for summertime where temperatures will regularly hit over 100 F. Keeping the soil covered and mulched in this way means we will be able to use water more efficiently and ensures that we are constantly feeding the soil. Because our soil was manufactured, it lacked the
organisms that are crucial for maintaining plant health and soil integrity, such as decomposers. Now that we have populations of decomposers, aided by the addition of local compost, it is part of our job as farmers to care for and nurture their populations in the ways we can.

For April, we will be harvesting our cabbages and sending them back to our Landfarm to be made into kimchi. Herbs such as cilantro and dill will also be harvested and then allowed to go to seed so that we may grow the healthiest plants possible next season. Our onions and garlic will continue in their growth until the early Summer, during which
time they will be pulled from the fields and dried, cured. All of these spaces will be followed up with a round of Summer cover crop in order to replenish nutrients used by the production crops.

As the farmer, the renewal of Spring finds me grateful for all our relatives that come to visit us at the farm. As the weather warms, bees and wasps, beetles and butterflies come into their next stages of life, floating through the flowers on the Skyfarm. Summer is my favorite season, but it is a time that requires great fortitude. During the summer, we grow only that which we know is strong enough to survive and prove fruitful. April is a wonderful time to plant okra and roselle seed, cucumber and zucchini, basil and beans for they are strong.

Next week, our Open Farm Day will discuss Calendula, which is a vibrant and attractive plant that makes a great addition to a Texas garden. Our lesson for 4/16 will be our Spring Herbal Tea Lesson and Harvest!

Join us each week for seasonal, activity based plant and sustainability lessons at the Skyfarm, Wednesday evenings from 6:30-8:30pm; always free and open to the public.

Check out our full event calendar.

cabbabe at skyfarm- april farm update