Is it ok to have bonfires on my garden bed when I'm not growing anything? Should I do anything special with the aftermath or just rake it into the soil?
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I wouldn't do it on my garden bed:
- The heat from the fire will kill soil life, including worms and beneficial microbes.
- If your fire gets hot enough, I think it might burn off soil organic matter.
I'm not a fan of bonfires in general:
- Most of the "good stuff" (carbon, nitrogen, etc. that would be helpful in the soil as plant nutrients) in the material that you are burning will be released into the air. It would be better (in most cases; see below) to capture this matter in compost.
- Along the same lines, bonfires unnecessarily pollute the air. Pile up the material that you would burn and bury it. It will rot over time.
You can make an exception for diseased plant material -- you don't want to spread disease around by composting it. When I want to get rid of diseased material I will put it on top of a hot fire in my wood boiler; understandably not everyone has a wood boiler available.
If you decide on a bonfire, I'd suggest doing it somewhere not on the garden bed. The ash left over from burning wood will have high pH and will contain some potash and calcium. You could spread the ash on your garden bed if you want to raise the pH of your soil.
Never burn pressure-treated wood or manufactured wood (e.g. OSB, plywood).

bstpierre
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I compost what I can, but this is a pile that is about 10x5x5 of large branches. I'd need a tractor to bury it and a decade to let it rot. Sounds like its a bad idea to burn on the garden bed though so I guess I will haul it to the land fill. – Abe Miessler Apr 30 '12 at 19:11
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5@abe: Hire a wood chipper? – winwaed Apr 30 '12 at 21:06
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Yeah that might work – Abe Miessler Apr 30 '12 at 21:27