This year, for the first time, I'm using row covers. I find them difficult to work with. They tear easily and it's especially hard to remove all the ground staples to lift the cover to work on the rows beneath it. I uncovered one row yesterday and within an hour some critter munched on the leaves. Slugs?
Tuesday, April 8, 2014
I'm trying out straw bales for the first time. I found this article helpful. He gives instructions on prepping the bales.
http://modernfarmer.com/2013/07/straw-bale-gardening/
http://modernfarmer.com/2013/07/straw-bale-gardening/
Gardening with Straw Bales
Two weeks of conditioning and I'll be ready to plant in these bales. The tree limbs are from my stash and we wove them together. I packed clay soil around the bases of the poles. Next I'll wrap the whole thing in plastic to speed up the bale's breakdown. I use urine to break mine down.
Two weeks of conditioning and I'll be ready to plant in these bales. The tree limbs are from my stash and we wove them together. I packed clay soil around the bases of the poles. Next I'll wrap the whole thing in plastic to speed up the bale's breakdown. I use urine to break mine down.
Wednesday, February 26, 2014
Zone 7
With lower elevations and longer days, a variety of vegetables will thrive in a Zone 7 garden. Lettuce, cabbage, broccoli and Brussels sprouts can be planted before the last frost. Carrots, beets, radishes, and parsnips will also do well. Onions, potatoes, peas, radishes, salad greens, and a variety of herbs can also be planted during this time frame. Most areas in zone 7 get moderate to high rainfall and many areas have little snowcover in winter. This makes zone 7 gardening an ideal gardening environment. Fall-grown vegetables, in particular, are usually of very high quality.Monday, February 24, 2014
Who's
planting veggies in their flower beds this year? Did you know Rainbow
Swiss Chard is gorgeous even if you don't eat it? Strawberries make
great ground cover in blank areas. Green sweet peas have pretty flowers
and you can grow them on your fence or a trellis. You don't have to go
all-out. Start small, and if you're a landscape gardener, think of
adding pretty veggies to your yard. Even if you
live in an apartment you can grow veggies on your deck. In giant pots,
plant tall full-sun vegetable so you can grow more shade-requiring
veggies beneath. I'm all about the food garden this year. One last
thing: PLEASE, if you buy seeds, buy organic. GMO (genetically modified
seeds) are pernicious evil things that pollute not only your garden, but
your neighbor's. If you plant your GMO near my Heirloom Organic
veggies, I'ma be mad.
I keep posting about starting small growing areas anywhere you can. Even large pots work in a sunny location. This UN Report says small-scale organic farming is the way to feed the world. This year I plan to over grow so I can donate to the soup kitchen here in town. I urge you to grow something --- anything edible. Do it this year. Save the world.
http://overgrowthesystem.com/un-report-says-small-scale-organic-farming-only-way-to-feed-the-world/
*I'm making new beds in the back for flowers, like zinnias, to grow. That way bees will flock to my garden. I'm using the lasagna method, which is excellent. I first learned of it from Peter Fossel. I believe he still works the Hermitage...? Anyway, other than straw bales, the lasagne method is the easiest way to start a new bed.
I keep posting about starting small growing areas anywhere you can. Even large pots work in a sunny location. This UN Report says small-scale organic farming is the way to feed the world. This year I plan to over grow so I can donate to the soup kitchen here in town. I urge you to grow something --- anything edible. Do it this year. Save the world.
http://overgrowthesystem.com/un-report-says-small-scale-organic-farming-only-way-to-feed-the-world/
*I'm making new beds in the back for flowers, like zinnias, to grow. That way bees will flock to my garden. I'm using the lasagna method, which is excellent. I first learned of it from Peter Fossel. I believe he still works the Hermitage...? Anyway, other than straw bales, the lasagne method is the easiest way to start a new bed.
*Using
hula hoops to grow plants. I'll cut them and bury the ends, then attach
small fence mesh to cover them. This is how I'll grow my tomatoes this
year. I want them up and off the ground. And this year I'm collecting
yogurt cups, etc., to create cutworm guards.
*If
you use a cold frame to extend your growing season, line the inside with
plastic milk jugs filled with water. The water be warmed by the sun,
and will help reduce temperature swings inside the cold frame. The
result: a lower chance of frost damage at night and overheating during
the day.
*Dog food as fertilizer boost? Need to build a cuke trellis?
Check it out here: http://www.johnaburks.com/?p=799
*More trellis ideas
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