This past Friday I had quite the scare. I knew there was a chance of thunderstorms. Shortly after I got home from work I was out puttering, intending to harden my sprouts off and do some watering. One look at the sky told me no watering on my part would be needed. A few minutes later, I got a county emergency alert on my phone with a severe thunderstorm warning... potential for winds in excess of 60 mph and hail the size of ping pong balls.
I LOVE thunderstorms. Love them. (If I grew up in tornado alley, I would probably feel differently.) But at the thought of what hail that size would do to my garden, I panicked and ended up racing around to cover my plants with whatever I could. Partway through, I snapped this picture.
We did get an intense downpour, but thank goodness, no hail. Hail was in the area, though -- my husband and two friends all reported hail golf-ball size or bigger on their commutes home.
We are really blessed with the location of our house... the worst of the bad weather almost always passes us by. In ten years we have had only one really hellish bash of rain which I think was a severe microburst. I was certain the back side of the house was going to blow in. Our neighbors ended up replacing siding from that one, but we were screened by the mature trees on that side. (And given that, I try not to complain too loudly about having no decent growing area on the south side of the house.)
In other news, things are finally coming up! Nasturtiums, both kinds of pole beans (Christmas pole lima and Cherokee Trail of Tears), cukes, and I am going to take a chance and say I saw a pepper sprout. The Cherokee beans and the cukes were just up today. I transplanted my cabbage and basil, even though they only have seed leaves. I don't have much hope for the cabbage, but I can try again in the fall.
Wish I had a better camera for this Cherokee bean. It is quite beautiful, half the outer hull and half a delicate ruffle just trying to unfurl. When I checked it this morning, the hull was barely visible above the soil, and here it is this afternoon, trying to pop up.
Here are the potatoes after their second 5-gallon covering. I am now certain that I didn't reserve enough backfill for them, but wise folks at SFG have suggested straw, so I'll try that.
Radishes are getting big, as is the rapini. The lettuce is doing well, too, though no where near ready to start cutting yet. Can't wait!
Lettuces (and onions):
Left to right: Carrots & onions in the high rise, radishes, Rapini, and Kohlrabi
My lonely corn plant:
Nasturtium:
Tomato plant direct-seeded into my SFG. I can't focus in on it closely enough, but it is MUCH sturdier than the ones I started indoors!
Sunday, May 16, 2010
Wednesday, May 12, 2010
How does my garden grow?
It has been quite chilly lately. I have gotten in second and third outdoor plantings, though, and the seeds do seem to be coming up quite quickly. This would be comforting, except I still have a bad case of Plant Envy for those great big Home Depot plants!
Here are some "What's up?" pictures taken today. Sorry about the light, it has been raining all day. The biggest news is that I think I am seeing some tomatoes sprouting from directly sown seed, and my potatoes are ready for their first ground of cover-and-grow, and if I squint hard enough, I think my strawberries might just be sprouting.
Here are the Kennebec potato plants. They seem very happy in their new bed. I will be covering them with more soil in the next few days.
Thesejust might be are strawberry plants. So very tiny!
Mixed lettuces. So far nothing has been eating them, don't know if it is the coffee ground or the shed cat fur. Top square was planted first, middle square second. The bottom square is transplanted thinnings from the top square. They are not quite as strong but seem to be doing okay.
Tomato sprouts! There are two (I think) showing their faces. This one is Cherokee Purple. Trying to protect them a bit with cut-apart water bottles.
Swiss Chard:
Pak Choi, both squares (the left a later planting):
Rapini Broccoli:
Front to back: Radish, Rapini, and Kohlrabi.
Carrots, plus some onion sets interplanted:
Summer Savory:
Kohlrabi:
My one lonely garden pea sprout. I planted more, honest!
This may be Amaranth. I sure hope so!
My one lonely corn sprout. I need more! Hard to see, but the true leaves are just starting to show.
Indoor sprouts, plus some gorgeous heirloom tomatoes that were gifted to me. Why are the indoor sprouts so leggy?
The sprouts are backup tomatoes, peppers, basil, cabbage, catnip, and marigolds. The peppers were extremely slow to germinate, but they did, finally. Out of all of them it is the heirloom marigolds that are doing the worst, just one sprout from 4 pucks. I thought marigolds were supposed to be easy?!
I still need to lay down more mulch around the SFGs, get the trellises up, and think about an outdoor watering system (the hose is very unwieldy!) but given all the rain lately, I am going to wait on those projects for now.
Happy Gardening!
Here are some "What's up?" pictures taken today. Sorry about the light, it has been raining all day. The biggest news is that I think I am seeing some tomatoes sprouting from directly sown seed, and my potatoes are ready for their first ground of cover-and-grow, and if I squint hard enough, I think my strawberries might just be sprouting.
Here are the Kennebec potato plants. They seem very happy in their new bed. I will be covering them with more soil in the next few days.
These
Mixed lettuces. So far nothing has been eating them, don't know if it is the coffee ground or the shed cat fur. Top square was planted first, middle square second. The bottom square is transplanted thinnings from the top square. They are not quite as strong but seem to be doing okay.
Tomato sprouts! There are two (I think) showing their faces. This one is Cherokee Purple. Trying to protect them a bit with cut-apart water bottles.
Swiss Chard:
Pak Choi, both squares (the left a later planting):
Rapini Broccoli:
Front to back: Radish, Rapini, and Kohlrabi.
Carrots, plus some onion sets interplanted:
Summer Savory:
Kohlrabi:
My one lonely garden pea sprout. I planted more, honest!
This may be Amaranth. I sure hope so!
My one lonely corn sprout. I need more! Hard to see, but the true leaves are just starting to show.
Indoor sprouts, plus some gorgeous heirloom tomatoes that were gifted to me. Why are the indoor sprouts so leggy?
The sprouts are backup tomatoes, peppers, basil, cabbage, catnip, and marigolds. The peppers were extremely slow to germinate, but they did, finally. Out of all of them it is the heirloom marigolds that are doing the worst, just one sprout from 4 pucks. I thought marigolds were supposed to be easy?!
I still need to lay down more mulch around the SFGs, get the trellises up, and think about an outdoor watering system (the hose is very unwieldy!) but given all the rain lately, I am going to wait on those projects for now.
Happy Gardening!
Tuesday, May 4, 2010
My garden smells like an espresso!
It's sad that I'm so congested from all the pollen in the air right now, because my garden smells just like an espresso. Yep, I scored at Starbuck's!
All I had to do was ask for used coffee grounds and they got the bag right away, good wishes for my garden, plus emptied all the machines currently in use and looked in back for more. There's filters mixed in, but I picked around them. I put a light scattering across the beds, plus a couple handfuls in the watering bucket to make a tea for other plants. (Yes, I clogged the watering can head. Easy enough to unclog, though!) So now the soil has a black-brown glow to it and the smell is incredible. I tried to keep it to a light scattering so as to avoid nitrogen burn.
More plants are up!
Taters....hard to see, but they are up. Finally!
Kohlrabi. (Lots of brassicas are up. So are the carrots, I think, but I forgot to get a shot of those.)
Lettuce...
Indoor seedlings, getting their first (very brief) taste of sun.
Here's a picture of blossoms on whatever-it-is in the perimeter bed. The leaves are pulled back to show the tiny blooms.
All I had to do was ask for used coffee grounds and they got the bag right away, good wishes for my garden, plus emptied all the machines currently in use and looked in back for more. There's filters mixed in, but I picked around them. I put a light scattering across the beds, plus a couple handfuls in the watering bucket to make a tea for other plants. (Yes, I clogged the watering can head. Easy enough to unclog, though!) So now the soil has a black-brown glow to it and the smell is incredible. I tried to keep it to a light scattering so as to avoid nitrogen burn.
More plants are up!
Taters....hard to see, but they are up. Finally!
Kohlrabi. (Lots of brassicas are up. So are the carrots, I think, but I forgot to get a shot of those.)
Lettuce...
Indoor seedlings, getting their first (very brief) taste of sun.
Pea shoot! And my attempt to protect it from hungry things... plus maybe some mini greenhouse help?
I was going to wait to post this until the grass was cut and general cleanup, but, here you go.
Here's a picture of blossoms on whatever-it-is in the perimeter bed. The leaves are pulled back to show the tiny blooms.
Saturday, May 1, 2010
Mulch Day
Happy May Day!
Eight bags of mulch down on the perimeter beds, two held in reserve. Got another few compliments from the neighbors today as well, always a nice thing to hear. I am still debating how to handle narrow strips of grass between the perimeter and the SFG's; I am tempted to rip out the grass there entirely.
Several more SFG squares are showing seed leaves -- radishes and some of the brassicas. Tomorrow I want to start Round Two of planting -- carrots, rapini, pak choi, chard, and lettuce. A one-week stagger may be too tight but I am anxious about the growing season. I would rather get too much too soon than have an entire crop bolt on me later. It's all about the learning curve, right? :)
Our cats are shedding, so I put down shed fur all around the lettuce square. I read somewhere that it helps against slugs, no idea if that really works but I really don't want to lose my first crop. I've picked one slug off the timbers already, and given a caterpillar an invitation to the neighbor's yard. Next week I want to hit the Starbucks near my office. Wish me luck on scoring used coffee grounds!
Eight bags of mulch down on the perimeter beds, two held in reserve. Got another few compliments from the neighbors today as well, always a nice thing to hear. I am still debating how to handle narrow strips of grass between the perimeter and the SFG's; I am tempted to rip out the grass there entirely.
Several more SFG squares are showing seed leaves -- radishes and some of the brassicas. Tomorrow I want to start Round Two of planting -- carrots, rapini, pak choi, chard, and lettuce. A one-week stagger may be too tight but I am anxious about the growing season. I would rather get too much too soon than have an entire crop bolt on me later. It's all about the learning curve, right? :)
Our cats are shedding, so I put down shed fur all around the lettuce square. I read somewhere that it helps against slugs, no idea if that really works but I really don't want to lose my first crop. I've picked one slug off the timbers already, and given a caterpillar an invitation to the neighbor's yard. Next week I want to hit the Starbucks near my office. Wish me luck on scoring used coffee grounds!
Friday, April 30, 2010
Signs of life
The seeds, both inside and out, are showing signs of life today! Indoors (if I haven't messed up my seed-tracking) the basil and catnip are sprouting. Apparently leaving the seed tray over the pilot light for my range is working well. Outside, my first lettuce square has sprouted lots of little seed-leaves that weren't there this morning. Hurray!!! First plants from seeds in Virginia, ever!
I also consolidated my thyme into a single, new container, much nicer than the old two plastic ones, which will be banished to the backyard for catnip plantings. Here is the new one. There is plenty of room left for additional herbs or maybe strawberries.
I read an interesting post on the SFG forum tonight about homemade plant markers. I couldn't make the photo show up properly there, but here's my idea: Use old, dead hydrangea wood! I used a permanent Sharpie, but no idea if it will last through sun and rain. Worth a shot, though, if it works it's free!
Tomorrow is Mulch Day for the perimeter beds and the walk between the SFGs. We've been using chunk cedar mulch for years, but the Orange Store doesn't seem to be offering it anymore... so we got shredded hardwood. I hope it works out okay.
Hubby and I are also discussing irrigation. I have stubbornly NOT watered, for years, and it's worked out fine for the most part, but now it's going to be important. I am reluctant to saddle ourselves with a drip system. They seem to be like pagers: Once you get one, then you have to fuss with it. When I lived out west, I often used half-buried milk jug or 2-liter soda bottles with holes poked in the bottom for slow-drip watering, but given it's our front yard I'm not sure that would fly well, plus I'd need many many jugs to make it work. So, the idea right now is some sort of sprinkler. For the moment, I am watering with an old-fashioned watering can. I fill it up whenever I am done, in hopes of warming the water and maybe let off some of the town water fluorine treatment. That's what I'm telling myself, anyway.
I also consolidated my thyme into a single, new container, much nicer than the old two plastic ones, which will be banished to the backyard for catnip plantings. Here is the new one. There is plenty of room left for additional herbs or maybe strawberries.
I read an interesting post on the SFG forum tonight about homemade plant markers. I couldn't make the photo show up properly there, but here's my idea: Use old, dead hydrangea wood! I used a permanent Sharpie, but no idea if it will last through sun and rain. Worth a shot, though, if it works it's free!
Tomorrow is Mulch Day for the perimeter beds and the walk between the SFGs. We've been using chunk cedar mulch for years, but the Orange Store doesn't seem to be offering it anymore... so we got shredded hardwood. I hope it works out okay.
Hubby and I are also discussing irrigation. I have stubbornly NOT watered, for years, and it's worked out fine for the most part, but now it's going to be important. I am reluctant to saddle ourselves with a drip system. They seem to be like pagers: Once you get one, then you have to fuss with it. When I lived out west, I often used half-buried milk jug or 2-liter soda bottles with holes poked in the bottom for slow-drip watering, but given it's our front yard I'm not sure that would fly well, plus I'd need many many jugs to make it work. So, the idea right now is some sort of sprinkler. For the moment, I am watering with an old-fashioned watering can. I fill it up whenever I am done, in hopes of warming the water and maybe let off some of the town water fluorine treatment. That's what I'm telling myself, anyway.
Thursday, April 29, 2010
Please meet the rest of my yard
First off, my garden plan is fixed and should be legible now.
Nothing doing in my SFGs so far, so I thought you might like to see other parts of my (unmowed!) yard.
The first denizen is the Sage Tree. It's all budded out and just about to bloom. It grows huge every year, and as big as it looks below, it is only about half the size it can actually reach -- I gifted a friend with several armfuls of boughs last year, so to my eyes it's looking a bit puny.
Just to the right of the sage is a plant I was given a few years ago. It is hiding under the day lilies. I planted it there between the sage and the lilies because I was told it prefers shade. I can't remember what it is called, but I think it is at least semi-rare; the person who gave it to me was trying to spread it around to increase its chances of survival. I think it might be wild ginger? I'll try to find out. It spreads very slowly underground, and has an easily overlooked but beautiful purple-brown flower (thimble-shaped and -sized) which seems to come up straight from the ground by the central stem. Really neat.
Here's a closer shot of whatever-it-is:
This is Kaleidoscope (R) hydrangea 'Homigo' (H. macrophylla 'Homigo'), mail ordered from Spring Hill in 2004. I don't think they offer it anymore. Its flowers start out blue, then go green, then red. The foliage and stems turn mostly rust-colored in the late summer/fall, too. The catalog says it often displays all three colors at once but to date I've not seen that happen.
It should be much bigger but it has had some bad years of burst-stem. I also transplanted it from its original location (between Jeff and the Sage Tree) as it seemed to be getting too much sun and crowded. It is much happier by the front step.
The chives in their prevent-the-chive-invasion container. They are in a brand new location by the gas meter, replacing a shrub (sweet broom) which didn't survive winter. I have been trying to cover that meter for years now and still no luck, but the chives' spilling-over-mess seems at home there.
Below are Mutt and Jeff, my roses, named after the cartoon characters. Mutt ('Brandy') is there on the left. Jeff is a single-petal white rose (name, I can't remember, something-Spice?? The tag is gone.) Both J&P and planted in 2001. Jeff is extremely robust and regularly whups the sage tree for size and breadth if I let him. Mutt is more delicate; slender and tall. I think they suffered from the deep snow this year... both are trying to bloom already.
Off by the front is my bee garden. I am very leery / anxious about bees, but I've also always felt it important to plant for them. There is purple salvia, just starting to bloom, and Bee Balm, as well as some Siberian iris, an errant crocus, and Mutt off there to the right. The Bee Balm didn't do well last year and has never bloomed, but this spring it's already bigger than ever before. I have hopes!
Tuesday, April 27, 2010
Bed construction complete!
I was so worn out from the past few days that blogging went by the wayside I'm afraid. But, the beds are finally done!
The upper bed needed another landscape timber; it just didn't look right without it. To dig it in so it would be reasonably level -- and keep the bed at about 36" wide -- meant ripping out a big 8' strip of sod. (More sod. It figures. ;-) )
Then there was the matter of the sod the other timbers are resting on. Hubby assured me the timbers would kill the sod, but I was dubious about that in a few places, so I ripped it out. I have lost count of the number of green buckets of sod that have been pulled out of the tilled soil or shoveled/cut out. Ten? More?
After pulling out the sod, though, there were holes in both beds. (Wish I could figure out how to post pictures side-by-side.)
Here it is.... holes patched, grid set up, and SEEDS PLANTED! (Most of them, anyway.) What I find ironic is that it doesn't look all that different, despite all the hours of work involved.
Here's the strawberry jar... with a few onions planted at the top. Supposedly onions and strawberries are companion plants? I want to try planting onions (bulb or spring) in with my carrots and lettuce... and just tonight I read something about them helping against squash bugs, too. I cannot find garlic starts anywhere!
Immediate to-do:
The upper bed needed another landscape timber; it just didn't look right without it. To dig it in so it would be reasonably level -- and keep the bed at about 36" wide -- meant ripping out a big 8' strip of sod. (More sod. It figures. ;-) )
Then there was the matter of the sod the other timbers are resting on. Hubby assured me the timbers would kill the sod, but I was dubious about that in a few places, so I ripped it out. I have lost count of the number of green buckets of sod that have been pulled out of the tilled soil or shoveled/cut out. Ten? More?
After pulling out the sod, though, there were holes in both beds. (Wish I could figure out how to post pictures side-by-side.)
Here it is.... holes patched, grid set up, and SEEDS PLANTED! (Most of them, anyway.) What I find ironic is that it doesn't look all that different, despite all the hours of work involved.
Here's the strawberry jar... with a few onions planted at the top. Supposedly onions and strawberries are companion plants? I want to try planting onions (bulb or spring) in with my carrots and lettuce... and just tonight I read something about them helping against squash bugs, too. I cannot find garlic starts anywhere!
Immediate to-do:
- tonight -- plant more seeds indoors (slightly sunny anti-cat window?) as back-up for the tomatoes, peppers and basil, maybe a few other things? Cabbage -- probably too late, but I'll try. Marigolds, for the little girls next door. And catnip. Must please the kitties! DONE
- mulch the new landscaping fabric and existing beds
- general yard clean up / mowing
- transplant thyme and marjoram / consolidate (and replace?) herb planters
- sow onion seed
- build trellises
Monday, April 26, 2010
Plant list and garden plan are up
Oh my aching muscles. The beds are finally done and most everything is planted. Seed list and garden plan are up. See the links under the "Pages" section on the right-hand side of the page under the Welcome statement. I will try to post a more detailed update soon.
Friday, April 23, 2010
Sodding sod!
I am sick of sod. Loose chunks of sod and moss are everywhere in my two beds. Every time I think I've got the last one, sure enough there is another. I am pining for the beautiful tilting soil sifter my dad made years ago in Washington state. Not going to happen, but I can still wish for it. (I should point out that if I were doing "true" SFG, I wouldn't be having all these sod issues.)
Hubby got some plastic edging material the other day to help finish off edges of the boxes, and I tried installing it tonight. It is impossible to drive that stuff through sod, and sod was in my way everywhere I tried. There was a thin strip of sod by the potato box, and a 4'x 1' foot strip along the walk on the other end where the rototiller couldn't get at it. Took me a good three hours to tear all that out, and the debris filled two buckets for the compost bin. Results: Minus the sod, the gap at the potato box is too tall for the edging; it's going to need another timber to close it off. At the other end against the walk, the edging looks nice but I wish it were a little taller.
I am concerned about the upslope edge of the upper box. There is nothing to divide the amended soil from the upslope grass there. I laid out edging there, and it looked funny. Seems to want a timber, but the timber won't help with grass invasion either. Both?? Have to think about that one some more.
I did get my buckets and now have 15 gallons of soil reserved to back-fill the potatoes. I covered it with plastic at the last moment because we are expecting rain the next few days. I also got a strawberry jar. Maybe they are called something else around here, because no one seems to know what that is! What I call a strawberry jar is a fairly tall clay pot with holes formed in the sides to allow plants to peek out. Depot did not have them and no one seemed to know what they were, but Southern States Co-op had a nice assortment. (Ouch, expensive...but made in America!) Got it soaked and filled with soil for planting tomorrow.
About an hour after the jar started its soak in a bucket, I noticed a little ant running frenetically around and around atop the rim, trapped there with water all around. I let her go. (I am not a big fan of ants, but maybe this one will bring me some good luck?)
I had intended to take some pictures today, but it didn't happen. I just kept on until full dark and then some. I got two more positive comments about the garden from neighbors today (running score 3+, 0-) so I am happy about that. I hurt all over, but maybe I will dream of strawberries tonight.
Hubby got some plastic edging material the other day to help finish off edges of the boxes, and I tried installing it tonight. It is impossible to drive that stuff through sod, and sod was in my way everywhere I tried. There was a thin strip of sod by the potato box, and a 4'x 1' foot strip along the walk on the other end where the rototiller couldn't get at it. Took me a good three hours to tear all that out, and the debris filled two buckets for the compost bin. Results: Minus the sod, the gap at the potato box is too tall for the edging; it's going to need another timber to close it off. At the other end against the walk, the edging looks nice but I wish it were a little taller.
I am concerned about the upslope edge of the upper box. There is nothing to divide the amended soil from the upslope grass there. I laid out edging there, and it looked funny. Seems to want a timber, but the timber won't help with grass invasion either. Both?? Have to think about that one some more.
I did get my buckets and now have 15 gallons of soil reserved to back-fill the potatoes. I covered it with plastic at the last moment because we are expecting rain the next few days. I also got a strawberry jar. Maybe they are called something else around here, because no one seems to know what that is! What I call a strawberry jar is a fairly tall clay pot with holes formed in the sides to allow plants to peek out. Depot did not have them and no one seemed to know what they were, but Southern States Co-op had a nice assortment. (Ouch, expensive...but made in America!) Got it soaked and filled with soil for planting tomorrow.
About an hour after the jar started its soak in a bucket, I noticed a little ant running frenetically around and around atop the rim, trapped there with water all around. I let her go. (I am not a big fan of ants, but maybe this one will bring me some good luck?)
I had intended to take some pictures today, but it didn't happen. I just kept on until full dark and then some. I got two more positive comments about the garden from neighbors today (running score 3+, 0-) so I am happy about that. I hurt all over, but maybe I will dream of strawberries tonight.
Thursday, April 22, 2010
Happy Earth Day! Cow poo and carrots, oh my!
This morning before work, I moved 100 pounds of cow poo from the back of the truck to the beds. In case you were wondering what 100 pounds of organic cow poo looks like, here you go:
I stopped off at Home Depot on the way home to buy a hand cultivator (looks like a trowel but with 3 prongs on it instead) and a couple seed packets at half price in honor of Earth Day (cilantro and spring onions), total $10.33. While I was there I noticed that in stark contrast to last weekend vegetable and herb starts were *everywhere*, and I began experiencing buyer's regret. Here I'd gone and blown over $50 on seed without really knowing if I'd be able to make direct planting work, as SFG instructs. I don't have any good place indoors to start seeds (think cats and windowsills), so outside is all I've got. I'd paid standard shipping on the seeds, so they were at least 5-8 days away... and today was such a lovely balmy Spring day that seeing all those robust tomato and pepper plants and herbs and so forth was actually a bit depressing.
That mood lasted until I got home, when I saw the big brown envelope on top of my mailbox.... my seed, and after only 3 days!! There was even a note inside apologizing for their slow (?) response, plus a complimentary seed pack. Yay for Baker Seeds! Opening that box was like Christmas in April, and I got excited all over again. (I have to admire the marketing tactic, but they did deliver and then some!)
After spreading the manure, I dumped that 5 gallon bucket of red clay from yesterday, spreading it equally between the two beds. Garden Clawed everything up, plucking out innumerable clumps of sod as I went. (FYI: Apparently roto-tilled sod does not go gentle into that good night. My dandelion puller, cultivator and I had conversations with some of that sod.)
I filled up the carrot box in the upper bed and evened out everything as best I could. Then I refilled the 5 gallon bucket with soil, and discovered I had a problem. Five gallons is no where near enough to backfill that whole potato box.
It will take (by my eyeballing) at least 10 gallons to do the job, so I'll need 2 more buckets to get enough fill out of my way. I can't lay grids or plant anything in either main bed until I remove that fill and get the remaining soil leveled, so, priority #1 for tomorrow is buckets!
That last may sound like Greek to you, but it will eventually make sense, I promise! Anyway, below is the post tilling shot.
Seeing as how I was able to get the carrot box filled, though, I went ahead and planted the first square. That box is 1 foot by 3 foot, so, three squares available. (I've been warned to stagger the planting so they don't all mature at once, which makes perfect sense to me.)
I set up the grid on the carrot box using drywall screws and "Sturdy Twists" plant securing twine. This marks out the individual square feet. I already love that twine, it's cheap and has its own cutter on the reel. I did make an idiot of myself with the drill, though, until I figured out which way to wrap the twine so that tightening each screw would not simultaneously unwrap the twine. Duh!
Carrots are planted 16 per square foot in Square Foot Gardening (SFG), as represented by the twigs and the dimples in the soil there. But according to the packet, carrots should be surface sown, so I smoothed all that out before I actually planted the seeds, 2-3 per each dimple. In the same picture you can see the spikes that will eventually be used to set the row lines for the main bed.
I want to plant some spring onions among the carrots, too, just didn't get to it tonight. That is companion planting, not SFG, but still great stuff.
Hubby brought home the edging (~$25) for the bed sections which don't have landscape timbers. I will try to put those in tomorrow. Now that I'm sitting back and thinking about it, though, it might be a good idea to totally surround each bed with edging. The timbers are just lying on the soil surface, and that grass of ours is pretty determined.
While I was at it, I ripped out two shrubs that didn't last through the winter, and started working on my herb containers. I haven't figured out how to manage the woody herbs (marjoram, thyme) so that they come up cleanly in the spring instead of being all twiggy. Maybe I am being too nice to them in the fall?
I stopped off at Home Depot on the way home to buy a hand cultivator (looks like a trowel but with 3 prongs on it instead) and a couple seed packets at half price in honor of Earth Day (cilantro and spring onions), total $10.33. While I was there I noticed that in stark contrast to last weekend vegetable and herb starts were *everywhere*, and I began experiencing buyer's regret. Here I'd gone and blown over $50 on seed without really knowing if I'd be able to make direct planting work, as SFG instructs. I don't have any good place indoors to start seeds (think cats and windowsills), so outside is all I've got. I'd paid standard shipping on the seeds, so they were at least 5-8 days away... and today was such a lovely balmy Spring day that seeing all those robust tomato and pepper plants and herbs and so forth was actually a bit depressing.
That mood lasted until I got home, when I saw the big brown envelope on top of my mailbox.... my seed, and after only 3 days!! There was even a note inside apologizing for their slow (?) response, plus a complimentary seed pack. Yay for Baker Seeds! Opening that box was like Christmas in April, and I got excited all over again. (I have to admire the marketing tactic, but they did deliver and then some!)
After spreading the manure, I dumped that 5 gallon bucket of red clay from yesterday, spreading it equally between the two beds. Garden Clawed everything up, plucking out innumerable clumps of sod as I went. (FYI: Apparently roto-tilled sod does not go gentle into that good night. My dandelion puller, cultivator and I had conversations with some of that sod.)
I filled up the carrot box in the upper bed and evened out everything as best I could. Then I refilled the 5 gallon bucket with soil, and discovered I had a problem. Five gallons is no where near enough to backfill that whole potato box.
It will take (by my eyeballing) at least 10 gallons to do the job, so I'll need 2 more buckets to get enough fill out of my way. I can't lay grids or plant anything in either main bed until I remove that fill and get the remaining soil leveled, so, priority #1 for tomorrow is buckets!
That last may sound like Greek to you, but it will eventually make sense, I promise! Anyway, below is the post tilling shot.
Seeing as how I was able to get the carrot box filled, though, I went ahead and planted the first square. That box is 1 foot by 3 foot, so, three squares available. (I've been warned to stagger the planting so they don't all mature at once, which makes perfect sense to me.)
I set up the grid on the carrot box using drywall screws and "Sturdy Twists" plant securing twine. This marks out the individual square feet. I already love that twine, it's cheap and has its own cutter on the reel. I did make an idiot of myself with the drill, though, until I figured out which way to wrap the twine so that tightening each screw would not simultaneously unwrap the twine. Duh!
Carrots are planted 16 per square foot in Square Foot Gardening (SFG), as represented by the twigs and the dimples in the soil there. But according to the packet, carrots should be surface sown, so I smoothed all that out before I actually planted the seeds, 2-3 per each dimple. In the same picture you can see the spikes that will eventually be used to set the row lines for the main bed.
I want to plant some spring onions among the carrots, too, just didn't get to it tonight. That is companion planting, not SFG, but still great stuff.
Hubby brought home the edging (~$25) for the bed sections which don't have landscape timbers. I will try to put those in tomorrow. Now that I'm sitting back and thinking about it, though, it might be a good idea to totally surround each bed with edging. The timbers are just lying on the soil surface, and that grass of ours is pretty determined.
While I was at it, I ripped out two shrubs that didn't last through the winter, and started working on my herb containers. I haven't figured out how to manage the woody herbs (marjoram, thyme) so that they come up cleanly in the spring instead of being all twiggy. Maybe I am being too nice to them in the fall?
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