Saturday, March 29, 2008
Only 500 Calories! Well...mostly!
Hint: Click on the picture at right to enlarge it for viewing or printing.
Rain, rain, go away…
On days like this when I'm couped up in the house and I have a choice between housework and goofing off. Well you know how that works. I went out into my garage and prepared a new 35 cell tray of starter cells for the reception of seeds that are to be announced. I also prepared a small 12 seed starter set and planted some Four Seasons lettuce in them. These red tinged lettuce plants will add some color to my spring salads when they are mature in about 45 days. The seed starters I use quite often are made by Park Seed and are called Park Starts. I order most of my garden supplies from either Burpee Seed or Park Seed and have never been let down.
Friday, March 28, 2008
A Nifty Storage Container
Thursday, March 27, 2008
Broadleaf Italian Parsley
Parsley is a must around my home. Above is a picture of broadleaf or Italian parsley that was recently transplanted into the garden and that is known for its flavor. I grow at least a couple of bunches each season to decorate dishes and to use in some of my recipes. Back in ancient
Tuesday, March 25, 2008
It's All About the Soil
Spring is Here!
Monday, March 24, 2008
You Want How Much for That Pepper?
Chives
Taney County Missouri Soil
Sunday, March 23, 2008
A Free Market Square
I'm sure that by now everyone has associated the rising cost of living with problems associated with the dollars fall relative to foreign currencies. As of this writing I think the US dollar is now something like forty percent of the Euro. So that means for everything we buy that is an import (like some gasoline) we have to pay forty percent more than our European and Asian friends. That increased fuel cost also directly impacts other markets like plastics, transportation and fertilizer costs, for instance. Pretty soon this all trickles down to the good old supermarket and opps there goes another rubber tree plant. Ahem.
OK, so it doesn't take a genus to see that prices of a lot of things (including groceries) will be going to rise for some time to come. While most of us cannot do anything about the price of meat or how much we're going to pay for TP we can get out there and grow some of our own vegetables in our own backyards. While this is a good thing in the short term, it also generates some difficulties. One of the big problems has to do with diversity. No one family can grow all the vegetables needed to round out the dinner table. Some crops like corn need large plants in order to germinate properly. Other crops like melons, just require a lot of space.
Mind Your Taters
Onions - Not Just for Breakfast
Start Your '4 by Whatever' Garden Today!
What’s really nice about such a small area is the amount of veggies you can grow in this space. You can feed a family of three with no problem from just one of these. In order to do this, however, you must consider using three very important techniques; inter-cropping, succession and companion planting. Oh, and yes, you must water if things get too dry.
Intercropping is nothing more than having the knowledge as to what plants grow at what rates so you can take advantage of every bit of space. For instance, if you plant out lettuce starts in neatly staggered rows, you will initially have a lot of space between the plants. Lettuce will take 45-55 days to mature and fill up this space so, why not strategically plant a fast growing crop like radishes in these spaces that will be up and harvested in about 30 days. This is the way that you can keep every bit of garden space up and in high production.
Coupled with this concept is succession planting that as the name implies helps you to fill a space vacated by a harvested planted with another in its place. The seedling may a younger version of the same plant that was there before or it may be another species that will do better later in the season. For instance, I will grow a run of lettuce plants that are immediately followed by pepper transplants that were started a month earlier. Or, I may just go ahead and put in a heat resistant variety of lettuce to harvest during the summer months. In order to pull this type of activity off, you must become aware of germination times, temperature preferences and even whether or not the different plants which end up next to each other will be happy. That last point is what companion planting technique is all about. Fortunately, there are many books that offer this information in table form to allow you to quickly and efficiently draw up your own unique show. For my part I first list the types of veggies I want to grow that season and then organize a plan around them that allows me to max out the crop yields, keep the garden full of plants while doing little or no weeding. If you make this plan correctly, you will find you have relatively little work to do while harvesting up to 100 pounds of produce from a 4x4 foot area. The only thing you must worry about is making sure you keep you little plot well furnished with compost and other amendments to keep the soil healthy and happy.
One note concerning the soil is that you really do not fertilize the plants with amendments; you actually are feeding the microorganisms in the soil that make nutrient ions available to the plants. This topic alone could fill a book and if you are interested certainly read up on the subject. The bottom line is that healthy, fertile soil has literally billions and billions of micro-organisms living it while unhealthy soil does not. Healthy soil will make you healthy plants whereas dead soil will not – no matter how must fertilizer you throw on it. If you experience problems growing stuff, make sure you get a sample sent in for analysis (soil test locations are listed in the tallow pages or you can go to your local extension office) and then make the needed corrections. Oftentimes, it is just a case of the pH being too high (alkaline) or to low (acidic). In order for effective exchange of ions and cations to occur between to soil and the plants roots, you must have the pH somewhere close to 7.0 (neutral) or perhaps a little on the acidic side. Once again any good gardening book will list the proper pH range for stuff you want to grow.
So let me summarize why 4x4’s are so wonderful; 1) they are easy to create, 2) they don’t take up a lot of space, 3) you can get gobs of food out of them and 4) because of the way you plant, you rarely have to weed them. Not too shabby a state of affairs is it? They also make a perfect area for any young gardeners you might have around the house. Just build one for each future master gardener and let that become their special area. You would be amazed at how creative some kids are when challenged in this way. One child I know of planted a different seed (actually a combination of peppers, lettuce, tomatoes, onions and radishes) randomly across the entire 4x4 surface. Surprisingly, everything germinated and grew really well. As a bonus, because there was not much of any one plant located anywhere in the garden, the little tykes garden did not suffer any of the usual pests that summer. My carefully planned gardens which were located just next door however were subjected to wave after wave of chewing insects. Yes, you can learn a lot from a child.
How Much is Enough?
Saturday, March 22, 2008
So What's the Deal with Raised Beds?
After many false starts in the home gardening business I came to realize that for all the rewards of growing your own stuff there was a dark side to it all. Garden, once established require a lot of work. My first effort (way back in '91') was little more than a twelve foot square of ground in the backyard that took me all of one hour to create. I used a shovel to remove the layer of grass and then roughed up the ground a little and spread some seeds. No big deal, I thought at the time. Yes, it was no big deal. Nothing actually grew in the pitiful square but weeds. It was at some point while I was standing over this 'garden' watering the weeds that it come to me there might be more than meets the eye to the business of wrestling large succulent carrots, peppers and lettuce from old mother Nature. I then did what I should have done much earlier. I went and asked a neighbor who was known in the neighborhood for her audacious harvests. She came over and eyed my little piece of disaster and suggested I get a book or two on the subject of square foot gardening and then start slow and work up gradually. A much more humble man now, I followed up her suggestion by a visit to the library where I came across a book by someone named Mel Bartholomew. It was titled, fittingly enough, 'Square Foot Gardening' and it did get my attention. For one thing, the author promised a great deal of vegetable from a small space with little or no weeding involved! After reading that I was hooked and went home with my new mentor tucked under my arm. Years later I am still amazed at how quickly success came once I shifted mental gears and went with a raised bed. More on this to come.