Inch by inch, row by row, gonna make this garden grow

Anhata's picture
Submitted by Anhata on Wed, 04/19/2006 - 4:11pm.

Has it really been over a month since I blogged? Geez. All's I can say is, I got invaded by family. My mother's family had a reunion at our place and mom just left for home on Monday. I've been double timing it the past two days in the vegetable garden to get everything done.

Some may recall my incessant whining in the past (though I hope you do not) about how it was too hard for me to get the garden going. Well, this year is apparently my year.

I've forgone the old double dig method, or at least have modified it/mated it with the deep mulch method and what I have now is their bastard love-child...dunno what to call it, but the result are sexy, slightly raised 4 foot wide beds.

While my mother was here we finished prepping the first garden bed and I planted the onions, spinach, and sowed the seeds of the lettuces, cabbage, and bunching onions. I also planted some hyacinth bean vines in the corner of the yard and forked up a third, narrow bed by the garden fence for the bush beans. And because you can never have too many plants, we went to my neighborhood nurseries and found some herb plants on clearance. I found a really cool rugosa and a cranberry plant, too. And mom bought me some sweet little hyacinths. At the second nursery mom bought me some fushia plants, I now have three to put in the ground and one to put in a hanging pot, yay! Love fuchias.

I spend quite a bit of time figuring out what I was going to put in each bed. Companion planting, plant spacing, etc. Have worked out a plan that will not put any plants that dislike each other in the same bed, I hope. Every year I have to move around where the tomatoes and the beans go, too, which keeps things interesting.

Yesterday I:
*removed the grass clods from the second garden bed (long story, basically, I'm an idiot)
*amended the second and third beds with the organic soil building compost that you can get round these parts in bulk.
*dug up the dandelions in the garden and saved the roots for medicinal purposes
*cut off all the side branches of the invasive bamboo that we've been diggin up and set the stalks aside to dry out to make cucumber trellises.
*dug up the raspberry bushes growing around the roses in the garden.

Three or four weeks ago, I can't really remember, DD and I planted vegetable and herb seeds in trays and the veggies are raring to go and most got planted today. The herbs are still thinking about it. I also picked up some tomato plants and green pepper plants and a fuschia at the local growers market. I didn't get a chance to plant the tomato seeds you sent me, Sparrow, will they keep till next year? :bowing head in shame:

Today I:
*turned the new compost pile
*stuck the hyacinths mom bought me and the one she dug up in the garden in the ground
*DD and I planted in the second garden bed:
--10 tomato plants (two brandywine, two roma VF, and six Burgerville* tomato plants)
--4 green pepper plants (two aneheim hot peppers, one emerald giant sweet pepper and one Romanian heirloom sweet pepper
--9 bush peas (four Oregon Sugar Pod II, five Mr. Big)
--8 cucumbers (three egyptian cucumbers, five Burgerville* cucumbers)
--sowed the radish and carrot seeds (1pkg Champion radish, 2pkgs Red Core Chantenay carrots)
--4 pumpkin plants (Conneticut Field)

I watered the beds a little bit to give the sown seeds something to work with. We've had two days in a row of pure sunshine and the top 1/4 inch of soil is dry.

Now I'm done for the day.

I still have to get in the bush beans and set up the cucumber trellises and the tomato cages. Also need to put the herbs in the herb bed, then find a home for the cranberry, plant the rugosa and the fushias, then I'll almost be caught up.

Except Earth Day is this Saturday and my goal is to find the Friends of Trees give away booth and hopefully get my hands on some elderberry bushes, some fig and apricot trees, a persimmon tree, and hazelnut trees. Depends on what they have. If they don't have those, I'll have to break down and go to a nursery and buy them.

Anyway, no more whining about how I can't do what I want to in the garden. Homeopathy, physical therapy, proper meds and such have given me back my body again, at least to the degree that I can garden again without crippling myself. I still need to be very careful to not overdo with my elbow tendons and things, but even though I'm still a month behind the ideal planting schedule, I'm light years ahead of where I was last year this time.

In about a week, I think I'll be done putting stuff in the ground.

*The Burgerville restaurant chain, native to the NW, gave away seed packets in their children's meals last spring. Dunno what kind of tomatoes or cucumbers they are, so we're calling them the Burgerville variety.

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Sparrow's picture

Hi Anhata! Bigger garden here, too.

Submitted by Sparrow on Thu, 04/20/2006 - 7:34am.

Anhata! Smiling

I was wondering how you were doing. Sounds like you've been really busy! Glad to hear you're feeling better, too. I think the tomato seeds probably will keep--I planted some this year that I bought three years ago and then lost in several subsequent moves. Most of them seem to be germinating just fine. I also sent some seeds to my mother in Kansas, who has yet to plant them but is still planning to. We'll see how that goes. Smiling

We're working on expanding our veggie garden over here, too. It'll be going from 12' x 15' with no real paths to 26' x 28' with much better-defined beds and paths. I should end up with 5 long beds with 2' paths between them. The old garden bed has been pretty well cultivated with the addition of compost and sand and my digging down about 18" throughout to break up the clay. Hard work, but the plants really seem to appreciate it. I'm hoping to do that in the new garden area, too, but slowly over the next few years. My husband heard me talking about tilling and said, "why not just dig?" That is, until he finished digging and filling in a trench about 3' wide by maybe 8' long and 18" deep. He agreed with me after that (though he was very sweet to tackle that!) Eye-wink For the rest of the new bed, we've put down new topsoil and we should be renting a tiller this weekend. The plants will just have to make do this year. Still need to put in the new fence, too.

The plants themselves are doing just fine under grow lamps in my guest room closet and outside on sunny days. I'm trying to start most of them from seed this year, since it worked so well for tomatoes last year. I think I'm going to end up with about 20-25 varieties of tomatoes, which will be great. I love homegrown tomatoes! I've also got cucumbers, a couple of different kinds of broccoli, corn, peppers, eggplant, a couple of cantaloupes, cauliflower, lettuce, celery, and green onions. I'm hoping to start a few more veggies directly in the garden, even if it is getting a little late. I think now is prime time for planting most vegetables around here. I've been slowed down a bit by medical concerns and helping my SIL, who just had her third child. Babysitting is much in demand (not like I mind). Smiling I need to start my hanging baskets sometime soon, too. I had a fuschia last year and loved it! Gorgeous flowers. Smiling

Sparrow's picture

That song!

Submitted by Sparrow on Fri, 04/21/2006 - 7:39pm.

You know, I had that song stuck in my head all day today as we dug and tilled. Eye-wink

Fence and paths are next, then fertilizing, then planting. Not sure if we'll beat the rain tomorrow or not.

Sparrow's picture

PP&M

Submitted by Sparrow on Mon, 08/14/2006 - 11:23am.

Saturday night my husband and I went to see Peter, Paul, and Mary in concert. Second song they sang? "Inch by inch, row by row..."

At least now my husband has heard a good rendition of it! Mine didn't really do it justice. Eye-wink


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