This year we got the garden in a little late. We moved here the May long weekend, I usually have the gardens all planted by then, so this one was 2-3 weeks behind schedule. We did not till the land. Chris had left a large pile of lumber sitting in the clearing since the fall, so all the growth underneath was dead or stunted. I decided on the layout, bought seedlings, laid down boards between beds for walking and got started.
For each seedling, I dug a hole larger than I needed, added a mix of manure, then planted the seedlings. The peppers and tomatoes got eggshells and Epsom salt mixed in with the manure. I also planted seed in trenches with manure.
Over the next few weeks, I worked on mulching and Chris built trellis and fencing from branches. We found a millwright nearby who sells untreated pine shavings by the bag, really cheap. And if we go bag our own shavings, they are free! I laid down a few layers of newspaper, wet it, then piled on a few inches of shavings. The potatoes were planted in a 12" deep trench, then had straw piled on top as they grew.
For the fence, Chris used large branches or small tree trunks as posts. Most of the wood came from the brush pile left after the driveway and hydro poles were put in. When that work was done, we relocated the smaller trees that we could save, but inevitably, some needed to be cut down or trimmed back. At least they will be put to good use! Chris dug the post holes by hand, going down about 3-4 feet for the corner posts. We then put the posts in the holes, and piled stone, gravel and sand around them to avoid using concrete. I used zip-ties to attach the 7 foot deer fencing all the way around, and Chris hung the gate. I will go into greater detail to show how we did this in a later post.
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The garden is about 25'x26'. The deer fencing has sod piled around the bottom edges to deter small critters burrowing, and Chris buried a log under the gate to prevent digging there |
We are growing several types of tomato, shepherd peppers, brussels sprouts, pole beans, snap peas, spinach, edamame, various herbs, cucumber, pumpkins, butternut squash, watermelon, zucchini, cabbage, chard, and potatoes. All our vining plants are trellised, even the large pumpkins! The stems are growing very thick as the fruit gets heavier to support their weight.
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Butternut squash |
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Cabbage |
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Pie pumpkin |
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Pretty potato flower |
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Tomato cages, and squash vines on the trellis |
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Watermelon teepee |
The mulch is working very well, I have yet to need to water in spite of having very hot dry weather for up to 10 days at a time. As long as it continues to rain well in between hot spells, I should not need to water at all. The only weeds that are coming up from under the mulch is the milkweed, horsetail, and vetch. They are easy to pull up if I get them weekly. I'm leaving most of the horsetail as it is a useful medicinal plant.
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Vetch, the bane of my garden. They are quite pretty growing in the field like these, but in the garden they choke out any plant it can wind its tendrils around |
The only things not growing well are some of the tomato plants. I've never had issue growing tomatoes before and I have been unable to diagnose the problem so far. Some of the tomato plants have disease on their leaves. It is spotting that causes the leaves to curl up, discolour and die. The strange thing is that the fruit seems unaffected. Even on the plants with all their leaves dead, fruit is growing and ripening! Some of the affected plants are even putting out healthy new growth above the dead parts. I cannot explain why only some of the plants are affected either. The sick plants are the same type of tomato as their neighbours and its not localized to one area of the garden. Healthy unaffected plants grow beside sick ones.
EDIT: I have since figured out my tomatoes were affected by early blight, a fungal disease. We will harvest the tomatoes early and let them ripen off the vine to avoid the fruit spoiling. Then we will pull up the plants and burn them. We will not be able to plant tomatoes in that location for several years as the fungus can live in the soil and reinfect new plants.
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Sick plum tomato plant with ripening fruit |
I also have a haphazard perennial garden with plants that I brought with me from our last house. In the fall I just dug random holes to get them in the ground quickly, as a temporary home until we have a proper place for them. With only one casualty over the winter, they seem to be quite happy growing where they are.
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These Fourth of July roses were one of the plants Phoenix picked out for her birthday last year |
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Happy hydrangea |