The weather this year has been nearly ideal for gardening. We've had a nice mix of sun and rain and an early summer which set us up nearly 2 weeks ahead of schedule. We also installed a drip irrigation system and it really made a difference during the oppressive heat of the last few weeks. There are a few lessons we've learned this year which will hopefully help us with next year's garden:
1. Use floating row covers on all transplants. Gives 'em a fighting chance against the hungry hordes.
2. Seed squash directly. I tried starting them in biodegradable pots made of composted manure thinking that it would allow me to transplant them without disrupting the root system. All my curcurbids went into shock and slowly atrophied for the first month out there in the wild, then got eaten by nearly everything.
3. Plant more peas and fava beans. We had lots this year, but only a handful was ever ripe at any given time.
4. Plant peas/beans and squash together. The legumes will act as a green fertilizer and by the time the squash vines really start to take off, the peas are already dying back.
5. Weed the raspberry patch. Even if you think your raspberries are the most wild and voracious variety, there are weeds out there that will out compete even them. Just our luck every single one of them in the state happen to have landed in our raspberry patch.
6. Birds eat Sluggo. I don't think it's toxic to the birds, since the active ingredient is a minute amount of iron phosphate, but they will trash your plants in the process. More on that below.
7. Pinch back the side shoots on young tomato plants to promote more fruit development and control the overall size of the plant. This was a tip from local organic farmer Michele Roy. It's too late this year, our tomatoes are already an enormous snarl, but we'll have to give it a try next year. So far, our tomatoes are blight free (knocking on wood). The new location and the red mulch are working well, I think.
2. Seed squash directly. I tried starting them in biodegradable pots made of composted manure thinking that it would allow me to transplant them without disrupting the root system. All my curcurbids went into shock and slowly atrophied for the first month out there in the wild, then got eaten by nearly everything.
3. Plant more peas and fava beans. We had lots this year, but only a handful was ever ripe at any given time.
4. Plant peas/beans and squash together. The legumes will act as a green fertilizer and by the time the squash vines really start to take off, the peas are already dying back.
5. Weed the raspberry patch. Even if you think your raspberries are the most wild and voracious variety, there are weeds out there that will out compete even them. Just our luck every single one of them in the state happen to have landed in our raspberry patch.
6. Birds eat Sluggo. I don't think it's toxic to the birds, since the active ingredient is a minute amount of iron phosphate, but they will trash your plants in the process. More on that below.
7. Pinch back the side shoots on young tomato plants to promote more fruit development and control the overall size of the plant. This was a tip from local organic farmer Michele Roy. It's too late this year, our tomatoes are already an enormous snarl, but we'll have to give it a try next year. So far, our tomatoes are blight free (knocking on wood). The new location and the red mulch are working well, I think.









2 comments:
Hey Ilana and Kirt;
I've been meaning to get in touch with you about a gardening question, so I thought it would be appropriate to send one along now.....We planted a few artichokes this year and two of them are actually producing little artichoke heads (they are soooo cute). Do I pick these little heads this first year, or do I let them go to flower?? We actually got peaches this year!!!....we didn't thin them quite like we should have, so they were small, but they were very tasty. We are getting excited about what will produce next year. We are not any where near as adventuresome with varietals as you are.....Rob likes his favorites and he's sticking to them! And you still win the prize for the most neat and tidy veggie space......ours is an old person's garden....lots of weeds filling up spaces just like gooey matter filling up our brains! Anyway, glad to see all is growing well, and you're able to enjoy the bounty. love aunt kay and uncle rob
We were told by Joaquin to let the artichokes flower in their first year, but harvest them in subsequent years. We ate our first artichokes last week with melted butter!
Good luck with your garden.
Post a Comment