An epic row by row tour of my 5 year old community garden. With hints, tips, disasters and *new and improved* swear words.
If vegetable gardens had beauty pageants they'd be held in July. Every plant is young, full bodied and free of disease. All well known requirements for any beauty contestant. Really the only difference is vegetables cannot play the piano or throw a baton. They have a lock on the question and answer segment though, invariably wishing for World Peas.
This year my 40' x 40' community vegetable garden is tidier, easier to keep and more organized than ever. It takes a lot of years to develop good habits in the garden. Like pinching suckers, remembering to reseed lettuce, keeping on top of all the pests, coming up with appropriate and innovative swear words.
I think this year it all came together. I fixed some mistakes from last year, tried a few new things for this year and so far everything is coming up roses. Amarosa Rose potatoes to be exact.
So let me walk you through this and point out a few things.
Firstly the mulch pathways through my plot. It is a HUGE pain and expense to mulch the walkways. Huge. Big. Huge. Pain. After doing it this year I said never again. But the mulch does a good job of suppressing weeds in the paths, it's nice to walk on, smells good and retains moisture. So I'll probably do it again.
When you walk in the garden immediately to the left and right are beds of asparagus. They are not dill. They are asparagus plants.
Just in front of them I've planted various flowers. The asparagus is very feathery so enough light comes through them for the flowers to grow but they'd be twice as big if I had planted them in their own beds away from any shading. So. Won't be planting anything in front of the asparagus again, except maybe things that like shade, like lettuce in the middle of summer.
I really cut back on my borderline lunacy dahlia plantings this year. It was a mistake. I want more dahlias again. Filling in the flower bed is statice which I've never grown before and it's FANTASTIC.
The statice is prolific, weird, feathery and is an interesting filler for arrangements.
I also planted cockscomb, which you may have noticed has the word cock in it. I hate it when people ask me what the name of it is. I mainly mumble something unintelligible and then run away. Because I'm 5.
These plants are still young, so they may produce more than I think but next year I'd like to plant about 10X as much of it.
Because .... seriously ....
The Zinnias are just getting going, once they're all in bloom I'll have pink, apricot and lime green zinnias.
Along my borders behind some more asparagus are red snapdragons and white snapdragons. Lots of them.
Up next, the first bed of vegetables in the garden is squash. NO idea what kind is in there. I know there are some Honeynut squash in there, but the others are a bit of a guessing game.
In total I'm growing Grey Ghost, Sweet Mama (Kabocha), Sugar Pumpkins, Hopi, Thai Rai Kaw Tok Pumpkin, and Jarrahdale squash. Although I don't think the Hopi germinated. Sad, because that'll only leave me with 17,893,488 squash for storage.
In the bed across the aisle from the squash is one of three potato beds I have. This one filled with Kennebec and Yukon Gold potatoes.
Kennebec potatoes are the potatoes of choice for french fries plus they store well.
More squash. Yep.
I don't do anything special with the squash plants, other than take a quick peek underneath the vines every once in a while to make sure the guy from downtown who wears bells on his shoes isn't living under there.
The Russet potato bed. The workhorse of the potato world, good for pretty much everything. Also in there are Red Potatoes which most people like for potato salad because they get soft but don't fall apart. I'm actually not a huge fan of that for potato salad, I prefer a bit of falling apartness.
The garlic you see below was harvested a few days after this picture was taken. For garlic I harvest when the bottom 2 or 3 sets of leaves have dried out.
TIP:
- Pulling your garlic out too early doesn't do anything to hurt it, you'll just end up with slightly smaller heads of garlic. Unless you pull it WAY too early and then your individual cloves won't have formed and you'll have a big blog of garlic.
- Pulling your garlic out too late could result in heads that are dried and splitting, which also means garlic that won't store well.
- Store your garlic in mesh bags in a dry and dark location. It should last at least 6 months. And even then if it starts to shrivel or sprout it's still fine. It won't be bad, just not at peak quality.
Also in the bed below is a row of leeks planted very close together. I have a leek growing technique post coming up soon and it could CHANGE YOUR WORLD. If, you know, you're passionate about leeks in the way most people are passionate about avoiding bed bugs.
More potatoes. Because potatoes aren't just potatoes; they're french fries, mashed potatoes, roasted potatoes, galettes, gnocchi, salad, latkes, chips, soup and more.
So one needs many potatoes. And many potato varieties. This is my hodge podge bed of potatoes with a bit of everything including Russian Blue, Peruvian Purple, Amarosa, Linzer, Pink Fir, and Red Gold.
TIP:
- Potatoes can be harvested any time after they've flowered. You'll get small, new potatoes.
- The time to harvest them is when the leaves all die back and the plants look dead. Even then you can leave them in the ground until it's cool enough in your house to store them. They store better in the soil than they will in your cupboard.
Onions! I didn't cover them to protect them from Leek Moths, so let's all hope and pray and have good thoughts that my onions make it to maturity without rotting at the neck from some horrible grub living inside of it.
I'm growing Red Florence Onions, Copra and a huge onion called Kelsae. It's a hybrid that was developed in the 1950's, but unlike most hybrids you can save the seeds from it.
TIP:
Onions grow best from seed or seedlings. Onion sets (which are mini bulbs) are more prone to bolting. Once an onion bolts and goes to seed, your onion stops growing.
Onions like to feed. If your onions don't seem to be growing as big as you'd like feed them with Bone Meal and Blood Meal. Mix equal parts and sprinkle 1 cup of the mixture for every 10 feet of onions.
Once you grow your own corn you will always grow your own corn. It's one of those magical crops.
TRICK
Corn is a bit difficult to germinate. I got almost 100% germination this year by covering my bed to heat it up with biodegradable mulch. That's the black plastic you see. Then I poked holes into the plastic and planted my seed. The mulch keeps the soil warm and the hole allows water to drain into the well where the seed is.
Also, do NOT grow corn in rows. To properly pollinate, corn should be grown in blocks. So instead of growing a row of 12 stalks of corn, grow a 4x4 square of them.
DISASTER:
These are my carrots. It's probably hard to see them because they aren't there.
I have started carrots THREE times this year and have almost zero success. I believe out of the hundreds of seeds I've planted, I've ended up with around 3 carrots. It is also entirely possible that other gardeners felt sorry for me and stuck a few grocery store carrots into my dirt. Who can be sure?
My last seeding was 3 days ago which will barely give me time to grow carrots. I'm not holding out a lot of hope.
For the carrots I did what I always do (and what normally works). I plant the seeds, water them in, and then cover with plywood to keep the soil wet. Dunno why the carrot Gods are against me. no idea.
Part of the reason I'm ahead of the game with my gardening this year is because of these hoop houses.
The metal mesh one is over strawberries to keep chewing pests like voles, mice, rabbits and 2 year olds out.
The lighter netting ones are to cover brassicas and peppers from flying insects that want to decimate them.
To the right at the back you can see the netting I made with nylon string for my melons to grow on. Probably is my melons aren't growing because of the snackelfarting (new swearing word) rabbits that ate them all. The same asshead (old swear word) rabbits ate all my rare bean seeds.
And in behind the mesh you can see the dill. Which these caterpillars eat but at least have the courtesy to leave me some.
I lost no strawberries to pests (except for some slug damage). My kale, broccoli, swiss chard and brussels sprouts have no holes and ZERO caterpillars hiding in them.
You can learn how to build the hinged hoop houses here.
I will never grow brassicas without this type of hinged hoop house again. What makes it FAR superior to just draping row cover over your plants, or even using traditional hoops stuck in the ground is the cover never flips open or blows away. It isn't a pain to get under for weeding or harvesting. You just flip it open and flip it closed. You will never ever swear while using a hinged hoop house.
Along the back of my garden is where I have all my tomatoes. Regular tomatoes on the left of the centre path, paste tomatoes on the right.
String training is my preferred method for growing tomatoes after testing about a billion other methods.
Learn how to do the String method here. It works for tomatoes, cucumbers; anything that has a stem you can wrap around a string.
The Luffa sponge plant. Nope. It doesn't grow in the sea. It grows on a vine in your garden. (If you're lucky)
Learn everything you ever wanted to know about growing luffa plants here, in my Ultimate Guide to Growing Luffa Sponges.
Behold the caterpillarless broccoli. Imagine gardeners. A broccoli you don't need to rinse, soak in water, swish in salted water, soak some more in hot water and then ultimately throw away because you aren't positive you got rid of all the cabbage moth caterpillars.
This is my first year growing celery root and I'm pretty excited about it.
Red cabbage growing in a row of both red and green cabbage under row cover.
TRICK:
DON'T pull your whole cabbage out. If you cut it just above the leaves closest to the ground it'll grow a few mini cabbages along the stem which are actually a much more manageable size than a full sized cabbage.
Clean, clean kale. No need for swearing here. At all.
I have two huge pots in my garden. In this one, I have Sweet Grass which my gardening neighbour gave me. (Thanks Ron)
In the other I have Ground Cherries growing.
On this particular day the harvest was a single beet (donated from Leo, a fellow gardener because my beets aren't even NEARLY ready), a bouquet of red snapdragons, scads of lettuce, some garlic and many pickling cucumbers.
Here's my Kosher Dill pickle recipe and my Bread and Butter pickle recipe.
And here's me. With my whack of garlic.
And my helper with a basket of raspberries, some pickling cucumbers and a few flowers to take home.
You know you're doing something right as an Aunt when your niece remarks that the raspberries are perfectly ripe because they're coming off the canes so easily.
A few weeks in the life of a vegetable garden is like decades for a beauty pageant contestant. So wilting, withering and possibly disease are likely to hit soon.
Within a few weeks the potatoes will start to die back, the tomatoes could get blight, the cucumbers powdery mildew. But for now it's July and these pretty young things are still turning heads.
Even without a bathing suit competition.
Beth Brand
Your garden is a work of art. Can you tell me or show me the lay out? We have a pretty good bit of space and I can do a 40 x 40. What size should the rows be? How long? How wide and how much space in-between?
Karen
Thanks Beth! I actually change the layout fairly often, but this post on my vegetable garden plan for 2021 might help you. :) Rows can be as wide as you can comfortably lean across. For most people it's about 4'. For me, it's 3.😆 ~ karen!
Garden Mom
Great looking garden, truly most success in gardening comes from preparation. I noticed that most of your crops are mounded. Do you find greater success in this? Is there watering advantages when using a drip system to have the mounds?
Heather
I am inspired to go out and weed my crazy vegetable patch, which I grew as a result of watching you garden. That said, my patch is not a patch on your patch. : )
Karen
I love hearing that I inspired people to vegetable garden. Honestly, it's one of my favourite things to hear. :) ~ karen!
Shana L Nussbaum
So I have to know how did your potato trenches work out? It spunded like such a brilliant idea and I'm determined to try it next year...depending on how yours went. Thanks for the tips abput the carrot board I've never tried that. Also the black plastic atound the corn is great. I always feel like I have to wait so long to start it. In Cali I could maybe get 2 harvests with that method.
Karen
The potato trenches? I didn't do trenches this year, I hammered a big wood spike into the ground and dropped a potato in. Is that what you meant? If that's what you're referring to it seems to have worked GREAT! ~ karen
Shana Nussbaum
Yes, I guess I meant NON-trenches! I am so bad at remembering to mound them up or even in pots I keep telling myself I need to top them off and by the time I get to it they're huge and I've missed my chance to get more potatoes off that portion. The idea of the holes filling themselves in is genius
Karen
That didn't work entirely though!! Some of them filled and some didn't so I had to go around with a hoe and pull some soil into the holes. Still WAY easier than digging trenches! ~ karen
Barb B
Love your garden! Mine is about the same size and I want to mulch like yours but having a hard time convincing hubby. Did you buy the mulch bulk or by the bag, and if you don’t mind, approximately how much was it? Did you use cedar?
The water system, where did you get it? Do you think it would work on rain barrels? We’re NE of Kingston on 9 acres and of course the garden is at the faaarrr end from the house, in the old goat run and schlepping water is a pain but we do have the rain barrels. Love the hoop house, will definitely be trying that next year!
Barb B
Sooooo silly me, found the post on the water system!
Still curious about the mulch ;)
Karen
Ha! I was going to direct you to the watering system post. I don't think it would get enough pressure to work with rain barrels, but if someone is especially crafty and can put the barrel up high and calculate gravity and speed and pressure and things like that ... maybe it could be done? I have no idea lol. I get the mulch per bag because it's easier to move around into my plot than having anything delivered and dumped that I need to wheelbarrow. It *is* a big pain either way. I wait until it's on sale and buy it by the bag then. I think it's around $2.99 at Rona. They're small bags though so for this garden it probably ends up costing me $75 just for mulch per year for the garden. Which is gross, but ... it's a hobby so I justify it that way, lol. ~ karen!
Barb B
Thanks very much, hubby was thinking it would cost hundreds, now I can show him yours and say look we can do it!
Now to start saving newspaper!
linda in illinois
Love love love
Kelly VanHoveln
This is lovely. This is my first year growing anything but tomatoes and zucchini, and I failed to plan for cabbage moths. I currently don't have raised beds, but I may put them in just for brassicas and those hinged hoop houses. What a great idea.
Karen
Hi Kelly! They work great. Way better than just covering with row cover. You can just stick hoops in the ground too (over some rebar or something to hold them in place) and drape row cover over top, holding down the sides with 2x4s. It's more of a pain for weeding and checking on stuff but works well. ~ karen!
Jody
Do you rotate? Your crops I mean.
Karen
Yes, and yes. Although it'll be less rotation with the brassicas. I have 2 mesh hoop houses and one low tunnel for them. The low tunnel can be moved anywhere and if I have to I can mix and match lids between the berries, kale, broccoli etc. Next year finding a spot for the tomatoes is going to be tricky just based on the direction of the sun. But honestly I know gardeners (real hard core gardeners who've written books) who do NOT rotate. ~ karen!
Ramona
Once again , you’ve made my day! This will be my last hoop-less year💕
Karen
Amen. They are THE THE THE THE BEST! ~ karen
Bonfire
Can you give us your irrigation watering schedule? We have the same system and I seem to vary between letting it dry out too much and completely soaking it! Also wondering what you will do next year with crop rotation and your hoop houses? (I know, I know...it's early, but surely you've got your whole next year's garden planned out already? LOL!!!)
Karen
Ha! NOT quite planned out yet. ;) Um, not even thought of yet. For the watering, I water close to daily for 1/2 hr to 1 hr. I just turn it on when I"m up at the garden, I don't have it on a timer. That seems to do the trick. It's hard to say though because the soil I have drains like crazy. Partly because of the soil and partly because they're raised beds. So it dries out incredibly quickly. For the hoop houses I'm not going to worry about rotation. Shocker! I know. I'll just rotate back and forth each year. So kale on the left this year, with peppers, broccoli and brussels sprouts on the right. Next year I'll flip it. I can also take the lids off and switch them, putting my strawberries in the outer 2 beds instead of the inner two when it's time to start new runners in a year or so. ~ karen!
Colleen Banner
Beautiful garden. Doesn't look like a community garden. I am spoiled having my mom grown vegetables and getting to taste how wonderful they are compared to store bought ones.
lisamc
Yeah, I love your new swear! The snaklefarting bunnies ate my beautiful beans, too (Cherokee Trail of Tears )....all of them and I wanted to cry. Actually, I did cry. Then I tried to kill the bunny. Then I found the nest with the three babies and couldn't kill the Mommy. But I won't lie, I thought about it for a second or two.
The bunnies were able to nest in my garden because it is a weedy disaster. I made the mistake of building a new chicken coop with a 12 x 12 run. You warned us in your coop building days about this, but I didn't listen. For over a month it has consumed my every waking moment and a few of my sleeping ones, too. This is the project that will never ever be finished. Just when I think I'm nearing the end I realize there is MORE to do! Predator proofing is pure, unadulterated hell when you have raccoons, coyotes, weasels, the neighbor's untrained stupid (don't I really mean asshead?) dogs and (a new entry in the WTF category) fisher cats.
But NEXT year I'll have it all under control ; )
ps- "ground booger" for slugs is your best ever renaming
Karen
Thanks Lisa! I will not lie. I was pretty proud of myself with "ground booger". ~ karen!
Mary
The most optimistic person is a gardener in spring. I have just recently stumbled onto your blog, and am learning, laughing and totally enjoying it. I even talked my husband into reading it, and he hates everything on the net. He has confessed that your hoop beds look like a good idea for the new garden area we hope to pull together for next summer. Thanks for a good read.
Renee Ryz
What exactly is sweet grass? An ornamental or for the kitty? I need suggestions on grasshopper control. I never had an issue with them, but had a ton last year, that I disposed of as I found them. There's a bunch of babies, and they are fast & hard to squish. What can I use now, or to stop them next year? They eat the petals off the flowers before they can even open all the way...:(
Karen
You know what? I've never had a real problem with grasshoppers so I don't have a solution for them. :/ I have more this year than I have ever had before but they aren't causing any visible damage so I just leave them alone. I know grasshoppers are a huge pest so there must be something that should work. I just don't like to say so if I haven't actually used the tactic/product myself. Oh! And sweet grass is a very long, tough grass that smells delicious. Like almond/vanilla. It's used in indigenous ceremonies and for incense. ~ karen!
Jennifer
Yes, you NEED all the dahlias. It’s an addiction. A beautiful addiction.
Meg
This is the most beautiful garden! I feel this year it's so organized and tidy. Lovely!
I *so* long to have a garden! Probably by the time I do you'll have figured out ALL the problems. *perfect!* I mean - holy crap, I'm amazed at those pest-free broccoli plants!!
I just moved, so since it's nearly August I'm starting some herb/veggie plants in containers inside. We'll see how they do, despite being off-season! haha! I'm not even sure that will work, but I'm going to try!
And maybe *next* year (I say this every year to myself) I'll be able to plant some things outside. Until then *please please please* keep posting photos of your garden. Even when it gets tired and hot in the middle of August.
Theresa Johnson
Overachiever. (In a good way.) Nicely done!
Nicole
So if you don't like them in potato salad, what do you use the Red potatoes for? I swore this was going to be the year I actually gardened. I lied. On the other hand, I have been busy doing other things, not just sitting on the couch (although that's where I am at the moment) and Boston's been setting heat records.
Peggy
Your garden is just beautiful! My parents, sister and I share gardening pictures and stories all summer. And often in the depths of an Alberta winter as we dream and plan. Interestingly, I too seeded carrots twice this year and ended up with a barren bed with 5 lonely carrots. Bizarre. I look forward to your posts, Karen, so keep ‘em coming!
Julie
Beautiful garden! We are growing giant pumpkins this year. The package says you have to basically mate the flowers yourselves then pour beer down the stems for bigger pumpkins. I think we'll just leave it alone for now, I don't want to interfere with pumpkin relationships. I'll let them "mate" themselves!
Elizabeth Welker Seufert
LOL Drunken pumpkin mating.