Horrible gardner lately. Even having hubby water. Feel a little guilty. Will be back soon.
P.S. Summer gardening is way more exciting.
Sunday, December 4, 2011
Tuesday, November 22, 2011
Pests are Back
The cutworms are back. I'm really frustrated and wondering if I'm going to eventually cave and just get something to put in the soil. They are seriously the grossest looking bugs I've ever seen!!!
My lettuce is growing and looks great, but I should have had starters as back ups to replace the ones I harvest. Live and learn, live and learn.
By the way, don't leave your start trays out in the rain. They flood. I had to do some emergency transplanting.
By the way, don't wait too long to transplant. It's not good for your plants.
My lettuce is growing and looks great, but I should have had starters as back ups to replace the ones I harvest. Live and learn, live and learn.
By the way, don't leave your start trays out in the rain. They flood. I had to do some emergency transplanting.
By the way, don't wait too long to transplant. It's not good for your plants.
Monday, October 17, 2011
5 Things the Newbie Gardener Should Get
About six months of gardening experience logged now, and here is what I've come up with:
1. Knee Pads
I first saw these knee pad contraptions that you strap to your knees on my elderly next door neighbor, who uses them frequently. I picked up a pair for myself and have been pleased with the results. No matter how young or fit you are, there is only so much crouching you can take. Knee pads enable you to kneel and do your gardening business with ease.
2. Hand Shovel
For planting, pulling weeds, and all other gardening pursuits. I use my frequently. I prefer the non-rust kind for those thoughtless moments when I forget them outside and they get wet!
3. Big Shovel
For big gardening overhaul, you need a big shovel. This will help you turn over more dirt at a quicker pace, and everyone should own at least one.
4. Gloves
Bugs ick me out, so if I have to touch them, I do it with gloves. Invest in better quality ones so you don’t have to keep replacing them. Mine are pig skin.
5. Sticks and Tomato Cages
I have lots of wooden sticks and tomato cages in my garden. I use sticks to cordon off new seedlings, prop up unruly plants, and so forth. For the tomato cages, I use them to prop up plants (mint, spinach, tomatoes, beans, etc). It is essential to keep plants from plopping over on the dirt, where slugs and the like enjoy burrowing into them and causing destruction.
Monday, October 3, 2011
Trying Again
It’s round III in the garden. After two disastrous attempts at having a fall “crop” (I say crop, but my house isn’t big enough to have a real “crop”), I’m trying again. I tried not to get discouraged the first couple rounds when pests destroyed all my new starters. I didn’t even get too upset when I found hundreds of cutworms lounging in the soil beneath the ruins of my spinach and lettuce.
I figure that the first couple years will be a learning curve anyway, right?
So this weekend I finally got around to double-checking to make sure there weren’t any cutworms in the dirt I had carefully combed the weeks before—there weren’t. I put dirt back in their appropriate places and transplanted starters (spinach and lettuce) and I’m waiting patiently. I did go to Lowes to look for some pesticides “just in case” (remember I’m trying to be organic) but didn’t find any to my liking, so I’m back to holding my breath. I also want to try putting a nail next to each starter to prevent cutworm destruction, but I haven’t gotten around to that either. Such is the life of a gardener with kids…you gotta do things in stages. Hoping the bastards don’t get the munchies before I get out there to do my preventative measures.
I also planted some onion bulbs I bought from Lowes. I haven’t been very successful growing root plants, so here is some new experience under my belt!
Monday, September 26, 2011
The Plague of Cutworms
It was most definitely the cutworms that ate my garden.
Here are some rec's people gave me (remember I'm trying to be mostly organic here):
- place a nail next to the plant to prevent cutworm from curling around plant and eating it.
- Diphel Dust
- BT by Safer
- get a chicken (where the hell would I get one by the beach??)
This is what I did:
- tore up garden and picked out cutworms (found around 100 of the bastards--still having nightmares of cutworm larva)
- waiting a few days
- searching dirt again
- apply Diphel Dust or BT
- transplant seedlings and place deep nail next to each one
- hold my breath and hope that the cutworms don't come back
In hindsight, I saw a caterpillar a while ago and didn't know what it was. I should have picked it out then.
Here are some rec's people gave me (remember I'm trying to be mostly organic here):
- place a nail next to the plant to prevent cutworm from curling around plant and eating it.
- Diphel Dust
- BT by Safer
- get a chicken (where the hell would I get one by the beach??)
This is what I did:
- tore up garden and picked out cutworms (found around 100 of the bastards--still having nightmares of cutworm larva)
- waiting a few days
- searching dirt again
- apply Diphel Dust or BT
- transplant seedlings and place deep nail next to each one
- hold my breath and hope that the cutworms don't come back
In hindsight, I saw a caterpillar a while ago and didn't know what it was. I should have picked it out then.
Sunday, September 18, 2011
Problems in Spinach Land
I planted about 5 of those spinach plants you can buy at Lowes. Today, I officially have 4 of the 5 plants mowed down by a mysterious predator. At first I thought maybe it was rats or some kind of rodent, but today I found this from harvestwizard.com:
Plants are eaten or cut off near soil level. Cutworms are gray grubs ½- to ¾-inch long that can be found curled under the soil. They chew stems, roots, and leaves. Place a 3-inch paper collar around the stem of the plant. Keep the garden free of weeds; sprinkle wood ash around base of plants.
This is what the latest tragedy in spinach-land looks like:
I did find weird worms in this section of the garden when I was planting, but I didn't think anything of it. Turns out, being a gardener is more than just planting stuff, it also involves pest control.
I just Googled the cutworm. Here is is:
So they are not really worms, but actually caterpillars. I definitely saw these guys in my garden, so now I'm thinking this is what is attacking my spinach plants. Time to learn what gets rid of cutworms.
I admit, I'm gettting really frustrating with this round of gardening. My summer garden was so easy and fun to grow, and these autumn crops suck ass. The pests are all over the place--we're getting invaded by slugs again. I set out beer traps that are working pretty well, but now I have to re-plant a bunch of stuff. I've got some starters going.
Couple lessons here:
* keep starters constantly starting so I always have something in rotation
* keep said starters protected from predators--set beer traps around them to ensure their safety
* get to the bottom of the spinach predator. Try methods listed by harvestwizard.
Plants are eaten or cut off near soil level. Cutworms are gray grubs ½- to ¾-inch long that can be found curled under the soil. They chew stems, roots, and leaves. Place a 3-inch paper collar around the stem of the plant. Keep the garden free of weeds; sprinkle wood ash around base of plants.
This is what the latest tragedy in spinach-land looks like:
I did find weird worms in this section of the garden when I was planting, but I didn't think anything of it. Turns out, being a gardener is more than just planting stuff, it also involves pest control.
I just Googled the cutworm. Here is is:
Wikipedia article about cutworms
So they are not really worms, but actually caterpillars. I definitely saw these guys in my garden, so now I'm thinking this is what is attacking my spinach plants. Time to learn what gets rid of cutworms.
I admit, I'm gettting really frustrating with this round of gardening. My summer garden was so easy and fun to grow, and these autumn crops suck ass. The pests are all over the place--we're getting invaded by slugs again. I set out beer traps that are working pretty well, but now I have to re-plant a bunch of stuff. I've got some starters going.
Couple lessons here:
* keep starters constantly starting so I always have something in rotation
* keep said starters protected from predators--set beer traps around them to ensure their safety
* get to the bottom of the spinach predator. Try methods listed by harvestwizard.
Sunday, September 11, 2011
The Pumpkin Harvest
Last year's pumpkin score: 0
This year: 1
Next year: hopefully at least 2-3 good ones.
Just picked today, about the size of a basketball. Firm, healthy, and a brilliant shade of orange. This is the lone pumpkin that came to fruit after planting 2 plants that took over a large portion of my garden. Let me tell you...what a pain! We had lots of little pumpkins start, only to have the plant drop them off the vine. Online research indicates that my plants were maybe not getting fertilized.
So, here are my lessons learned:
* plant in June, just like I did. I may have even planted them too early. I can't remember if I planted them in late May or June. Either way, I picked this baby today and we're still over a month away from Halloween...so maybe a little later would be okay.
* plant in one area. The two plants I had grew in different directions and were separated by corn, yellow squash, and lots of other plants. I think this may have contributed to the fertilization problem. I can only assume that by some stroke of luck maybe an insect out there randomly helped fertilize the one pumpkin we got. At any rate, I think planting them in one area will help. Also, next year I'm going to do a better job of reining them in, because these plants like to grow everywhere.
This year: 1
Next year: hopefully at least 2-3 good ones.
Just picked today, about the size of a basketball. Firm, healthy, and a brilliant shade of orange. This is the lone pumpkin that came to fruit after planting 2 plants that took over a large portion of my garden. Let me tell you...what a pain! We had lots of little pumpkins start, only to have the plant drop them off the vine. Online research indicates that my plants were maybe not getting fertilized.
So, here are my lessons learned:
* plant in June, just like I did. I may have even planted them too early. I can't remember if I planted them in late May or June. Either way, I picked this baby today and we're still over a month away from Halloween...so maybe a little later would be okay.
* plant in one area. The two plants I had grew in different directions and were separated by corn, yellow squash, and lots of other plants. I think this may have contributed to the fertilization problem. I can only assume that by some stroke of luck maybe an insect out there randomly helped fertilize the one pumpkin we got. At any rate, I think planting them in one area will help. Also, next year I'm going to do a better job of reining them in, because these plants like to grow everywhere.
Monday, September 5, 2011
Spinach is Good for You!
I planted spinach plants yesterday. I cheated a bit and bought the already-grown plants from Lowes. I also bough seeds to plant when I get some room in the garden. I figure there are a lot of months left before I can plant summery things, so there is time.
You're supposed to plant spinach either in the fall or late winter. If you plant them in the fall, you're supposed to do it 6-7 weeks before the first frost. If in the late winter, 6 weeks before average last spring frost date, starting seeds indoors or somewhere protected. The thing is, I live in Southern California near the beach where there is no frost, so I'm thinking this doesn't apply to me. Moving onwards.
You're also supposed to prepare the soil by loosening it at least up to 10 inches deep, mixing compost and all that kind of good stuff to make the soil rich and humus.
Thin plants as they grow so the leaves of plants next to each other don't get entangled. You want to give them space. I learned this the hard way--good crops need good space.
More on this later.
Coming up:
~ still dealing with pests
~ succulents
~ transforming a blah winter garden
~ pumpkins
You're supposed to plant spinach either in the fall or late winter. If you plant them in the fall, you're supposed to do it 6-7 weeks before the first frost. If in the late winter, 6 weeks before average last spring frost date, starting seeds indoors or somewhere protected. The thing is, I live in Southern California near the beach where there is no frost, so I'm thinking this doesn't apply to me. Moving onwards.
You're also supposed to prepare the soil by loosening it at least up to 10 inches deep, mixing compost and all that kind of good stuff to make the soil rich and humus.
Thin plants as they grow so the leaves of plants next to each other don't get entangled. You want to give them space. I learned this the hard way--good crops need good space.
Coming up:
~ still dealing with pests
~ succulents
~ transforming a blah winter garden
~ pumpkins
Monday, August 29, 2011
Invasion of the Unknown
So, I had some Japanese raddishes growing (by request of my husband) and lettuce growing. Oh and some red bells. The red bell pepper plant was (foreshadowing here...notice the word "was") beautiful. It was healthy and strong and growing tons of nicely shaped, store quality red bells that hadn't turned color yet.
Until the day of the invasion.
I checked on the garden beds and noticed there was a suspiciously empty patch in one of the areas. I looked a bit closer and yep--all my lettuce was gone. Completely full on gone. The Japanese raddishes were gone too. Totally gone. I immediately thought maybe snails, but they usually just nibble and stuff. And I couldn't find any tracks or evidence of them.
I then started thinking maybe a bird. After all, I did have some entire strawberries go missing.
I found a tiny slug nesting in my bell plant. Again, I didn't think anything of it. I simply picked it out (with gloves and a shovel) and got rid of it.
After another frustrating day of things mysteriously disappearing, I decided to try one more thing. I've already used crushed egg shells to no avail. It could be a bird, it could be slugs. I didn't know. So in a last ditch attempt to keep things organic, I filled pie tins with cheap beer and put them in different locations.
The next morning, my husband excitedly called me outside before work.
7 slugs. 7 little damn slugs terrorizing my garden.
Oh yeah. We mean business around here.
Until the day of the invasion.
I checked on the garden beds and noticed there was a suspiciously empty patch in one of the areas. I looked a bit closer and yep--all my lettuce was gone. Completely full on gone. The Japanese raddishes were gone too. Totally gone. I immediately thought maybe snails, but they usually just nibble and stuff. And I couldn't find any tracks or evidence of them.
I then started thinking maybe a bird. After all, I did have some entire strawberries go missing.
I found a tiny slug nesting in my bell plant. Again, I didn't think anything of it. I simply picked it out (with gloves and a shovel) and got rid of it.
After another frustrating day of things mysteriously disappearing, I decided to try one more thing. I've already used crushed egg shells to no avail. It could be a bird, it could be slugs. I didn't know. So in a last ditch attempt to keep things organic, I filled pie tins with cheap beer and put them in different locations.
The next morning, my husband excitedly called me outside before work.
7 slugs. 7 little damn slugs terrorizing my garden.
Oh yeah. We mean business around here.
Tuesday, August 23, 2011
Growing Better Sweet Corn
We planted our corn something in late April. The year before we planted it too late and learned our lesson the hard way when our corn never got higher than our knees and didn't produce any corn to eat.
So this year we got our timing right. Great.
Other things I did right:
*watering was appropriate.
*picked them just at the right time...and the ones that were big and full were so good and sweet.
*planted them in a block, which helped with fertilization.
But....I made some mistakes. Here it is in a nutshell:
* Overcrowding. I grew them from seeds and grew too many. Then, I didn't have the heart to get rid of any, so I planted too many next to each other.
* Didn't fertilize or mulch or add anything else. I'm wondering if that would have produced bigger corn to eat.
So I did a little research. Next year I want to do better. I want to be able to eat nice juicy corn from every plant. Here it goes:
* work the soil before planting. Help the soil get it as humus as possible. Work in some multi-purpose compost before planting seedlings.
*plant legumes in the area where I want to plant corn next year. Legumes (like beans and peas) help enrich the soil by contributing nitrogen. Sweet corn needs plenty of nitrogen.
*crop rotation--so plant my corn in a different area next year.
Monday, August 15, 2011
Gardening Vocab Lesson: Building Rich Soil
I’m learning as I’m doing, so I wanted to document things I’ve learned in the world of gardening.
First, some vocabulary.
My gardening books keep talking about “humus.” Humus? Like hummus the food? I was thoroughly confused, so thanks to the good ‘ole Internet, I looked it up.
Humus: organic matter. It apparently is super excellent natural stuff in your soil that helps things grow out of control (in a good way.) You apparently can help your soil be more “humus” by composting, building lasagna gardens, and mulching. That brings me to more gardening jargon to look up.
Composting: decomposed recycled gunk you throw in your garden for nutrients the soil needs to stay rich and healthy.
Now, we’ve tried to make our own compost. We’ve put in the right scraps and used milk cartons. It just never happens for us. So, recently we bought some organic mulch from Lowe’s.
Lasagna Garden: a method of organic gardening that involves layering (just like you would make lasagna, hence the name). Here is an easy to follow tutorial of how to make one.
Mulch: sprinkled on top of your soil. It retains moisture in the soil, suppresses weeds, and makes the soil more attractive. Organic mulch improves soil fertility too.
So hopefully you see (as I have learned) that maintaining healthy soil is a work in progress. It's a continuous process. Serious gardeners are mindful of their soil quality, so this is an area you'll be seeing me post about frequently in the posts to come.
The Start of My CA Garden
When we had a new fence installed, we found out it had to be done at an angle because of some stupid rule due to the proximity of my neighbor's garage (stupid beach community--houses built on top of each other!). So, that left us with a piece of land that was rightfully ours that I wanted to do something with. I thought it was a good opportunity for me to do what I've been wanting to do--a "California Garden."
What is that, for all of you non-Californians?
It's a garden that utilizes plants native to California, which are considered more environmentally sound since they use less water, generally speaking. Here's a nice list of plants.
I plan to extend this California Garden to the side of my house too, once I find the right inspiration for such pursuits.
What is that, for all of you non-Californians?
It's a garden that utilizes plants native to California, which are considered more environmentally sound since they use less water, generally speaking. Here's a nice list of plants.
I plan to extend this California Garden to the side of my house too, once I find the right inspiration for such pursuits.
Introduction to Green Urban Gardener
Hello all!
I wanted to pick the blog name "Gardnerella," and luckily thought to Google it first. This popped up:
Gardnerella vaginalis.
Now, I don't know about you but I just don't think any readers would enjoy a blog name that reminded them of a bacterial infection of the vagina. Ouch.
I'm a Green Gardner, and a mean that in a couple different ways. I'm "green," as in a new gardener. But I'm also trying to be a "green," gardener, using organic methods.
The most important thing is that I'm a new gardener and I'm hoping to share my experiences and the things I learn with other newbie gardeners.
This was my second year attempting a garden. My whole life I watched my dad garden and longed for one of my own. Well, the day finally came where I bought a home of my very own. The first summer was a wash from moving and also suffering morning sickness with my first pregnancy. Year #2 in the house involved a sad attempt at growing corn and a bell pepper plant. The bell produced one bell which unfortunately succumbed to a fate at the paws of my dog. The corn was planted too late and never got higher than my knees.
That brings us to year #3 in the house. A little remodeling of the backyard gave us more space. We built planters. We planted at the right time. Lo and behold, we successfully grew corn, pumpkins, strawberries, beans, yellow squash, basil, thyme, lavendar, rosemary, oregano, cucumbers, sunflowers, zinnias, marigolds, tomatoes, parsley, mint, and it just keeps comin'.
Young corn plants:
Grew to be mature corn plants:
We even managed to get a fall/winter crop in the ground this week.
I should also add that we live in the city. A beach community. Hence the name "Green URBAN Gardener." Did you catch that? Beach community= tiny backyard (although to us it seems huge). I want to blog about how you can totally grow a garden even in small space. My dad shook his head so many times and told me I didn't have the space...I sure showed him!
Take a look:
We even squeeze in our drying rack for hanging clothes. Pictured here are the cloth diapers we use for our son.
More to discuss later!
Happy gardening!
I wanted to pick the blog name "Gardnerella," and luckily thought to Google it first. This popped up:
Gardnerella vaginalis.
Now, I don't know about you but I just don't think any readers would enjoy a blog name that reminded them of a bacterial infection of the vagina. Ouch.
I'm a Green Gardner, and a mean that in a couple different ways. I'm "green," as in a new gardener. But I'm also trying to be a "green," gardener, using organic methods.
The most important thing is that I'm a new gardener and I'm hoping to share my experiences and the things I learn with other newbie gardeners.
This was my second year attempting a garden. My whole life I watched my dad garden and longed for one of my own. Well, the day finally came where I bought a home of my very own. The first summer was a wash from moving and also suffering morning sickness with my first pregnancy. Year #2 in the house involved a sad attempt at growing corn and a bell pepper plant. The bell produced one bell which unfortunately succumbed to a fate at the paws of my dog. The corn was planted too late and never got higher than my knees.
That brings us to year #3 in the house. A little remodeling of the backyard gave us more space. We built planters. We planted at the right time. Lo and behold, we successfully grew corn, pumpkins, strawberries, beans, yellow squash, basil, thyme, lavendar, rosemary, oregano, cucumbers, sunflowers, zinnias, marigolds, tomatoes, parsley, mint, and it just keeps comin'.
Young corn plants:
Grew to be mature corn plants:
We even managed to get a fall/winter crop in the ground this week.
I should also add that we live in the city. A beach community. Hence the name "Green URBAN Gardener." Did you catch that? Beach community= tiny backyard (although to us it seems huge). I want to blog about how you can totally grow a garden even in small space. My dad shook his head so many times and told me I didn't have the space...I sure showed him!
Take a look:
We even squeeze in our drying rack for hanging clothes. Pictured here are the cloth diapers we use for our son.
More to discuss later!
Happy gardening!
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