Thursday, May 27, 2010

He took a GI Joe and packed him in a bunch of ...seaaa weeeed.

A friend loaned me his F150 for a couple of days so I made plans to go visit family. I was raised near Galveston and in my time on Google, I've discovered that seaweed makes for an EXCELLENT fertilizer/mulch/tea. The main benefit of seaweed is that it develops a strong root system and it is excellent for moisture retention within the soil. There is a seaweed season from mid-May to about early August where it washes up at least knee-high on the Galveston beaches. The kind that washes up is called sargassum. It's somewhat spongy and stinks to high heaven. It appears to be viewed as a bane in the seaweed community as it is highly invasive, grows quickly and appears to prosper from high waste output from factories, humans and animals. But then again milkweed is by it's very name viewed as a weed and it too is seen as invasive 'round these parts. But it is also the only source of food for Monarch butterflies. So I decided to take the approach that one man's trash is another man's treasure and decided to give it a try. I got just enough to put on my gardens, I didn't want to get too much because I still have to "process" it for lack of a better word once here. Because it stinks so much I'm definitely not going to use it as mulch but I think I'm going to use it more for my next crops because the main benefit seems to be early on. Before the next planting, I'll probably work it into the soil to really build up the soil. We are planning on going to the Annual Sand Castle Competition in Galveston so I'll probably pick up more then and just put it in plastic bags.

One thing about using seaweed. It's suggested that you rinse the seaweed before storing it for use because of the salt content. I've not found any real direction on how or how long to rinse the seaweed. Some opinions even say don't worry about rinsing because you don't want to put a lot on your gardens to begin with due to it's overall high nutrient value. With these variances of opinions from "OMG RINSE!RINSE! RINSE!" to "The amount of salt contained is determined by nature and thus good for your garden", I think I'm just going to wait until the next garden so that I can do some more research and see how my garden takes without the seaweed benefit. Then once I use it, I'll have something to compare it against.

Thursday, May 13, 2010

Hello handsome! You're a good looking fellow do you know that?

This morning's walk of the garden revealed this
Sunflower 051310

I also found a visitor
Small Visitor 051310

I half expected to see a little trail of smoke with a caterpillar and a hookah at the end.
Small Visitor 051310 B

I'm trying to stay away from the obvious Alice in Wonderland reference but it may be inevitable.

Sunday, May 9, 2010

This is so much fun, it's freaky!

Remember here where I said that the green spray paint next to the shed was where wildflowers would be? Well, the wildflowers might be next year. That garden bed is 20 feet long and 2 feet wide and I had a bunch of pumpkin and cucumber plants that needed to be put in the ground quick. This was the perfect length for them

So for Mother's Day I spent the day finishing up that garden bed and planting the last of the seedlings. And in a completely honest way, it was complete satisfaction.

So to give another quote from the movie
Harry Stamper: Come on, God, just a little help. It's all I'm asking.
Max: I think we're close enough, He might have heard ya.

Friday, May 7, 2010

It's supposed to be hard. If it wasn't hard, everyone would do it. The hard... is what makes it great

I know a lot of people garden but this just seems apropos. Lately, I've felt like I've reached this milestone. Like something, internal or maybe external, is throwing down some kind of gauntlet. I'm spending at least 8 hours a day easily on my backyard, its getting hotter and hotter (the last couple of days have been in the 90's!) and I catch myself thinking how easy it would be to stop.

Gardening isn't hard but it isn't easy. It isn't just a matter of getting some seeds, putting them in miracle-gro and watering them everyday. There's more to it. A lot more to it. Here are some notes I've made along the way:

  1. Soil temperature affects growth. I point this out because mulching not only retains moisture, it retains heat. So while it is only necessary to mulch twice a year to retain moisture, it's also important to mulch in order to regulate or maintain ground temperature

  2. Have a rainwater collection system in place.

  3. Good plants for beginners are onion and garlic. With these plants, it literally is just drop the bulb in the ground and water. In addition these plants, garlic especially, repel a lot of insects go figure. Get these plants established in your garden first as their uses are immeasurable.

I think what I have to remind myself is that not only am I trying to start a vegetable garden but I'm also trying to clean up a backyard torn up by years of renovation. In addition, I'm trying to landscape the backyard so not only am I cleaning up, but I'm reconditioning and I'm trying to establish.

Hard hard work. But really satisfying and really great.

Sunday, May 2, 2010

Can I tell you a story, Rick?

Time to catch up on the stories I mentioned here.

Corner update
The thermometer/hydrometer. I did look at the digital ones but I liked this one better. For one thing, it's a lot easier to read than the digital ones. In addition, it pivots. So if we're outside or don't like the angle it's at currently, we can always move it.

Garden bed by the grill
My next door neighbor had bought too many red cabbage plants so he gave me 4 plants. I did some research on companion planting for red cabbage and discovered that dill is perfect for it. And since we are growing cucumbers to make pickles... perfect! But dill seeds were to be planted in late March so I'm hoping that the plant will bloom and do Ok.

The other two gardens
I'm going to do sister planting in these gardens with Sunflowers, Cucumbers (the Sunflowers providing the post for the Cucumbers) and watermelons and pumpkins which provide shade for mulching and weed/insect control. But remember that I had lost a batch of Cucumbers because I planted to early? Well, hopefully this second batch will hold. So far so good. It turned out I didn't have as many watermelon plants as I thought I would so I'm going to plant a couple of pumpkins plants here. While I started the seeds to late, the plants should do fine. I just don't know if they'll produce a pumpkin and/or if the pumpkin will go to full ripe in time before the first frost.

My seedling shelves
As can be seen, I have a bunch of seedlings. And we have been trying to eat outside as much as possible so I had to free up my picnic table and this spot of the yard gets full sun all the time. The bottom shelf, well there was a bit of a mishap. I was watering the plants yesterday and the entire bottom shelf fell over. The logs holding the shelf up are not level width wise or depth wise. I had to reclaim the kid's table to put those plants on there. The shelf itself was very easy to make. I took a board we weren't using anymore drilled four holes, one at each corner, and bought some ropes. I cut two sections of rope long enough to loop twice for each side. Tied a knot at one end of the rope and put it through the first corner hole. Took the rope and put it through the chain link fence and then up over the top of the fence. Then down to the corner hole in front and back again to the back hole. Once the rope went through two times, I tied the rope off at the back through the fence. It's held up amazing well through wind and rain.

Seedling containers
When growing from seed and starting with a seed greenhouse, it's advised that once the seedling has grown big enough to be planted to plant directly into the ground. However as discovered with cucumbers, sometimes that isn't the best thing. So again armed with google, I discovered that seedlings can be placed in 3- or 4-inch containers as kind of a parking spot (which is why this is the size container plants are in when buying them). The best "parking spot" container are the ones that come commercially. The reason being that the best time to move the plant from the parking container to their final or next location is when the plant is too big for the container. This can be determined when the roots start to go out of the container. And commercial containers are very easy to get plants out of. Everyone however suggest to park the plants in Terra Cotta pots. Not so good. For one thing, it's not as easy for the roots to come out of the container. Most of the time, the roots start going up and eventually the entire container becomes one big root ball. For another thing, it's somewhat difficult to get the plants out of the container. My experience has been that after two plants grown in the same container (one after the other obviously), the terra cotta pots will break.

I soon began to use whatever container I could find. Recycling cans from soup/canned vegetables/etc. work great except talk about not seeing roots. The good thing is that metal cans hold water very well so while it's not easy to get the plant out, the plant will most likely succeed because of the water retention from the can. Just remember to put as much of the dirt from the can with the plant in the transplant.

Overall, I'd have to say that the take and toss cups such as this,
are the best. The roots can easily be seen and it is easy to remove the plants from the cups. But that gets expensive in my opinion. In a moment of "Augh, I ran out of containers and I still have seedlngs!" I grabbed the nearest unused thing which happend to be a zoo cup. That's when I found the best containers. Paper cups. They are reusable for at least the same amount of time as terra cotta pots if not more. I've used some cups 4 times now. They hold water exceptionally well. For this final batch of seedlings, the dirt has been amazingly wet where as terra cotta pots tend to pull water from the soil. True, you can't see the roots but it is easy to determine when a plant is ready to be transplanted. Biggest advice on that, it's better to wait and have the plant be too big for the container than to hurry and have it die due to shock. In addition, once the cups are no longer reusable, fill them with sawdust or tiny sticks or lint from your dryer and use it as a fire starter for your fire put or fireplace!

Plus if you use zoo cups, you get to do homemade Chia pets!