Posted on

New Year’s Resolutions in the Garden

Making New Year’s Resolutions for the garden is much more fun than making resolutions in my personal life.  No need to give up the cake in the garden; the exercise I get while working in the garden gives me an excuse to eat cake! 

As 2018 leaves us, I give you a list to pursue for next year.  Some of these resolutions I have already achieved through many years of work, and some of them I continue to pursue, but I will put them all here in case you need some gardening inspiration.

1. Don’t let any weeds go to seed in the garden again, ever.

This is a big one, I know. But every time you see the fronds of the crabgrass plant about to mature enough to spread seeds or the tiny flowers of henbit appear, pull up the plant. Clip off the seed heads and throw them in the garbage if you can’t manage pulling up the weeds. Get my ebook on weed control for more ideas to stop the weeds. 

There is a saying, “One year’s seeds makes seven years’ weeds,” and this is true. One mature crabgrass plant can shower 150,000 seeds onto your garden, and so pulling up that one crabgrass plant before it goes to seed can keep you from dealing with 150,000 crabgrass plants in the future.

2. Hoe the soil early and often, sort of like unscrupulous politicians encourage voting.

Don’t wait until the weeds are six inches tall to deal with them. Walk through the garden when the weeds are very tiny, or even before they appear, and lightly disturb the soil with a hoe. This will kill all the weeds and those that are about to appear, with very little effort from you.

Try to do this on the early morning of a dry, hot, day and the weeds will shrivel away in moments.

3. Consider applying mulch to the garden if all this hoeing sounds like too much work.

If you apply it heavily enough, weeds will stay away all season. Consider using heavy-weight, professional-grade landscape fabric if applying mulch made of organic materials sounds like too much work.

Don’t bother with the landscape fabric sold in home centers; it will deteriorate within a few months. I don’t care what it says on the box.

4. Lay out permanent beds in the vegetable garden.

Cultivate this area, and do not walk in it. Leave the paths between the beds for foot and wheelbarrow traffic. Reduce the cost of fertilizers and compost by applying the material only in the beds instead of broadcasting it over the entire garden.

5. Eliminate chemical fertilizers from your garden.

Feed the soil, and the soil will feed the plants. Add organic matter like leaves or straw, compost, grass clippings, alfalfa meal, blood meal, bone meal, or a general organic fertilizer to the garden. Purchase worms from a bait store or online, and add them to the garden if you don’t have any. Chemical fertilizers damage beneficial soil microbes and add unnecessary salt to the soil. Encourage soil life, and your plants will thrive.

6. Get a soil test every year and follow the recommendations.

Ask for organic fertilizer recommendations in the test results. The soil in my garden is deficient in phosphorus, and isn’t very high in anything. It’s the first year on new ground. Because I know that it lacks phosphorus, I can spend my money on adding phosphorus instead of spreading around the money on all of the soil nutrients. Soil test results also indicate whether or not the garden needs lime, and how much lime it needs.

7. Plan ahead for irrigation.

Nothing needs water in my garden this rainy winter, but July will arrive, and instead of dragging around hoses and using sprinklers that water irregularly, I will set up drip irrigation. Drip irrigation saves water and also reduces disease because it doesn’t wet the plant’s foliage.

8. Try something new.

Whether it’s a new flower or vegetable, starting plants from seeds, learning to root cuttings, managing the weeds differently or using season-extension techniques, begin a new project in the garden. My project will be constructing a low tunnel or hoop house in the garden from plastic conduit and greenhouse plastic.

I will grow lettuces and other crops that benefit from a little warm weather and protection, and then in the summer I will cover it with shade cloth to protect plants from the scorching sun. I’ll update you on this project as it progresses; I plan to begin it this coming week!

Posted on

Preparing for pigs and lettuce

I plan to put the pigs in a scrubby former pasture that we cleared during the process of building the house.  It adjoins the woods, and so I plan for the pigs to live in the pasture and destroy the sweet-gum sprouts in the spring when it is cool, and to move to the woods during the summer.  The pasture is about 400 feet from the house, and so I draped hoses through the woods this morning to see if we had enough water pressure to get water up to the pasture.  I am now feeling the fall I took when I tripped over a muscadine vine and landed flat on the ground.  The pigs will help get rid of all the viney trip hazards.  We do, thank God, and so that is one problem solved!

56675282509__ea35c4df-351e-449b-a4ba-a233a9f80576
Water for the pigs!

I haven’t made a proper compost pile in a long time.  Instead I have just piled kitchen debris at the edge of the garden and let nature take its course.  My soil at the new home needs all the help I can give it, and so I made a compost pile out of chicken manure and litter and fall leaves.  I was thrilled this morning when I visited it and found that it was warm inside, a sign of rapid decomposition!  I’ll add more manure and turn it, and get the contents ready to go onto my caterpillar tunnel bed this spring.  img_3448

We do plan to close on the selling of the other home this week, I pray, and when I went to the house to get out the final items, I also cleaned out the compost pile.  I got a couple of wheelbarrows full of the beautiful finished compost.  It is full of weed seeds, but I have put it in a nursery area where I can let the seeds germinate and kill them before I apply it to the garden.  For more of my thoughts on weeds, get my ebook, How to have a Weed Free Garden.

img_3454
Site of the caterpillar tunnel

Here’s where the caterpillar tunnel will go.  Caterpillar tunnels are inexpensive hoop houses that protect plants from the weather and allow an early harvest.  In the summer, shade cloth protects plants from the sun.  I expect to have a harvest of lettuce, kale, spinach, and other greens ready for sale this spring.

Posted on

Announcing my eBook

I have always wanted to write a book, and although I have some other things in progress that I would like to try to publish in a traditional manner, I took advantage of self publishing through Kindle to write an eBook on everyone’s favorite gardening subject, managing weeds.  In it, I condensed my years of battle efforts against the weeds into several simple methods anyone can use to keep the garden weed-free (or at least greatly reduce the weeds 🙂 )Head over to Amazon for your copy! Here’s a link to my book, How to Have a Weed-Free Garden.

Posted on

Early December projects

The weather has prohibited me from doing much gardening, but I’ve been busy with other things like this wreath I made from High Point Farm-grown cedar.

I’m also working on these chicken tea towels that I will sell on consignment at Sal’s Local Seed, a farm and seed store near my home.

I’ve harvested this lettuce once from the cold frame, and we are looking forward to another harvest soon–it’s growing back nicely.

Ashes-cat is always showing up wherever I am–she thinks everyone needs her help, whether it is me or a man she has never seen before who is working on the house. She approaches everyone, purring and twining around their legs.

I still have some flower seedlings to set out in the garden. It’s been hurt by the frost, but this winter I’ll plant the rest of the seedlings and have a beautiful garden for the spring (I hope!)