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Showing posts with label vegetable garden. Show all posts
Showing posts with label vegetable garden. Show all posts

Friday, 16 May 2014

Finally, a nice day - 68˚F (20˚C)

Finally we got our first day with temperatures was up to 68˚F (20˚).
With all the grey and cold weather lately I felt that there was not much to write about.
In the morning, view from my porch.

A tray of flowers for my garden is already in place. Some will go into my vegetable patch, the others will find a spot around the house. (And the table needs a fresh coat of paint).

A day ago, I saw the "enemy" right in front of the porch!
I took the photo through the old wavy window panes, hence the blurriness. 

That hare was facing Molly who was tied up by the entrance. 
Since she did not move, he came up to her as close as 13 feet (4 m)! Maybe he realized that the dog was on the leash.


An hour later I was busy fixing the fence. Under the old window frames I am growing 3 tomato plants. Lettuce, spinach and peas are peaking their first leaves through the ground.
It was high time that I protected my future food against hungry hares!

The brown patch in the lawn shows the way my garden was arranged last year. I hope it will be green again in a few weeks time. 
I got the tricky lawn mower started as well! 
The grass is growing fast now and I mowed for the first time this season.
View from my garden over to Eastport, ME.
I think I have to set up a bench here - just to be able to sit and enjoy the view.


Thursday, 24 April 2014

About the "magic squares" and other gardening stuff.

How did my garden patch evolve?
I have always had a soft spot for gardening. Digging in the soil, and seeing seeds grow up into delicious foods or flowers. 
When we moved in here I just knew that I couldn't get stopped from working on that garden. 

The vegetable garden idea originated from a book I found in the library. 
It was called "A magic square", (Lolo Houbein).
My first attempt of "squares", seen in June 2012
The author suggests that instead of having a labour intensive, conventional garden, to try and play with a 9x9 ft square. Big gardens seem too intimidating, and who needs long rows of carrots, cabbage, lettuce and tomatoes when you have only two people to feed?
If you liked it, you could always add another square and so on. 
So, the magic square it was. 

Hubby was so kind to produce the wooden frames; I had decided for two. 
The idea is to divide each square in several, smaller squares, 
then plant a few different plants in each section. 
That way you get a lot of variation and it isn't overwhelming. 


These two squares gave me 2 x 9 smaller squares to fill.
I planted:
3 broccoli, 3 cauliflower, carrots, beans, sweet corn, 4 tomato plants, lettuce, parsley, chives and some flower seeds (cosmos, sun flowers).
 Same squares seen in August 2012
Weeding was not a problem at all, and it was amazing how much we got out 
of such a small area. It provided plenty of fresh vegetables all summer long! 

This was so encouraging that I decided last year to add two more squares. 
But I had to dig up soil the old fashioned way, there was just not enough time for hubby to get two more squares ready in time. 

Second attempt with added area for more vegetables
(early July 2013)
I drew a sketch of the garden to remember what I planted where. 
Now I am able to just move the combination of crops over to a different square with each new season. 
That way I don't use the same vegetable in the same spot more than once in the time of a four years rotation.
It is good for the soil and prevents diseases.

My dear husband finally had time to construct the additional two squares I had requested and I am glad for that. 
Weeding and watering is so much easier in raised beds. 
 (April 2014)
Now I am eagerly waiting for the weather to turn warmer in order to get a new round of crops into the ground. But it doesn't look good at all! :((
On my list are: 
3 Broccoli, 2 white cabbage, red beet, radish, 6 peas, carrots, 6 bush beans, 9 sweet corn, 1 tomato, basil, parsley, cilantro, lettuce, collard green, and of course potatoes. 
That sounds maybe much, but remember, there are just a few plants of each. Enough to provide a wide variety of organic greens all summer long.
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Otherwise there is not much of a "flower garden".
Most of the houses here are surrounded by coarse grass. That's the easiest way to keep a tidy look all year round. 

"Mow it and be done with it."

Nondescript, boring front in 2010
In my dreams I would like to have "botanical garden", but that unrealistic. Therefor I dug up just a very few, small flower beds. One front of the house, one around the apple tree,  an other around a big rock, and a "proving ground" where new plants are placed to see if they can survive. 

Add to that a vegetable plot and you get the idea.  

Working on a flower-bed along the front of the house.
(July/August 2013)

And should the occasion arise the whole area can easily be transformed back into "grassland". 
The front in last year (July/August 2013)
July/August 2013
So much more pleasing to look at.

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Apropos to:
Barbara: It was really easy. Just set your camera on auto and "multiple shots", keep the focus on one bird and start shooting as soon as it makes a move. I took 46 shots all in all. It could have been worse. Laugh.