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Posts from the ‘Potager’ Category

Veggie Garden Progress – Wordless Wednesday

Tomatoes are already out of control! Can you see the cages holding them up?

Nothing ripe...yet

Hoping for a bumper potato crop this year

Green beans are little behind but catching up FAST!

Hummingbird feeder

Tomatillos & peppers are finally showing fruit

She swore she was only eating bugs but I'm not sure I believe her...

Cabbage & brussels sprouts are almost too pretty to eat

Our NEW Backyard Sanctuary

This past week we finally finished our back patio. We took a little time off in June to visit France and England (it was a blast). But, when we came home to a giant dirt hole, we knew we needed to get the patio finished. After all, we’ve had the stone since April! To speed up the process I invited friends over for a tea party – giving us a week to get it all done.

The main reason for the new patio (beside it’s beauty) is to have a permanent home for our patio furniture and pots. Since we removed the lawn we’ll also have less mowing and watering. Plus, it’s great for our outdoor movie nights.

We used Tumbled Pennsylvania Bluestone since it’s the same type of stone used on the front walkway and we liked the different shapes of the stones. I wanted our patio to look natural and old – not perfect! We even left a space between the stones so a variety of ground cover would fill the gaps. So far the chickens have only eaten/devoured/destroyed the Blue Star Creeper.

To see my inspiration and before pictures you can check out a post I wrote a couple months ago: My Backyard Inspiration Picture.

Here’s my new patio:

New patio looking towards the house.

View of the back of the garage & veggie beds from the house.

Our fire pit & movie watching area. We've even got a spot set aside for an outdoor outlet.

Raised veggie & herb beds.

Pots filled with Creeping Jenny, Coleus, Bamboo, Heather & Midnight Wine Wiegela.

Coleus, Hebe & Variegated Holly.

Containers full of Coleus, Creeping Jenny, Hebe, Heather, Corkscrew Willow & Bonsai Maple.

Container filled with a young Dogwood, Heather, Coleus & Creeping Jenny.

Our backyard is now low maintenance and sustainable. I love it! Now, we relax.

My Veggie Garden Evolution

I’m not going to spend a lot of time talking about how I think it’s mean/discouraging when someone criticizes someone else’s garden or garden style. It happens. I’m one of the folks that thinks that anyone can and should garden (see my quote in the side bar). Really. Just do what you can.

To give a little encouragement to those just starting a veggie garden, I’m going to post pictures showing how my garden has evolved over the years. I’ve been growing veggies since 2002 – so almost nine years.

You’ll notice that my first veggie garden was pretty ugly, weedy and wimpy!  I mulched the pathway but not the weedy beds and those trellises wouldn’t hold anything up.  I remember how proud I was of this garden – and still am.

2002 Veggie Garden Beaux Arts Cottage

I doubled the veggie garden the second year. I also added tomatoes and dahlias! Oh, and the neighbors started remodeling their house — now that’s UGLY! The crazy mess in the middle is my herb garden.

2003 Veggie Garden Beaux Arts Cottage

I couldn’t find a picture of the 2004 Veggie garden but remember it was crazy with two large rows of green beans.

I had a wimpy garden in 2005 with mostly squash since I just bought a house and creating the perennial gardens took up all my time.

In 2006 I cleaned up a sunny spot on the North side of my lot and made brand new trellises for my green beans. This was back when I used red plastic mulch under my tomatoes. Now I cut up black garbage bags.

2006 Veggie Garden Monroe House Spring

In the winter of 2007 we added raised beds – I love them. We still have them today. Look how nice the beds look in early summer.

2009 Veggie Garden Monroe House

This is what the garden looks like in late September. Yikes. I have plastic over the tomatoes to keep the rain off.

2009 Veggie Garden Monroe House Late Summer/Fall

Here’s what the garden looks like today. We are in the process of remodeling the backyard and adding a stone patio — but it sure looks ugly right now. I’m not worried. I know it’s going to look great!

2010 Veggie Garden & Backyard Remodel MESS

See. It takes awhile to get your garden started. When you do get it started it may look good on some days and look like a bomb went off on other days. At least I have a fence to hide behind.

Updated 3/23:

What I’ve learned

  1. Raised beds are better for weed control and don’t need to be fancy. The community garden in my neighborhood uses *free* pallets and cuts into sections for raised beds.
  2. Drip irrigation works great for watering. I got a timer for $30 at Costco and I have all my drip hoses hooked up for early morning watering (in summer). My garden waters itself. Plus a lot of plants don’t like to be watered from above.
  3. To remove grass I now put down newspaper/cardboard and cover with mulch (we use leaves in the fall).  This kills the grass and adds nutrients back to the soil.  This works WAY better than laying down a tarp.
  4. If not using raised beds, try using mulch like straw, bark and shavings to keep weeds away. I cut up black plastic garbage bags for tomatoes & peppers and place over the drip irrigation (even in the raised beds – it adds heat). I hear you can call your local arborist and they’ll sometimes give wood chips for free (they dump it anyway)!
  5. Add compost. Before I made my own, I purchased bags of cow manuer from our local hardware store. Some of you may even have a neighbor with some to spare.  I mix it with the soil to add nutrients & feed the plants.  Make sure you have more soil than manauer when mixing – adding too much can burn the roots.
  6. Grow only what you eat. I grew stuff I thought was cool but never ate. This takes up room you could be using to grow something you would eat.
  7. Plant your veggie garden in a FULL SUN spot. Part of my first garden was in shade. I had a hard time getting anything to grow in the shady spot – even lettuce.
  8. If you want to save money, buy seeds. Easy seeds to start outside are lettuce, beans, peas, carrots, radishes, cucumber, sunflowers  and squash. These are also fun to grow when getting started. 
  9. Have fun, experiment and don’t give up. Start small and expand until you get overwhelmed. I learned by reading books and experimenting.
  10. Have the right support for your veggies. You can create trellises out of scraps of wood, fencing, bed frames or you can build your own.  I created my two trellises (in 2006) out of 2×2’s and nylon twine. I cut the 2×2 with a saw and wrapped/criss-crossed the twine to connect the wood together.

Book Review: Grocery Gardening

Me & Grocery Gardening

The first book I want to share with you is called Grocery Gardening – Planting, Preparing and Preserving Fresh Food (Cool Springs Press). I like this book because I love growing veggies and this book has a lot of great recipes, interesting facts and helpful tips.

When I first opened the book, I was pleasantly surprised by the layout.  It starts by giving the basics on composting, pest control, disease and picking a garden location – which is especially important for new veggie gardeners. Then it moves into the specific items you can grow by categories: herbs, fruit, and veggies.  In close it provides additional information on preserving and disease and pests.

I like how the information on the featured herbs, fruit and veggies is easy to read and scan — perfect for people like me who skim read. Each featured item includes six or more pages of facts, fun quotes from the authors, planting & growing information, varieties, produce selection & harvest, preserving/preparation methods and recipes!

In short, it includes the basics on planting, preparing and preserving fresh food.  Just like it states on the cover.

You’ll enjoy this book if you’re starting a vegetable garden, interested in learning more about growing veggies, like to cook and/or just enjoy reading a well designed book on a subject you love. My only complaint is not knowing if I should put this beautiful book with the cook books or the gardening books!

Grocery Gardening was written by Jean Ann Van Krevelen, Amanda Thomsen, Robin Ripley and Teresa O’Connor.  It’s available now – I picked mine up on Amazon.com.

Here’s are a few examples of how the pages are laid out:

Beautiful Pictures and Easy to Read

Facts, Fun Author Quotes & Recipes

Silence of the Bees – A Must Watch PBS Video!

Everyone (especially gardeners) should watch this PBS video on “Colony Collapse Disorder.”  It was required viewing for our Master Gardener training.  I don’t know about you, but I’d rather not hand-pollinate flowers, crops and fruit trees because we’ve killed off all our honey bees.  

http://www.pbs.org/wnet/nature/episodes/silence-of-the-bees/full-episode/251/

Collecting nectar & pollen from our chive blossoms