Sunday, January 10, 2010

Catching Up and Finishing Up

Well it's been quite a while since my original post. I kind of figured I might be less than dedicated to doing this blog, but here I am again. Better late than never, right?

Catching Up

The garden was not quite the success I had hoped for. Some issues with a wilt on my tomatoes as well as less than desirable growth out of other plants left me a little frustrated. I now have my doubts about square foot gardening, but to be fair to the method I think my biggest problem may have been less than desirable compost. The compost I found was mostly horse manure from stalls where wood shavings had been used. I think it was too much wood shavings and not enough manure.

I think one of my biggest doubts about the square foot gardening was the depth of the soil. I believe the book recommended 2x6 lumber which only gives you a depth a little over 5 inches. I used 2x8 lumber and I still feel like the depth was not enough. In order to improve on this for next year I'm digging into the soil below the boxes by about 6-8 inches and mixing in even more compost. This will eliminate the weed barrier between the box and the soil underneath, but since I'm out in the garden almost daily, picking weeds as they sprout should not be a problem.

Out of everything I grew the strawberries were by far the healthiest looking plants. They really took off. I had to replace 2 or 3 plants that didn't make it at first but that wasn't a problem since I had more than I could plant to start off with. I planted an everbearing variety and per recommendations I picked all the blooms in the spring and kept runners trimmed. Trimming the runners was a SFG (square foot gardening) recommendation in order to deal with the limited space. I kind of expected to get a few berries later in the year but that never happened. Can't wait to pick some berries in the spring.

The corn I planted looked to be doing great at the start but once it reached a certain height (3-5 feet) it mostly quit growing taller. Ears did form but most were very small and the husk busted open before they matured. Thinking that I had planted it too thick and the soil was not deep enough I made the correction I mentioned about to that box and replanted mid summer. The second crop was better but still not what I was looking for. I'll have to think hard about doing corn again.

Some other plants I had some success with were potatoes, sweet potatoes, cabbage, carrots, peppers, and cucumbers. Broccoli, cauliflower, beets, brussel sprouts, and tomatoes were all mostly a bust.

I wish I had taken pictures to share but unfortunately I didn't.


Finishing Up

Well today was the last day of deer season and after missing twice this season, once from about 20 yards, I came up empty handed. I guess that is just the way deer hunting goes some time.

One of the most frustrating parts of hunting this year was being in the woods, finding some trails, but never feeling really good about what tree I should climb. It is almost impossible to find a tree in the dark that will present shots once you are 30 feet high. Keep in mind I'm hunting public land that I don't always know very well.

The next steps are to start scouting very soon for next season in order to take advantage of the lack of foliage that will allow me to see further and look for this past season rut sign. This should allow me to setup some trees and have some more definitive places to go once deer season rolls around in the fall. I should also be able to clear some better shooting lanes.

Cheers!

Monday, March 16, 2009

OCD! Should I see a doctor about this?

ok, so yes I am very obsessed! OCD maybe? I must admit that I may have gone a little too far but I just started getting pretty pumped about the whole idea. I mean who wouldn't want to go to all this effort to make sure things were going to be just right. And besides that how can you go into any project not knowing what the costs are going to be? So what the heck am I talking about...

Yes it is confirmed. I am my father and I'm growing a garden!

There I've said it. whew!

Sorry to disappoint. Nothing exciting about that I suppose but I sure have been obsessed for about a week with it. I've actually been tentatively planing to do this for months now but only in the last week or so did I actually start getting some real ideas down. And of course a spreadsheet quickly became necessary to track the material and costs associated with starting this garden... And it didn't stop there.

Before I go any further I should mention that I've decided to follow the square foot gardening method for growing a garden in my backyard. The method really seems pretty practical and makes a lot of sense. It goes against some of the traditional row based, amend your existing soil ideas I was more familiar with but all in all nothing too radical. The basics are that you build boxes 4 ft x 4 ft x 6 in deep. I decided to use 2 x 6 lumber so mine are a little deeper. I would have gone for the 2 x 10 lumber but I decided to try and keep costs as low as possible. Once the boxes are built you put weed cloth across the bottom of the box and build a grid on the top so you end up with 16 1 x 1 ft squares to use for planting. Once the boxes are built you mix a combination of compost, peat moss, and vermiculite in equal parts to get the volume of soil you need to fill you boxes to the top edge and you ready to plant!

The real story here is how much time I've spent plotting out stuff on graph paper, working on spreadsheets to calculate material needs and costs, and drawing a diagram of my backyard layout. I even had my beautiful wife out in the yard with me late last night helping me measure the dimensions so my diagram would be to scale. See the result of that effort to the left.

As you can see from the diagram, I've got 5 boxes built and have put together a "strategic" 3 year plan to build additional boxes. We also have plans to one day have a fence around our backyard, hence the long narrow box on the North (left in this case) side of the property. As for the crops I plan on growing, here is the list:
  • asparagus
  • bush beans (green beans)
  • broccoli
  • carrots
  • corn
  • cucumber
  • hot peppers
  • lettuce
  • okra
  • onion
  • peas
  • potatoes
  • strawberries
  • sweet peppers (bell peppers)
  • sweet potato
  • tomatillo
  • tomatoes
I have some detail on exactly where each plant(s) will go but I have not created that digitally...yet so I'll have to post that detail later. I'd also like to take some pictures to I'll have as much of a visual log as anything and I'll post those when I have them.

Stay tuned....

Oh yeah and here is my blog! Blah blah blah not sure what all I'll post here but here it is. How's that for a first post intro.