Showing posts with label free materials. Show all posts
Showing posts with label free materials. Show all posts

Thursday, July 9, 2020

Growing a vertical garden & container gardening in early July

Everyday, I smile at this whimsical little flower garden. I planted these back in the spring but I couldn't tell you what the varieties are except identifying some sunflowers.





Other flowers growing at my garden are hostas with their dainty purple goblets. Mimosa trees are blooming hair-like, heavenly fragrant flowers. The daylilys died out and now the tiger lilies are blooming in their place.

Mimosa 

Hostas


tiger lilly

At my grandparent's, I planted these gladiolus and they are absolute royalty!






There's so many beautiful flowers at my grandparent's garden. I admire each individual flower every time I visit which you can see in the previous post.

Phlox and gooseneck

This hot weather has turned dry. It has been nearly 100 degrees everyday for a week here in North Eastern Kentucky.

There hasn't been rain in over a week. So I have been watering my container garden for the last 3 days. The containers dry faster so I focus on their needs first.

As well as watering the veggies in the containers, I have been using my own compost too as fertilize for the veggies. I have tomatoes, peppers, squash and cantaloupe in the container pots. They respond really well to the compost and grow quick!


Desperately, I need to water my grapes, berries and fig trees as they are fruiting now. I have been harvesting blackberries for over a week. It is early July, and that's the exact time to start picking berries and foraging chanterelle mushrooms here.




At least these plants are growing food. I was disappointed that the cherries, plums, peaches, nectarines and peaches were affected by the late frost. This should give you a tip if you're first starting a food forest: focus on late blooming fruits if you live in a cold climate. Of course, there's advantages and disadvantages to every garden endeavor.

At my apartment, I have many tomatoes and some pepper plants in pots as well.

Used my own compost to make the
plants grow big,  fast!

Jalapeno pepper plants

These were tiny tomatoes weeks ago before I mulched them with compost 

Basil plant too!

Also, I have cleaned up two garden beds, slowly trying to clear out all of the old radish, lettuce, spinach, cilantro plants. I harvested cilantro and arugula seed and cut it out yesterday.
Today, I spread soil overtop of the garden bed and transplanted Coxcomb flowers in the bed. These are plants that my grandma had growing extra from her flower garden, so I took some to add a little pizazz to the garden as the Phlox and Hibsicus and other whimsical flowers bloom.

Coxcombs planted

In the garden bed next to this, I cleaned it up last week and spread soil overtop then sowed zucchini and pea seed. Some zucchini and peas have come up, but I have struggled this year from pests eating seeds

Slowly I am cleaning up the garden, I'm hoping to get them cleaned up and ready for sowing cauliflower, cabbage, broccoli and brussels sprouts seed.

In my garden over the mountain, I tilled and hoed my tomatoes today.




I also hoed around the rows of corn. I strung up twine around posts as support for the corn.


Then, I put up more fencing for the cucumbers that are intertwining with the corn and cushaw. I wanted to keep all of the vining plants separated so there are barriers for them to grow up and not entangle to strangle any corn.

Cushaw growing on fencing

Cushaw, corn and cucumbers 

Now in this garden, there are big cushaw plants in 4 small rows, corn growing in 4 small grows, cucumbers in 3 small rows, and tomatoes in 4 small rows, and 3 rows of potatoes. I have beans planted but the seed was old, so I may plant lettuce and radish seed here now because this garden is cooler and shady.

Because it's early July, I don't have much time to plant any more beans, corn or any summer crop. But, any further planting will be for fall crops. And in this stage of planting fall crops, you have to be more diligent in composting and watering to ensure healthy, sustainable growth even in the cold nights that will soon come in October.

Monday, June 29, 2020

Vertical gardening in the veggie gardens & enchanting flower gardens

Today, I weeded the veggie garden. Additionally, I hoed more rows of beans for the rows that didnt germinate. I laid out fencing to put up tomorrow around the beans. I put fencing against the rows of cushaw plants. I have rows of corn and cucumber to post and string up as well tomorrow. 
In my other garden, I cut back the weeds around the blueberry plants and started pylling up old lettuce and radish plants. Still, I have much work there to do in order to rotate crops from spring to summer crops. It was a busy day, and it all starts again tomorrow to work. 

Cucumbers in grow bags & potatoes growing in buckets


Potatoes

Corn and beans

Tomaotes 

Corn

Corn

Cushaws tied to fencing 

Tomatoes

Cockscomb flowers








Saturday, March 21, 2020

DIY handmade garden archway/arbor

This afternoon, I scavaged through my wood pile for thick tree branches with curved edges and pieces to make this archway. In a matter of a few hours, I assembled this ever-so rustic structure leading to the garden. I hope to grow climbing flowers or bining veggies this year and the future.


Each branch is tied with metal, ivy, and string, including those twisty ties off of lettuce. 


Tuesday, April 17, 2018

Sowed carrot, kale, cilantro, beet seed around seedlings

After days of hot weather, it immediately set in rain, then got cold. So I covered the seedlings in the garden with plastic bottles. Today I sowed carrot, kale, cilantro, and beet seed around the seedlings in the garden.

On the right, carrot "little fingers" and arugula were sowed

Beet seed and cilantro sowed around seedlings in the bed beside grow bags 

Around the bottles, a line of kale was sowed

I need to rotate the soil here again then I'll transplant pepper & tomatoes 

I'm going to sow squash & cucumber seed here in May