Overview
Gardening is my summer hobby. I love watching things grow
and enjoying the harvest. I’ll share my experiences and to keep a gardening
record for myself in this blog. I hope
you enjoy.
Since it is already early June, I need to catch up on spring
happenings.
One exciting and unusual thing happened early. Leeks,
planted last season and harvested by cutting at base, came back up in March.
I’m enjoying very early leeks.
The unusually warm and relatively dry early spring provided
opportunity for early planting. My peas,
spinach, arugula, lettuce seeds and onion sets went into the ground March 10.
As the peas emerged, many were eaten by a garden critter. My
lettuce didn’t survive the critter. The arugula and a bit of spinach survived.
Exciting stuff: Potatoes planted in late April are starting
to bloom. Shell peas are setting on the vines.
June 7 buds on the red potato plants.
Note: potatoes are planted on the ground and under hay
for ease of harvesting new potatoes during season.
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Before I go much further, I need
to describe my gardens.
I am an apartment dweller. Since moving to Lowell, I’ve been
fortunate to find one garden site after another. My first, and still used, is a
4 ½’ X 12’ framed, raised bed. This is my 5th year at this site.
After two successful years, the woodchuck discovered our beds. Now only
vegetables that do not suit woodchucks’ palettes i.e. hot peppers, garlic are
grown. This year, it’s only onions due to lack of space which is now occupied
by perennials.
Original raised bed. Onions doing well. Perennial chives
blooming. Notice the miniature red rose bush. Feathery plants are cosmos
that reseeded themselves.
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Original raised bed. Onions doing well. Perennial chives
blooming. Notice the miniature red rose bush. Feathery plants are cosmos that
reseeded themselves.
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My second garden space, on its third year, is in South
Chelmsford. This space, now reduced, is
15’X15’ with three, double dug raised beds. This is the site of my earliest
planting.
I’ve improved the soil of both beds over the years by adding
seaweed (collected on a Cape Cod beach) and coffee grounds, from home and a
local coffee shop that is happy to fill gardeners’ five-gallon bucket with
grounds. The seaweed is a good fertilizer, mulch and natural pest control especially
for slugs who don’t like the sharp, salty edges. Coffee grounds improve texture, encourage
worm activity and repel slugs.
Two more recent sites for me include a project within
cycling distance of home. This was conceived and managed by Mill City Grows to
encourage urban gardening. Each gardener has a 10’X 4’ framed, raised bed. Beds
are deeper than normal (about 3’) to eliminate the possibility of urban soil
contamination. Beds are filled with 80%
compost and 20% loam. The soil is nice
and loose; perfect for root vegetables.
More carrots, lettuce, spinach, arugula planted Memorial Day weekend
along with a pepper plant, two sauce style tomato plants and, small sunflower
and marigold seeds. June 5 and all seeds
are sprouting.
Notice the height of the beds. Good practice with urban
gardening to eliminate possible soil contaminates being taken up by
vegetable plants.
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Other than basil, tomato, cucumber and pepper plants,
seedlings still quite small. We’ll watch it develop. Although, some critter,
probably an Asiatic garden beetle, munching on tender leaves of spinach,
sunflower, lettuce.
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Notice the height of the beds. Good practice with urban
gardening to eliminate possible soil contaminates being taken up by vegetable
plants.
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Now to find a solution.
Check this for control of Asiatic beetle.
http://extension.unh.edu/resources/representation/Resource000542_Rep564.pdf
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North Chelmsford soil prior to tilling
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North Chelmsford plot finally
tilled; busy days ahead.
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Two small areas dug and planted after about 9 hours of work removing clumps of weed roots and digging as deep as possible (~18") |
Bring your 5 gallon buckets and take home some composed manure for your new site, it looks great!!! Harris and Paul
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