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Gardening Season Is Open- Get Your Therapy In The Dirt!

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Sludge

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We discussed this a bit last season, so I figured I would bring it up again. Never got to post any pictures of my late season projects because the drought here made everything look like hell, or Iraq, or some other burned out dun colored dust bowl.

I'm rocking and rolling already on adding a third level to my pond complex, repairing drought damage to my lawn and buying up seeds and flowers when they are on sale. Also dug up and crown divided all of my hostas, and got them replanted in better spots.


I built a birdhouse too. It is so ugly the birds use it as a comfortable place to sit and take a dump.


What ya'll got planned/going on?

Nothing like back-breaking labor and the smell of fresh earth trigger a good night's sleep!
 
My wife and I have had a number of gardens over the years. Got away from it a number of years back when we got very busy with some other things and didn't have the time for it.

So, we're at it again. It will be in a new area of my yard so I'll have to start from scratch. I'll probably be starting it in a few weeks when my yard, hopefully, drys out a bit. I've had ducks and cranes landing in my yard thinking it's a pond.

Just for a start we'll put in tomatoes, cherry tomatoes, zucchinis, potatoes, broccoli, carrots, eggplant. They'll probably be more as we go.

I like the work as well. Nothing like getting out there hearing the birds and smelling the roses, or manure, great stuff. I'll post pics as I go.

I'm also building a privacy area on the edge of my deck for some flowering vines, columbine or trumpet vine. It will give me a break from having to look at my .........................*(^*)(((&%Tneighbor. :rolleyes:
 
Moving to a new house in two weeks that a big garden with peach trees, lemon trees, and grapefruit trees. I want to start a veggie garden but since I am now in the southern hemisphere to try and plan re: planting seasons etc. is really messing with my head. I'm trying to find books on veggie gardening in South Africa...
 
Hey Oasis

Ah,,fruit trees, I should have planted them on my property years ago. That's super. Nothing like a fresh picked grapefruit, yum!

I also googled these books for gardening in S.A., hope they might give you a start and some ideas. Hmm, tomatoes for Christmas!?

Link Removed

Link Removed

http://www.alibris.com/booksearch?qwork=14915180
 
Brown thumb. They pay me to stay out of the forest cause they're worried I'd kill everything. My wife was the one who could grow stuff. I'm good at mold!!!!

Sarg
 
Thanks Jar! I will look for them in the book shop though, mail order is out of the question. You know how unreliable the mail is down here, you got my Christmas card a couple of weeks ago!

And add elephant fencing to the list!;)
A friend of my husband runs a safari lodge in Zambia, and he told me once that they had a semi-tame elephant walking around all the time, he used to break into their veggie garden and throw tomatoes at the house with his trunk...
 
I think you have 2 growing seasons down there NaO. Would love to take advantage of that. Bugs may be more of your problem down there.

I love growing things. Vegetables mostly. Grew up on a farm and my Dad always had a big veg garden so.....I was cheap labor. And dammit I learned something while doing it. Sneaky that.
 
I think you have 2 growing seasons down there NaO. Would love to take advantage of that. Bugs may be more of your problem down there.

I love growing things. Vegetables mostly. Grew up on a farm and my Dad always had a big veg garden so.....I was cheap labor. And dammit I learned something while doing it. Sneaky that.

Thats how I learned...as slave labor for my granfa's 3 acre organic gardening.


I only wish I could get a truck load of horse shit here. Dunno anyone with horses. Soil is alkaline and low in nitrogen...
 
Cow shit works too. Also something my Dad discovered by accident. Pond and lake weeds. Drag em out, dry em and mix them in the soil. Tomato plants grew over 7ft.

Lime will knock down the acidity in the soil. Think my dad put a couple buckets on the garden every other year.

Dried blood sprinkled around the perimeter or select plants will put nitrogen in the soil and keep away any rabbits and sometimes chipmunks......sometimes.

Don't grow potatoes. Unless you really like bugs. Bug magnets they are.

Compost piles are golden. Used to get a bucket of red worms to give a good start or boost when it gets too big.
 
Cow shit works too. Also something my Dad discovered by accident. Pond and lake weeds. Drag em out, dry em and mix them in the soil. Tomato plants grew over 7ft.

Lime will knock down the acidity in the soil. Think my dad put a couple buckets on the garden every other year.

Dried blood sprinkled around the perimeter or select plants will put nitrogen in the soil and keep away any rabbits and sometimes chipmunks......sometimes.

Don't grow potatoes. Unless you really like bugs. Bug magnets they are.

Compost piles are golden. Used to get a bucket of red worms to give a good start or boost when it gets too big.

We have sandy, clay free slightly alkaline soil here. Our growing season is too dry for cow shit- it just goes to fungus and causes root rot. Horse shit, being a dryer, finer consistency has proven superior.

I grow taters every year, but will not be doing so this year. The drought caused a population explosion of stink bugs, which are going to be horrendous this year. So no taters, melons, pumpkins cukes or squash here this season for me. I plan on tomatoes, carrots, peas, onions, garlic, and radishes. Too much sun and to dry for any salad greens here outdoors, but I grow those indoors year round. My asparagus and horseradish should produce this year as they were planted when I bought the house.


I am a composting god (Yup, that is me stating facts again...). I have a knack for getting big piles of shit to rot really well. It is to the point here that I have four 6x6x4 compost bins operating, and will add two more this season. The entire neighborhood donates their leaves, grass, and kitchen scraps and I maintain the operation as my entire back 1/2 acre is in full shade and perfect for composting. Then as folks need compost, they can come and get it.

This works out great as they trade fruit and vegetables, or canned goods that I cannot grow in my garden, am not interested in growing, or do not have time to mess with. The real chicken eggs are my favorite barter item. Can't get enough of them, me, but cannot have chickens due to the lot I own.

I greatly enjoy ornamentals too. My wildflower beds are legendary, even after the drought as they are planted and designed to be zero maintenance. I am also converting my full sun areas of lawn over to 100% native shortgrass praire- buffalo grass, sheep's fescue and numerous border and ornamental native flowers.

I really try to be organic, as it was family tradition back in PA, AND the biologist in me refuses to use pesticides, herbicides and manufactured fertilizers. My property is on a hill that drains to the Missouri River, which is a disgusting open sewer thanks to Midwestern ignorance and greed. Guess I am a filthy hippy by nature, eh?
 
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