Tuesday, March 29, 2011

Potatoes sprout....and get frosted

A purple potato sprout

A few days later these got a little frost......killed off the sprouts but potatoes put up new shoots shortly after the frost.

Thursday, March 24, 2011

Dividing sansevieria trisfasciata 'Hahnii'

I divided my Sansevieria trifasciata 'Hahnii'....wow...I feel smart just for saying that. Let's just call them STH. It's a small house plant that evidently does a good job of cleaning toxins from indoor air. I had to do quite a bit of searching online to figure out what the heck it even was. Other sub-species are called Mother-in-Law's Tongue and are taller and more popular as house plants.

These plants came from one small "momma" that I "borrowed" from my mother's house. I don't know from where or how she first received her STH starts, but she had been growing and killing them for many years. Evidently both she and I were not doing this right, despite their tendency to sprout new plants and spread.

The one on the left was divided out last spring and has grown leaps and bounds over the other two. I assume it's the larger pot with a drain.



I got some general advice from Urban Jungle, a tropical plant service in Northwest Arkansas, that showed me just how wrong I was about them. They like very well drained soil and like to dry out very well between waterings...oops...those drain-less small clay pots or random containers with no drains were not cutting it. And judging from this picture, my small clay pots were far too small.

(root bound plants are not good)


My hunch appears to be right. Better drainage, don't be afraid to let them dry out, and they need a bigger pot. I hope the divided plants flourish in their new, more appropriate, pots.


Wednesday, March 23, 2011

Last minute garden additions

New NO MOW ZONE around the base of the two huge sugar maples. Grass barely grows, there is some ground cover vines that should spread to fill it if not mowed, and perhaps we can drop in random shade loving plants. Or just let it go all natural. Used logs from the branches downed two years ago in the ice storm to outline the area.



New bed, pre-compost...because more seeds were bought than we had room for plants.



So this is what the back yard and vegetable garden looks like at the beginning of the spring season. Just a few things poking up and growing at this point.


Tuesday, March 22, 2011

First Harvest


Casey was hoping to get quick radishes going first, but last year's asparagus plantings have beat him to it. I snapped off four good sized spears this morning. I ate one fresh, just so I could say I'd eaten something I'd grown today, but I think I'll wait and cook the others. :-)


Sunday, March 20, 2011

Rattlesnake!

I was dumping compost, right next the wood pile that really should have been cleared of brush and weeds last year. I heard a wicked rattle...it terrified me. I immediately thought of a rattlesnake, but remembered that it was far too cool of a spring day for a rattlesnake to be out and about.

Guess what it was?


I felt stupid. These are the seed pods of our "mimosa" tree, on a branch that had been trimmed a few weeks previous. They are very dry and clumped together like that they make a great rattle.

"Mimosa" you ask? Albizia julibrissin is often called mimosa in the US, though it is not in the Mimosa family. It's non-native, tends towards invasive, and should more rightly be called a Persian silk tree among other names. Does that seed pod remind you of a bean pod? Well it's in legume family...go figure. It had a beautiful blooms last year in early June.

Friday, March 18, 2011

Forsythia fail

The big forsythia in the front yard kinda failed this spring.


My only assumption is that the buds couldn't handle the extremely cold temperatures we had rather late in the season, during one of our horrible snow storms. After all, this is Arkansas. Why did it bloom on the first foot of the plant? Maybe the 14 or 15 inches of snow insulated the plant. Don't even ask about the pruning that should have happened....

Wednesday, March 16, 2011

Planting potatoes (on my birthday)

I spent my birthday in garden. And that's actually a good thing. First of all it meant the weather was nice. Secondly I do enjoy it, so it was a treat. Potatoes are kind of a Casey crop focus after my experiment last year and my focus on growing volume of calories.

Potatoes were crowded out of the expanded garden by many varieties of a lot of fun stuff, but I insisted on potatoes. Having already invested in the materials for a lot of new raised beds for this season, we are trying something different. We had read about growing potatoes in bags so that you can gradually fill up the bag with soil as the potatoes continue to grow up. This "hilling" process can be done on flat ground if you have enough soil to gather up, but we don't (screw this cherty clay). Our experiment this year is going to be round mounds. Three of them, at the ends of the rows of raised beds. The idea will be to add soil (cross fingers that we will find more compost) to them gradually during the growing season and end up with a mound of potatoes. I think we are going to make chicken wire walls to help hold the mounds together.


4' diameter circle, basically just dug over 4-6 inches deep. Left the sod in to decompose. This was the first one...middle grade in the crappy soil quality of the three circles.


Nearly all of this chert came from the second bed....horrible cherty clay soil. Most likely from a pad of clay laid for the foundation of the house when it was built. The red clay around here is the leftover residue of millions of years of erosion of limestone with thin layers of chert in between. The limestone dissolves almost completely leaving behind the cherty clay. Ugh.....


Each broken up clay circle got two inches of the chunky compost scraped from the raised beds.


First bed is 13 generic red potatoes.


Second bed is 6 generic purple up front and 6 generic red in the back.


Third bed is 8 Yukon Gold at the front and 5 generic red at the back.



I spread about 3 inches of this mixture on top of the potatoes. This is the chunky compost scraped off the tops of the raised beds plus the remnants of the leaf piles that were attempted to shelter the soil from the winter weather.


The three potato beds. Chicken wire walls to come later.







Saturday, March 12, 2011

Spring workday in the garden

This Saturday in the garden was an EARLY one. 7AM because I had to get to a mini-retreat for the county party and Kyle...wait, I don't know why Kyle was up that flipping early. Anyways, some early work plus returning in the afternoon made for a big jump start to the spring.




Prepping the existing beds this year meant raking off the leaf cover and the big chunks that had "risen" through the compost. The loose soil barely needed a two inch deep raking to fluff the soil for planting.



Not purely the square foot method, but marking the areas this year with string helps us know where and when we are planting what.



Most of these long strings have quick maturing radishes planted under them for a living divider. Several large section of lettuces planted as well.



Early Direct Seed: carrots



Early Direct Seed: leeks (that's the garlic in the background)



Onion rows as dividers.



Old fence sections for trellis. This will be for cucumbers.




Planning helps....this map changed several times and is bound to change again.



Just another day of glass :-(

Tuesday, March 8, 2011

Where to put your compost pile

I am a compost convert...I am completely sold on the idea of closing the nutrient cycle of everything that grows and comes onto someones property. Of course apartment dwellers can't do this easily, but so many people live on suburban lots. There are lots of excuses why people don't compost and most of them are crappy ones. Basic knowledge shouldn't be one of those excuses. You can find all kinds of advice...everything from detailed scientific or pro-farmer experiences all the way down to average yokels like me. Here is one simple lesson.

Where to site your pile is a common question. Common pointers: not near trees (roots will suck nutrients), not in the shade (heat helps decomposition), close to your garden (for convenience). Sometimes they add "close to your kitchen." Well...guess where mine is? Not close to my kitchen. Look below:

All the way at the back of the lot near the corner of the neighbor's fence.

Do you know why they recommend putting it near the kitchen? Because this is what you collect to put in the pile:

Not exactly what you want lingering in your kitchen.

Now Northwest Arkansas has mild winters...but this one was extreme. We had four snows in a six week period. The first was the dusting above.

The second was several inches..okay, normal. And usually it melts off fast.


The third was a very decent snow by our standards. And some very cold weather to go along with it.


The fourth snow was 14 inches at our house. A record during my lifetime for Fayetteville. And BITTER COLD for days. (don't the raised beds look like shallow graves covered in snow?)

Well guess what happens when you don't want to trudge through knee high snow at 4 degrees?


PILEUP!!!!!



Lesson learned.


Monday, March 7, 2011

The Garden Awakes!

After a bitterly cold winter with far above average snows, Northwest Arkansas is getting a taste of a traditional spring. We had several warm days that saw 70 degrees and sun. We have had several VERY rainy days complete with thunderstorms and hail. Cloudy, mild days into the 50s feel like normal. It's enough to warm the hearts of gardeners and the soils of their gardens. Seed orders are coming in and we are already procrastinating on the indoor seeding. I took a walk around the garden and realized that it has awoken, despite the hard winter.


Garden looks pretty boring here...depressing even. Notice the newer beds on the outer edges. These additions add 176 sq ft of raised beds, bringing the total close to 400 sq ft.

Garlic is up and ready for warm days. As opposed to last year, I got these in the ground in the late fall rather than waiting until the spring. That is the way it is supposed to be done evidently. These overwinter just fine. I have a challenge among a few friends for the best garlic to be pulled on July 4th.

Parsley overwintered just fine and is starting new growth. Curly leaf parsley on the left, flat leaf (Italian) parsley on the right. You can't see it but behind the parsley the chives are pushing up mounds of soil in their effort to break through.


This bed is the permanent strawberry bed. It was started last year with just one row up front of everbearing plants. The rest of the box was filled in the late fall with first year transplants from our friend's borrowed box in our garden and his pots. We needed to dump a lot of new compost in his bed and I feared the small pots would not protect the plants during the winter. The potted strawberries also had many runners that had rooted into the rest of the box. The whole thing was a mess....the friend hadn't visited his plot in months. So his have now filled the back of the bed. Some were everbearing and some June. Kyle added 3 or 4 inches of compost right on top of the plants and the existing mulch.....I feared that this would hurt the strawberries, but I think it actually provided great insulation. He was careful to make sure he gathered the plant leaves up and spread the compost all around them. I imagine as perennial plants with quick rooting, the strawberries will just gradually raise their root level and thrive. Let's hope.


Brand new growth of strawberries. They are ready for spring!


Mint. This is a 2x5 raised bed that is completely segregated from the rest of the garden. Mint can be very invasive, so we planted it away...in the shade...and we kind of ignored it as it is just far enough out of sight and hard to reach with the hose. It didn't do very well at all last year, but we sort of don't mind. We dumped 3 or 4 inches of compost on top and just let it sit during the winter. All kinds of new growth...but we may have killed one or two of the varieties planted in this box. We will see.

Is anything waking up in your garden/farm?