Archive for the 'Gardening' Category

Apr 30 2008

I Miss My Vegetable Garden!

Published by admin under Gardening

I had a vegetable garden up until April last year and I loved it. It was the best feeling to go out and pick the vegetables that I had grown and come back in and cook them up for my family. While I was very pregnant with baby #5 and just after her birth I found that I just couldn’t keep up with it anymore. So I harvested what was there, let everything die off and eventually let the grass grow back over it.

Now that Sophie is 1 and can potter around the backyard with me and summers harsh heat has left us I am missing my little vegie patch.

I have a small garden at the end of our paving which was a herb garden but I let that die off too. I am going to plant some lettuce, some rocket and possibly some herbs in there again. It won’t be quite as much fun as my bigger vegie patch but it’s a start.

The beginning of a vegetable garden

Here is a before photo of the plot that I intend to fill with yummy lettuces. I’m hoping to get it cleared out and some lettuce seeds planted in there in the next couple of days!

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Jul 07 2007

Boost veggies with side-dressing of nitrogen fertilizer

Published by admin under Gardening

tomato plantsMany vegetable crops benefit from a side-dressing of nitrogen fertilizer after making considerable growth or starting to fruit, unless a slow-release fertilizer was applied at planting time.

In a side-dress application, the nitrogen fertilizer is applied along the sides of the plants, about six inches away from the stems, either along the row or around individual plants, such as tomatoes.

A Purdue publication on vegetable gardening, HO-32-W, suggests using ammonium nitrate, which has an analysis of 33-0-0, as the fertilizer material. However, it’s not readily available, and other forms of fertilizer can be used on an equivalent basis.

One is urea, which has an analysis of 46-0-0. It can become volatile, escape into the air and burn the leaves and should be incorporated immediately by lightly tilling it into the soil or watering it in with irrigation.

The general application rate for ammonium nitrogen is about one pound, or about one pint, per 100 feet of row. For three feet of row, that’s one tablespoon (one teaspoon per foot). When urea is used, apply slightly less, or about 1 1/2 cups per 100 feet of row, 2 1/4 teaspoons per three feet of row or 3/4 teaspoon per foot of row. For example, if you side-dress tomato plants, spaced four feet apart, you should use one level tablespoon (three teaspoons) of urea around each plant.

The time for side-dressing depends on the crop. Side-dress tomatoes about two weeks after the first fruit sets, two weeks after picking the first tomato and again one month later. The cole crops (cabbage, cauliflower and broccoli) should be side-dressed three weeks after setting out plants, onions about one to two weeks after bulb formation and peppers after the first fruit sets.

Side-dress cucumbers one week after blossoming begins and three weeks later; peas and beans, after heavy bloom and set of pods; and sweet corn when plants are 8-10 inches tall and one week after tassels appear. It’s important not to apply more than the recommended amount of nitrogen or damage to plant roots can occur.

The third week of June is the time to …

*Obtain a copy of the publication, ‘Home Gardener’s Guide’, from an Extension Service office in Indiana for details on fertilizing vegetable crops.

*Deadhead or remove spent blossoms from early-blooming perennials to prevent seed formation and encourage re-bloom later this season or next year.

*Remove vegetable crops such as lettuce, which have bolted (formed seed stalks), and replant the areas with bush green beans.

*Thin fruit from apple trees after the June drop of excess fruit. Space remaining fruit about 6 inches apart (one per cluster on the average), to obtain larger and higher quality fruit.

*Plant seeds of cole crops (cabbage, broccoli and cauliflower) to obtain transplants to set out in late July for a fall harvest.

Steve Buchanan writes article on many topics including Honda Generator, Yard machines snowblower and Murray lawn mower

Source: High Quality Article Database - 365articles.com

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Mar 01 2007

In the Garden - March

Published by admin under Gardening

An Image on A Juggling Mums Blog

During the first week of each month I like to take a look at my vegetable garden and decide what needs to be done. The photo above was taken on the 1st February and the photo below was taken today.

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As you can see there has been quite a lot of growth.

  • The cucumbers on the trellis on the right have not done so well in the heat but there is still a bit of green vine and some small cucumbers so I’ll leave it in there for now. I want to get in there and pull out all the dying leaves though.
  • Some of the lettuce is just about ready to pick so I want to plant some more lettuce seeds in the gaps.
  • The radish have just about all been picked so I will plant some more radish seeds and also some carrot seeds.
  • It’s also time to get leeks into the garden, so I will either get some seeds or buy some seedlings.
  • The zucchini is doing really well and I have heaps and heaps of little zuc’s that should be ready to pick in the next week or so.
  • The eggplant is still doing well and there are quite a few little eggplants growing on there so nothing needs to be done with them. A few of the plants need to be staked so I’ll do that.
  • Behind the eggplant are the tomatoes and basil. The tomatoes are getting quite tall now and I need to stake them too. There is no sign of fruit yet but hopefully soon :)
  • And the whole garden needs a good dose of Seasol and a bit of weeding.
  • I bought a hose weeks ago to make into a drip irrigation system, but I haven’t put the holes in it yet, so I need to do that and set it up in the garden.

So that’s the plan for the next week. I’m hoping now that summer is over we will have some tamer weather and hopefully some more rain.

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