Basic
Gardening
You visit the local
farmer's market on a whim, stroll past vegetable stands,
herb bunches, and flower bouquets. Finally, your eyes fixate
on a huge tomato that?s bigger than both of your hands put
together. It pulls you toward it; you lift it in your palms
up to your nose and inhale all the sweetness of a thousand
harvests. You are ruined in an instant and vow never again
to be seen buying little mushy pre-ripened red water
balloons that the local grocers label as the same fruit.
The "real" thing is always better than a fake, lacquered,
forced vegetable. If you've ever wished you could grow your own
crops, you're not alone. Hundreds of thousands of people have
realized the taste and nutritional benefits of producing their
own food. Not every body has a large patch of ground in which
to sow their seeds. But anyone anywhere can grow their own
food.
Embrace whatever situation you have, and creatively compose
your garden. For people who live in the city or apartment
complexes, a container garden might be ideal. Grow boxes and
wide beds can be installed in virtually any sunny location.
Indoor lights can simulate sunlight if your location doesn't
get enough direct rays.
Your ability to garden is limited only by your location and
imagination. Focus on what you have available to you, not what
you don't. A lady in South Dakota grows enough fresh vegetables
on their picnic table for her two young sons. They won't eat
the store bought stuff, but they devour her organically-grown
delectables. A culinary arts college student in California
grows his own chives and oregano in his window.
Once you've located a spot for your plants that has enough
direct light throughout the day, there are a handful of tools
you'll want to pick up before getting started. Everyone needs a
hand trowel and a hand-held weeding tool. A soil test kit,
shovel, leaf rake, steel ground rake, pruners, how and
pitchfork are also helpful, depending on whether you are
gardening in the ground or in containers.
Getting Started in the
Ground
If you are reclaiming an area outside for regular in-the-ground
gardening, you'll probably need to clear the area of dead
vegetation, garbage, rocks and other debris. Test the soil ph
with a simple kit that costs a few bucks at a gardening store.
If you're soil is too alkaline, it may recommend you amend the
dirt with aluminum sulfate, iron sulfate, or sulphure. If it's
too acidic, add the amount of lime it recommends on the
kit.
Make sure your soil is a good loam, meaning it's spongy enough
to soak in water, but sandy enough to drain properly. It should
have just enough clay in it that when you squeeze some in your
fist, it retains some of its shape but crumbles easily. Adjust
your soil by adding half in of clay or three inches of sand at
a time. You might also want to add Humus, molded leafs, or peat
moss.
Consider building wide beds by scraping dirt into rectangle
that?s about three feet wide and five or six feet long, with a
depth of at least 18 inches. If you lay weed mat or newspapers
covered with straw on the walkways in between, you?ll have very
little weeding to do throughout the season. The other reason
wide beds are recommended is that they are water-economical.
Because you plant staggered instead of in rows, more food can
be raised in a smaller area. Also, no plants have roots that
naturally conform to single-row gardening. Wide beds allow
roots to spread naturally, hence they support larger
harvests.
Once you get your watering system in, you're ready to plant.
People have a lot of success by laying drip hoses about a foot
apart across wide beds, then covering the whole bed with weed
mat. The weed mat warms the soil and helps retain water. After
starting seeds indoors before the last frost, thin plants
directly into the soil. Water frequently enough to keep soil
moist but not soggy. As plants become established, let no more
than the top two inches of dirt dry out before watering. Now
all you need to worry about is organic pest management.
Getting Started in Containers
Micro gardening is becoming the new trend because people now
realize the potential to grow large amounts of food in small
areas. Containers, by their nature, will contain or retard root
development some. Choose medium or large containers, as small,
single plants will dry out too quickly. Think wide but not
necessarily tall. Containers should be at least two feet in
height. Their diameters depend on how plant type and quantity
desired.
One barrel up against a wall that gets direct sunlight can hold
a few different types of plants. Place taller plants (like
tomatoes, beans or peas) in the back, medium-sized plants (like
peppers, onions, carrots or beets) in the middle, and
low-growing spreaders (like pumpkins and creeping thyme) in the
front and on the sides. Plan out your container garden before
you seed.
You can plan, arrange and fill your containers before the last
frost. Just make sure they never sit in standing water. Wrap
them in bubble wrap if you?re worried about them freezing, and
place plastic over the tops to help warm up the soil. Indoors,
a few weeks before your anticipated last frost, start 50% more
seeds than you plan on using to make sure you get enough
healthy sprouts to fill your containers. Thin and transplant
directly into the containers - through the plastic if you
want weed control -- before seedlings get spindly.
Water containers once or twice a day, depending entirely upon
your zone. Just like with wide beds, it's good for the plants
if the first inch or two of soil dries out. Don't ever let them
dry out completely or sit in water. A higher quality planting
mix should take care of these issues. Feed container plants
once or twice through the season, and use organic pest-control
methods.
Farming in containers or in the ground is equally rewarding.
The essence of self-sufficiency is growing and harvesting your
own food. Embrace lighting and space availabilities as
opportunities to eat more healthfully and enjoy the process of
gardening.
David Beart is owner of
the Professors
House, a site dedicated to
family, relationships, gardening, and
household issues.
|