April 2012

Play

This past week, I missed the normal scheduled show release.  I wasn’t sure anyone would miss a single show episode.

Boy, was I wrong!  I want to thank everyone who took time to email me expressing concern that something was wrong since there was no show.

Actually, I will come clean.  I took some time off from talking about how to garden, while my wife and I traveled to Corpus Christi Texas to celebrate my birthday, and retirement from my day job.

While there, I spent nearly a day onboard the USS Lexington, a WW II era Aircraft Carrier, touring several of the decks, including the flight deck and the hanger deck.

It was an exciting step back in history for me, seeing how they lived and worked aboard this floating city on the sea of 33,000 Tons!

 

  • Same as a 19 Story building

  • 3 football fields on Flight deck

  • 14 Basketball courts

  • 33,000 Ton City at sea with its own post office, hospital, barbershop and dental clinic

  • Overnight campout for Scouts

 

Back To Gardening

For this weeks episode, I decided to talk about my favorite varieties of Heirloom watermelons, and why they are my favorite.

 ·         Blacktail Mountain
Small, 12-18 lbs, deep scarlet flesh.

·         Golden Midget

·         Moon & Stars – Medium Size
Yellow Fleshed. 18-24 lbs

·         Orangegeglo –Large – Orange Flesh 24-32 lbs

·         Petite Yellow-Small Round Icebox sized ~5 lbs

·         Sweet Siberian

·         Georgia Rattlesnake – Large 25-30lbs

 

As a result of several emails this week, I wanted to talk a little about basic soil improvement and how you can easily improve your soil enough to have a good first year garden and beyond..

Your garden needs three things: Sun, water, and Soil.

You can’t add sunlight, you can’t make it rain, but you can improve your soil.

Unlike dirt, soil is full of fungi- mycorrrhizal fungi – several varieties

1.    Structure and texture – physical properties

2.    pH level ( acidic or alkaline

3.    Nutrients

4.    Organic matter

If just starting your garden, need to work in one or more of these factors.

Goal is a pH just slightly below normal – around 6.5 – 6

Adding compost and well rotted manure yields wholesale improvement to your soil on all 4 points.

Turn over the soil, sift out weed roots and rhizomes, add a few inches of manure and/or compost – could have a decent experience in your first year.

Add more next year and it will improve even more.

Natural Mulch – Mulching with Hay or Straw, and then turning it under  after the garden is done or after each crop is as good as “Green Manure”

Turn mulch and all over in either the Spring or Fall.

 Green Manure is a crop that grows quickly, usually an annual that adds a lot of nitrogen fixing to the soil.  They are turned under before the crops are planted.  They add beneficial microbes and nutrients to your soil

Clover, Hairy vetch, field peas, mustard, many others, mainly legumes.  Mixtures available at Johnnyseeds.com

Mail Bag

Thomas writes in from Illinois, asking if it’s ok to use commercial plant starts instead of seeds.  I respond with my opinion.

Alex writes in asking about the best way to prep his soil in his new community garden plot.  I talk a little about methods and recommend using a stirrup hoe since his weeds are still small.

 

{ 3 comments }

Play

Why do so many people want to downsize and simplify these days?Barn

While I can’t answer for everyone else, I wanted to share my reasons, and see how they compare to yours, whether you are in a suburban lot wanting to move or are already there, most of the benefits will be the same.

 

 

{ 2 comments }

Life’s Little Surprises

April 18, 2012

One of the bumps in the road to moving to my country homestead in California, was the sale of our current home in Texas.  Since we weren’t able to sell for as much as we planned on, we had to stick around for another year and save up some cash. But that meant our new [...]

Read the full article →

GYG-074 DIY Garden Accessories

April 15, 2012

I recently received a new copy of one of the many Garden Supply Catalogs in the mail.  While looking through it, I saw a couple of innovative Ideas I wanted to try, but was appalled at the price. As I paged through the issue I began to see how so many first time gardeners can [...]

Read the full article →

Water – Why Worry?

April 10, 2012

Many of us live in areas in where most years, Mom Nature provides us with all the water we need for drinking, gardening, landscaping, sports, and many more uses. But we never know what mood she might be in so we should all try and conserve and stock up on water when we do have [...]

Read the full article →

GYG-073 Tomato Basics

April 8, 2012

Recent Organic News: This week I learned that citizens of Vermont are close to getting a Bill passed to require Labeling of GMO products, including those using GMO’s in their production. However, even though the large majority of the citizens want it, and most of the committeemen are in favor, it appears to be stalled [...]

Read the full article →

California Here I Come

April 4, 2012

It’s really hard for me to believe this, but it’s been nearly a year since we placed our Texas Property on the market and planned excitedly for moving to a new home on our land in California. But due to the down economy, when it did sell in September, it was substantially less than we [...]

Read the full article →

GYG-072 Breaking Ground

April 1, 2012

Wow! What a week this has been. All sorts of problems with my Hosting Provider making it impossible to post the podcast on time. You wouldn’t believe the hours working on my “Geekdom” with them to get this resolved. As a result, this weeks podcast is a bit short, and I debated even publishing it.  [...]

Read the full article →