Garden 2009
/Planning for this year's garden is in full swing. This will be the third year that we grow veggies in our back yard and we've got big ideas for that 15ftx 45ft plot of dirt.
(The New Victory Garden- awesome book!)
As much as I think that I would love taking on something like this..."Be realistic, be realistic, be realistic" is my mantra this year. Last season I planted 4 cherry tomato plants!!??? After eating gobs of them ourselves and forcefully offering them to all of our friends and neighbors, we just couldn't consume all of them. So, this year I am focusing on things that we like eating,in quantities that we enjoy, and that can be easily preserved.
The girls have been especially inspired. I have been trying to find age appropriate ways of incorporating them into the planning.
After going through our favorite seed catalog (Bountiful Gardens- heirloom/non genetically modified seeds), we picked out our favorite veggies. Each girl was allowed to pick one or two packets of seed for her very own tending. For Hannah sunflowers are always a must. She also wants to try some strawberries.
Emma and I measured our garden space and then worked out how much room we would need to plant what we ordered. She investigated which plants grow well together and created a little "vegetable friends and enemies" chart. Then, I gave her some graph paper and asked her to create a map of our intended plans to scale.
It proved to be a great little math/science/nature study assignment. She worked hard on it and enjoyed the detailed and spacial thinking that it required.
In the previous years we have just grown our vegetables in the ground. However, our soil is very clay based and it has been hard to amend it for better draining. So this year I have requested above ground beds. My husband has also promised to a install drip irrigation system. Last year I relied up on timed sprinklers or manual watering. I'm finding lots of inspiration out there.
Here is what we hope to grow this year:
corn (I haven't had success in years past with non-gmo corn seeds, I'm going hybrid this year)
potatoes
zucchini
broccoli
cauliflower
cucumbers
snap peas
carrots
leeks
radishes
onions
tomatoes (roma, cherry, and large heirloom)
sweet bell peppers
strawberries
green beans
greens (butterhead lettuce, gourmet mix, chard)
squash (acorn, butternut, yellow crookneck)
The seeds are on their way and we are making room around the sunniest spaces indoors. The last frost date around here is about middle of May. Planting day is coming soon!