Getting the Garden in the Ground

It feels like a lot has happened in the last two weeks. COVID-19 appears to be slightly loosening its grip on our daily lives and that’s hopeful. I know that isn’t the case everywhere and I’m certainly not supporting any premature relaxing of restrictions – the digital signage on the highway where I live still says “safer at home.” I personally think this virus will play a starring role on the global stage for at least another year. But I’ve been trying to focus on the things within my control and what I can influence to stay healthy. Ups and downs though, like everything. Rarely is anything in my life a linear and even paced arrow toward a target.

I got all my plants in the ground between May 14 and May 19. This gave a very generous three-week window after the last average frost date of April 21. I have read that giving a little extra time can be the difference between success and a lot of disappointment. With the weather here in the mid-Atlantic so wet and much cooler than normal I was in no rush.  I think it was the right call.

Here’s what I got done –

  • Peppers – my seedlings were not as strong as I would have hoped but I just had to plant them and see if they hang on.  If not, I’ll have to buy a few starts from the nursery.
  • Tomatoes – my seedlings never really advanced beyond the spindly, thin stage. After the second set of leaves came in, that was sort of it.  In hindsight, I don’t think I had enough nutrition in my growing medium. I opted to go by six heirloom plants from the nursery. I’m disappointed about this but it was a good learning for next year.
  • Beans – I’ve got three varieties of bush beans and one pole bean.  I learned last year to sprout them first, which only means wrapping them in a moist cloth (you can use a wash cloth, paper towel, cut up t-shirt, etc.) and leave them in a produce bag on the windowsill for a 2-3 days. Then gently remove them and plant them right away.
  • Cucumbers and Peas – built a trellis with old tomato cages by cutting the wire to essentially break the cage, bent them flat, and then zip tied a few old garden stakes across (see below).

You may recall the sadness and tragedy I experienced last year when deer ate all my luscious blueberries in one weekend.  Well, fool me once but not fool me twice. To ensure this doesn’t happen again, Cactus and I spent about four hours installing an electric fence around the berry patch. This is an area about 20×30 feet and we already had the poly wire and enough step in posts so hoped it would be a relatively easy project.  Cactus bought a solar powered fence charger from TSC and we figured it out pretty quickly watching this series of videos from McGregor Electric. The thing we had the most trouble with was determining what was grounding out the charge. I also wanted to expand our blueberry bounty so bought two additional bushes – Blue Gold and Duke. 

There’s a separate garden bed in the berry patch that I didn’t use last year, largely because it was free reign for the deer.  Since we got the fence installed, I decided to try corn, butternut squash and watermelon.

The black raspberry bushes are blooming beautifully and look way more full than last year. And fingers crossed that we’ll actually enjoy some figs this year. We put lots of leaves around the roots to keep them insulated during the winter and it was a very mild winter so it seems promising.

Close up of small fig growing on bush

How to Make a Trellis with Two Tomato Cages:

Keeping Busy, Staying Sane

Well this is not how I pictured April panning out.  I’m not one to plan out my life weeks in advance, but not leaving my house for four weeks straight was certainly not my ideal scenario, or yours I’m guessing.  Regardless, I hope you are healthy and safe wherever you are.  I hope you have food to eat and loved ones to check in with.  As many negatives as this situation is presenting, there are definitely some significant positives.  However, I’m not about to sugar coat it.  Lots of ups and downs in our household.  Thankfully more ups.  I don’t have any answers or solutions but I can say Cactus and I do infinitely better on the days when we each get an hour of ‘me’ time.  Preferably outside, with some fresh air, doing something active.  It clears my head, helps me slow down the thoughts that were starting to go on over drive, and gives me the mental re-boot to make the rest of the day more enjoyable.

Besides checking the calendar to remind myself what day it is, here’s what I’ve been up.

Nursing my seedlings. I’d say about 50% of my seedlings are going strong.  The peppers are on fire.  A bunch of my tomatoes and peas fizzled out and I think I’m to blame. I put them out on a really warm day for some fresh air and I think it shocked them.  If you are approaching your last frost date, be sure you do the hardening off gradually.  Like 2 hours one day, then 3 hours, then 5 hours, then 6 hours, etc.  It takes a little more attention but it’s worth it to not kill the plants you were just babying for the last 8 weeks.

Pepper and tomato seedlings that are strong healthy
8 week old pepper (left) and tomato (right) seedlings doing just fine…
Pea, pepper and tomato seedlings that are struggling
8 week old pepper (top) and pea (bottom) seedlings doing less than fine (there was not that much space between them – I’ve lost about 10 plants).

Planted my cool crops.  I sowed my kale, onions, carrots, beets, cauliflower and broccoli directly in the ground in the beginning of April.  Last year, I didn’t attempt a Spring garden so I’m curious to see if they take hold.  I had a great kale and beet harvest, but I did them in the Summer just a single time with no succession planting for the Fall.  I’m hoping that my rotation and all the manure and compost I’ve added make a difference.  Even though I have read about 100 times that soil testing is a must, I have not yet done it.  I am promising myself I will do it at the end of the season this year so I can amend as needed for next year.

Homemade teepee trellis. I experimented making a teepee trellis with some old blackberry canes.  I’m not sure how sturdy this will be.  I really want to use bamboo and I see walls of bamboo in yards when I drive around town, but I haven’t had the courage to knock on someone’s door and ask “Can I cut a few of your bamboo stalks?”

Blackberry canes lying on the ground
Some blackberry canes that I pruned for a potential teepee.
Four blackberry canes standing up to be secured as a teepee trellis
Four blackberry canes standing up for a teepee trellis.
Teepee trellis made out of four blackberry canes
Securing the four blackberry canes with twine.
Teepee trellis made out of four blackberry canes
Blackberry cane teepee trellis secured – wahoo!

Chick wrangling. Our four chicks (2 Isa Browns and 2 Gold Leaf Wyandottes) are alive and well in the bathtub.  They are getting pretty big and almost all of their fluffy down is gone so we’ll be ready to take them out and introduce them to the rest of the flock in the next two weeks I think.  I’m a little disheartened that two appear to be roosters.  I could be wrong *fingers crossed*.

One month old 2 Isa Brown and 2 Gold Leaf Wyandottes chicks in white bath tub
Look at the comb coming in so strong on the dark one in the back – grrrrr. You better not be a rooster!