Friday, October 31, 2008

The Summer Garden Is Finally In

With going away and then the family health hiccups we've had, my poor garden has been totally neglected.

Last weekend, DH finally prepared the garden beds for me. We've built one of the beds up a level and topped up the second bed with compost. He also built me 3 strawberry beds.

On Wednesday I bought some seedlings and last night they went in.

Strawberries

I bought 5 more plants to bring our total number of strawberry plants to 10. Those that have survived from last year have increased in size so I'm hoping we'll do better with our strawberry yield this year.

DH used 3 truck tyres filled with compost for me to plant into. They're nice and close to the vegie garden so will hopefully get watered more there.



I bought one punnet of sweetheart plants (4 in the punnet) and a single plant in a variety I've not heard of before - Eureka. It's supposed to grow large fruit.

Tomatoes

I was disappointed with how the Roma Tomatoes yielded last year and the Diggers Heirloom punnet I bought didn't even survive. So this year I'm trying a couple of different varieties. Mighty Red and First Prize. Each came in a punnet of 4 so I have 8 tomato plants in. A couple are looking a little on the sad side so we'll see how many we end up with in a week or so.



Cucumber

Last year my cucumbers got choked out by overzealous zucchini so I've tried to give them more room this time. I planted apple cucumbers last year but the kids weren't real keen on them. This year I've stuck with lebanese cukes (which is what I normally buy from the supermarket).



Sweetcorn and Beans

I bought a different variety of sweetcorn this year called Tasty. Last year we grew a variety called Sweetest which had a combination of yellow and white kernels. I couldn't find seedlings for this variety this time so we're trying something different.



I read somewhere recently that if you plant your beans at the base of your sweetcorn plants, they can grow up the sweetcorn plant. My beans were a total flop last year so I'm giving this a go. I think the biggest problem was they struggled for water being right on the edge of the vegie patch. Hopefully this way they'll get some of the water.

Squash, Zucchini and Pumpkin

I bought a punnet of green squash plants to try this year. We quite like the small yellow button squash but it's quite expensive. I've never seen green button squash before so hopefully it tastes okay.



The only zucchini seedlings the store had were black jack and we didn't really like the blackjack zucchini I grew last year. I thought I had some green zucchini seeds at home but I don't so we don't have any zucchini in so far this year.

The pumpkins took over the vegie garden (and half the rest of the yard) last year so the plan was to plant them outside the yard in the orchard (where they can grow to their hearts content). Unfortunately, I don't have enough of the right soil out there yet so I haven't been able to plant. I did pop a couple of butternut seeds in the edge of the garden yesterday in case I don't get the chance to plant any others. The butternut plants weren't quite as big.

Why So Many Seedlings?

I usually try to plant seeds where possible and only buy seedlings for those plants that are harder to raise from seed (like sweetcorn and tomato) but time wasn't on my side this year so I've gone for more seedlings.

While I really want to learn to garden as frugally as possible, for now we have decided that we'd rather spend the money and actually grow something. There is so much more benefit from the garden than simply low cost food. We're going for freshness, nutrition and taste above money saving. Hopefully as my experience grows, we'll do better at gardening on a budget.

4 comments:

Anonymous said...

I'd love to have a garden. I think the only veggie I don't like is radishes. But then again, it's been so long since I tried one I might even like them now.
Have a great weekend!!

River said...

Your sad looking tomatoes? Give them a dose of seasol and watch them pick up quick. Don't worry too much about the right kind of soil for the pumpkins. Put them in anyway. Put down a bucket of compost, drop the pumpkin seeds in, water with seasol and let them ramble. Just add a bit of compost now and then. They should be fine.

Ginkgo100 said...

Hi, found your blog through Entrecard! I was wondering why on earth you were planting tomatoes this time of year. Then I thought, she must live in Australia or South Africa. (I'm in the northern hemisphere.) I had to go to your main blog to get the answer. I'm not fond of fall and winter, so I am jealous of your getting to enjoy spring right now! Have fun and good luck with your garden.

lightening said...

Vicki - thank you. I hope you get to start yourself a garden soon. Even a bit of parsley in a pot can be incredible rewarding. :)

River - thanks. Followed your advice and gave everything a water with seaweed solution. Cucumbers are REALLY struggling (having some bug issues *sigh*) but most everything else seems to be settling.

Gingko100 - hi and welcome to my blog. I hope you return again. Perhaps I need to add something to my sidebar about being in Australia to make it clearer for new visitors?