Wednesday, April 15, 2009

Seedlings
































They are here!! Look close to see my first little seedlings that have popped up there little heads! At the end of March I planted peas, spinach, radishes, broccolli, and cabbage. I have seedlings up for all of them now. Now is a great time to plant any of those and onions, lettuce, eggplant and corn, among others. Check your seed packages to see what else can go in. Don't wait until May to plant your peas and spinach, they don't do well in the heat and need to harvest before it gets to hot.

Children's Garden
















We are trying some square foot garden boxes in addition to our traditional garden this year. We have made a herb box, a salad box and a children's garden box. We made them out of 2 x 6s we had left over from another project. We painted them for one family night and planted them for another. The soil is compost, peat moss and vermiculite (or pearlite). We got the compost from the land fill for $25.00 for a cubic yard and a half ( a good buy), the peat moss ($10.00 for a large bag) and vermiculite $23.00 for a large bage at Lowes. We were able to fill 6 4 x 4 garden boxes for that (some for our parents).

I think the garden box will be a fun way to get the kids involved in the garden. Hyrum got to pick out his own seeds (he selected honey dew melons, popcorn, lettuce, little finger carrots, green onions, peas, bush beans and a sun sugar cherry tomato plant- tasty and I don't like tomatoes.)

Saturday, April 4, 2009

Kristi Moultrie Hone on Square Foot Gardening

"Square Foot Gardening is exactly what I am doing this year. We have a fairly small yard. We just bought our wood to make our 4'x4' boxes. I am going to do two boxes this year with vertical supports at each end so I can grow my vine plants. Next year I may add two more. I also got peat moss, vermiculite and I am going to get a truck load of compost. We are going to dig out a section of lawn and put some sort of barrier between that and our fresh dirt we are putting in. Hopefully that will slow the grass from coming back up in my garden. Some of the bigger plants like squash and pumpkins I am planting in my front yard with my flowers. That way they won't take up all the space in my SFG. For the last 5 years we have planted our tomatoes in the front and they have done really well. I'll try and take pictures as we garden this year.
I also believe you can grow a garden for way less than $700. With all the supplies I have got for the boxes, the vertical supports, the good, rich soil, and my seeds I bought in bulk I will have spent less than $200. And I have enough seeds for probably 3 years. I shouldn't have to spend anything else for a few years. I am now just crossing my fingers that it all goes as planned!" - Kristie Hone

Thanks Kristie for that information on starting a square foot garden!

Friday, April 3, 2009

Urban Gardens

Not everyone has a large back yard to grow a garden. This news story was on KSL and I thought it might inspire those with little or no yards. I definitely think this can be done for less than $700 though!! I plan on trying some square foot gardening, which can be modified to look like what the guy in the story has. I would love to hear from any one with experience in small scale gardening. Post in the comments or send it to me in an email and I'll put it up as a post.

http://www.ksl.com/index.php?nid=148&sid=6053177

Thursday, April 2, 2009

LDS church food storage counsel

I have been working on my food storage for several years now. I got started when I was called in my ward (local church congregation) to serve on a cooking with food storage committee. I believe the best place to start is with the counsel from LDS church leaders, from there use the inspiration to direct you to what is best for your family. The more we worked on being prepared, the more direction and help we received.

The food storage posts will all reflect what I or other friends have done, use them as suggestions and ideas, not as the only way to do things.

Because each family is different, you will notice the church has given broad guidelines, not specific lists.

http://www.providentliving.org/channel/1,11677,1706-1,00.html

Tuesday, March 31, 2009

Soil Test

Here in Utah we have alkaline soil, that is the opposite of acid soil. That means when you are looking at plants make sure they do well in alkaline soil, some like blueberries need acidic soil and will not do well here.

You can have your soil tested to see it's Ph and see what kinds of fertilizer you need to add. Go to the local extension center (at the county courthouse) and they will give you a soil testing kit with instructions, the kit itself is free. Then follow the instructions and send your soil sample along with I think $10.00 (it's on the instructions) to the lab and they will send you an analysis of your soil. It has been a couple years since we did ours but I believe it takes about two weeks to get back.

http://extension.usu.edu/files/publications/publication/HG-513.pdf

http://extension.usu.edu/files/publications/factsheet/HG_H_05.pdf

If you live in another state, check with your country extension service to see about soil testing.

Where to plant your garden

Most garden plants need full sun. This means they get sunlight most of the day, and are not in the shade of buildings, trees or fences. When you have selected the place for your garden, watch it on a sunny day to make sure it isn't shaded during different times of the day. If you plan adding other landscaping items like trees or sheds, draw out a plan for your yard and place those items on it to see if they will shade your garden.

Our backyard faces to the south and full sun is not really a problem for us (that's code for it's freakin' hot back there :). We chose to put our garden all the way in the back and then put our trees on the north side of the garden.

If you have selected a spot that is currently lawn you have two choices. You can cut out the sod (with a sod cutter or by hand), then till up the ground, be sure to add some organic material like leaves and compost and probably some fertilizer. You can also wait until the grass has greened up and is growing well and use Round up on it to kill it. You may have to apply that more that once. Round up only works on plants that are growing well. Be sure the grass is really dead, because it will be hard to get rid of once plants are growing. After the grass is dead till up the soil.

The KSL Garden show addressed this topic a couple of times this last Saturday, Podcasts of the show are available on their website, see the Garden Websites list on the side of my blog.

An important thing to know before you start any garden project is how are you going to water it. There are many different options and I will try and look at some in another blog post.