How is your vegetable garden doing this year?
gjcore
4 years ago
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nbm1981
4 years agolast modified: 4 years agotomatoz1
4 years agoRelated Discussions
How much do you spend on your garden per year?
Comments (3)Yes...Nice Wagon! I've never really kept track of it, but do think it might be interesting to see just how much (or how little) I spend on my healthy obsession I call hobby gardening. This season (so far), it has been one small plant coop (cost-can't remember) 4 bales potting mix-$28 total 30 tomato plants-$5 Pepper plants-$4 2 shrubs...a variegated boxwood, and a new lilac (to add to my collection)...about $12 total unknown amount on postage seeds trades unknown amount on postage on plant trades...but so worth it for for what I receive in exchange. Yesterday I spent $12 on plant trade postage. I should figure up just what all I receive in return for that small investment. When trading, the digging, labeling, and packing of the boxes is the biggie...moreso than the actual cost, as it involves so much time to do it with great care and attention to packing them the best possible way. Sue...See MoreDo you use Solar Radiation forecasts in your vegetable gardening?
Comments (3)I think we all pay attention to it but do so indirectly, not in any formal or scientific study sense. But we consider it indirectly in the gardening aspects of picking the best sunny yard spot for the garden, E-W bed orientation when possible, plant placement to avoid shading of other plants or plant placement to provide some shade for other plants, ambient air temp dictated by the sun and its effect on plants, deciding when to water or when to apply foliar sprays, etc. Home gardeners don't have the cultural control advantages that large commercial growers do. We don't have the acreage, the equipment, the working staff, the funds, or even the need to produce for corporate profit they have. So we make-do with what we have and work to control what we can. The rest has to take care of itself. ;-) Dave...See Morewhat steps do you take in planning your vegetable garden?
Comments (17)I'm not trying to solve a problem with my post (I'm just being conversational, since I thought that's how the OP was meaning to be). I get seeds. I decide where to plant them. I repeat this process throughout the previous year and the winter. I plant them. I usually rotate crops, although I've had good success with certain kinds of crops in the same place two years in a row. I strategize as to how to avoid cat problems. I mostly grow Solanaceae (esp. tomatoes) and Cucurbitaceae plants, but I grow a bunch of other stuff, too, like basil, okra, corn, radishes, and bunching onions. I have to plan what to grow in more shaded areas, what to grow in containers (usually peppers), what to grow in the raised beds, etc. I have to plan how and if to amend the soil. I tend to till the soil (with a shovel), and do a lot of weeding. I experiment a lot. The garden isn't all about this year, in my view. Learning can help for the future. I'm not usually conventional in the way I garden (this is partially because the growing conditions and my resources aren't conventional, but also because I'm not the most conventional person out there). I don't mind taking risks if I see possible gains that I like enough. I actually grow F2 hybrids, sometimes. I save seeds from most things. I grow a lot of varieties to learn about them, and for genetic diversity in breeding projects. I keep records of results and what I have. I'd like to get into cover crops more. I make sure to plan when to start seeds in cells/trays in my small, unheated greenhouse (to be transplanted out of it later). March or early April seem to be good times for what I start in it. I plan my seed-starting mix, containers, etc. I plan when to fertilize my seedlings for the first time (if they're in the greenhouse long enough). Of course a lot of stuff you just have to plan until you find something that works (and then you can do that stuff that works again instead of planning all over). What works for one person or in one garden may not work for another in another....See MoreWhat garden hose do you use on your organic vegetables?
Comments (1)The hoses I use are vinyl and while they do kink on occasion I have not found them to be a pain to deal with....See Moredigit (ID/WA, border)
4 years agoNicole (CO Z5b)
4 years agotomatoz1
4 years agonbm1981
4 years agomathewgg
4 years agoNicole (CO Z5b)
4 years agonbm1981
4 years agonbm1981
4 years agoZachS. z5 Platteville, Colorado
4 years agodigit (ID/WA, border)
4 years agolast modified: 4 years agodigit (ID/WA, border)
4 years agotreebarb Z5 Denver
4 years agodigit (ID/WA, border)
4 years agotreebarb Z5 Denver
4 years agodigit (ID/WA, border)
4 years agogjcore
4 years agolast modified: 4 years agodigit (ID/WA, border)
4 years agogjcore
4 years agodigit (ID/WA, border)
4 years agolast modified: 4 years ago
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Nicole (CO Z5b)