Showing posts with label Planning. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Planning. Show all posts

Saturday, January 11, 2020

A New Year & New Garden Plans


Welcome back to another episode of Lost in the Farmers Market.  Before we dive into this episode of LITFM I would like to make a last call for a Sustainable Neighbors annual event. Tomorrow, which is Sunday the 12th of January at 2:00pm at Leclair’s General Store Sustainable Neighbors will be hosting its Annual Seed Swap Event. If want seed varieties that you’ve never seen before, come on down! If you’ve got seed varieties you’d love to share, Come on down! Hell, come on down if you’ve got no seeds and want to get some groovy seeds to start your garden right in 2020! This is an open door event all are welcome and we would be glad to have all of you. Now, onto today’s topic, as per tradition at LITFM, I often like to debunk concepts that are common in the gardening and agriculture field and part of today’s post is flatly debunking the heck out of the belief that nothing blooms in the winter and a winter garden is bland and has nothing going on.
 
Viola tricolor - Johnny Jump Up

Viola tricolor - Johnny Jump Up

The above two images disprove two common gardening misconceptions at once. Firstly, that you can’t have bright colors in the garden all winter long, and that you need a fancy rain barrel so rain catchment isn’t an eyesore. Pansies and Violas both are frost proof in our climate come in a wide variety of colors and can fill almost any bland spot in the garden. As an added bonus they love cold weather, may resow themselves and will freely hybridize over time. As if that were not enough the flowers can be candied, or eaten in salads making them a winter food item. As for the rain barrels you see That the test gardens have pretty bland looking black plastic rain barrels of the type that you can buy at low cost from the Agriculture Extension’s soil and water office. However few have thought of putting those hanging plastic bag planters on the sides to break up the outline of the barrels so they can be pretty or have thought to place basket planters in the tops of the rain barrels to add extra color. I urge all you readers out there to reconsider how you use garden space in 2020 to see if you can maximize the usage of space without compromising the productivity of your garden operations.

 
Fragraria x ananassa 'Ozark Beauty' - Everbearing Strawberry

Despite what a lot of garden guides say, in our climate strawberries prefer the colder months and may stop producing in the dead heat of summer. Most strawberries have white flowers but a selection have pink and even red colored blooms and this can add some delightful color to the winter garden in the form of fruit and blooms. It is false to assume that you only have one option when it comes to strawberries and also to assume that they too cannot possibly be pretty. Of course the trick to good strong strawberry plants is ample nitrogen and good soil which is why the pictured specimen is growing in a large tree-pot. Also on the lower right hand side of the picture is a volunteer flowering tobacco plant (Nicotiana sylvestris) which is supposed to be a frost sensitive annual, and it didn’t get the memo. In the lower right are Danver’s Red-core carrots (Daucus carota subspecies sativus) which seem to do well next to the strawberries. The contrast in leaf shape is its own form of decoration plus two-thirds of what’s in there is a food plant.

 
Pisum sativum var. saccaratum 'Oregon Giant' - Oregon Giant Snow Pea
 Snow Peas are a species of pea that are given little consideration in the garden because they are often overshadowed by more famous species such as Shelling peas and other types of Sugar peas. However snow peas are the most cold tolerant of the lot and will take frosts and produce peace in the dead of winter. Their white pea blossoms are a welcome sight at a time when little else is blooming and few food crops are so massive. Batches of these guys  can be grown in 14" pots with a small tomato cage as support and they will be perfectly happy. The trick is ti get them started while it's still warm in September along side whatever Swiss chard, Carrots and Radishes. This late start time means that they don't compete for space on seedling trays with members of the cabbage family whom should be started a month earlier in August. For note there are several varieties of Snow Pea that have been tested in the botanical test gardens such as Taichung (pink flowers) and, Snowbird (White flowers with rare pink blush), so there are options out there.


Camellia sasanqua - Variety Unknown

What indeed would a southern garden be without the Camellias? Sasanqua-type camellias bloom in the dead of winter, and come in single, double and triple forms and may produce viable seed too. If you like rose blossoms, but hate that roses don’t do much in the cold months Camellias can provide your cold-seas color fix and they make nice cut flowers. The only thing they don’t seem to do is have a scent, but then that’s where other flowers like pansies come in. I should also note that Camellia sinensis is the source of black and green teas and having one of these shrubs will add function to your already stately and evergreen camellia bushes.


 
Lunaria annua - Honesty, Silver Dollar Plant, Money Plant
 
I love it when I hear gardeners say ‘Aw, but nothing grows in the winter’ because I know Money plant would love to have a word with that person. Lunaria is a biennial meaning it emerges and grows one year and then produces seed and flowers the next year. It is in the Cabbage family so parts of it are edible and when it blooms it produces bright purple flowers. The flowers are followed by the plant’s trademark papery seed capsules which are the size of Silver dollars which is how it got one of its common names. Unlike other members of the cabbage family, Lunaria isn’t nutrient intensive and will happily naturalize where aver you sow the seeds and be a nice neighbor.


 
Narcissus pseudonarcissus 'Thalia' - Thalia Daffodil

Daffodils are one of the earliest to emerge bulbs that you can plant, they are aromatic, and in the case of Thalia they also change color. Thalia emerges butter yellow, and then fades to pure white and the petals may go semi-translucent. Aside from snowbells and the next entry daffodils can add some serious early color to your garden in exchange for minimal maintenance. Narcissus are also squirrel, mole and vole proof because they are very poisonous, and their scent tells those critters to get lost. You can plant other more vulnerable bulbs in with the daffodils for protection.


 
Iris cristata - Crested Iris
You don’t see crested Iris in gardens much, and I believe this one was a ‘distressed plant rack’ rescue from bLowes. Its variety is unknown however, it emerges super-early, we’re talking late November making it earlier than Daffodils if you can imagine that. It blooms later however and it persists until late summer as foliage. In contrast to other Iris who tends to be summer oriented this is an option for earlier color and shape in the winter garden.

 
Agave americana - American Aloe

If course I had to show this plant. American Aloe isn’t actually an aloe but a member of the agave family that can live for decades and get massive over time. It’s a succulent with some pretty difficult spines that once established needs no care (much like a prickly pear) and will reward you with a unique shape that can be the center piece of a garden bed year-round. Starting with a small one (think 6” pot) yields the best reward because you get to watch this native succulent grow and develop. The blue-green new foliage and grey green foliage is interesting to look at. The best part is if you look closely, you can see that the developing leaves naturally are furled so tightly that they leave permanent marks making for odd patterns that are never exactly the same on each leaf.


Abutilon megapotamicum 'Orange Hot Lava' - Flowering Maple

I sold a number of these plants in 2019, and will have them again in 2020. But this isn’t about shilling for the market, instead if you notice this flowering maple in the dead of winter still has its leaves and shrugged off every frost we’ve had so far proving it’s hardiness in the garden. This relates to the prior topic of alternative uses because this plant mimics a Japanese maple due to its leaf shape making it a suitable alternative to an actual Japanese maple. The bright fireball orange bell shaped blooms that appear all summer long are an added bonus that liven up the garden when the plant’s foliage is overshadowed by showier options. Just to be clear, flowering maples (Abutilon) are actually in the Hibiscus family and have no relation to the Maples (Acer). Oh and as a technology fact, the Computer brand named Acer, well the word Acer means 'Sharp' which isn't surprising since the Acern company is best known for producing computer screens. I admit a slight bias to that company's products due to the clever name.

 
Brassica oleracea 'Lacinato' - Dinosaur Kale

As a final thought for this post, the above demonstrates how you harvest leaves from a cold season leaf green kind of plant. You cut the lower leaves off and use those instead of harvesting the whole head because it will result in more numerous harvests over time. It also removes the oldest leaves from the plant facilitating its natural growth pattern while opening up air spaces below the given plant to prevent disease.


With all that garden goodness covered this is the part of the blog where I have to advertise for the Fayetteville City Market. Now I know you readers probably don’t much like advertisements, but by booth at the City Market helps to cover the costs of running the test garden and literally maintains the Research & Development budget that is used to bring you the information that has made up the backbone of this blog. Also, as of the start of 2019, my booth can now process credit or debit cards thanks to the acquisition of s a Square reader so your payment options have doubled. With that said, if you want to get some GMO-free, Organic vegetables, herbs and fruiting shrubs come on down to the Fayetteville City Market on 325 Maxwell Street in downtown Fayetteville between the Hours of 9:00 am and 1:00 pm on Saturdays. Even in bad weather the market goes on though you might have to look for me under the ‘arches’ of the Transportation Museum’s front entryway.

Plants & Stuff Available Now:

All the Stuff:
Soup Kits: $6.00
Seasoning Packets: $2.00
Ginger, 4oz Packet: $2.00
Wormwood Packets: $2.00
Lavender Packets: $2.00
Pepper Packets: $2.00
Garlic, Whole Bulb: $1.00

Coming Soon:
TBA

These days I am generally at Leclair’s General Store once a week, for the weekly Sustainable Neighbors meeting at 5:30pm through 7:00 pm. If you have questions then I will be there to answer your questions. Since our meetings have an open-door policy you don’t need to sign up for anything or join anything, you can come on in ask for us and join the meetings. If not, you can always send me questions through this blog or visit the farmer’s market or pay attention to what Sustainable Neighbors is doing at the link below.

https://www.meetup.com/SustainableNeighbors/

This brings to a close the first LITFM post of 2020, stay tuned the next episode which should be posted on the 24th of January. There will be more garden updates and other cool stuff.

Thursday, April 11, 2019

Delayed but Present*


Welcome back to another episode of Lost in the Farmers Market. This is the first post of April which is the first full month of spring and the point at which the weather could go either way. It could get cold, we could conceivably have frost or it could be constantly rainy and miserably wet. There is no predicting the weather in a year where Easter is late. Just as a note the unofficial latest frost date is normally Easter Sunday, however because Easter is late this year, super late! In 2018 Easter was April 1st, but this year it’s the 21st for reasons that don’t make a lot of sense truthfully. According to the USDA, this year’s last probable frost date is the 9th of April, since I cross-checked past unofficial and official frost dates for the last decade just to see why we have such a holiday anomaly this year. I think it is safe to say that the USDA date is the safest of them all as long as you utilize the normal amounts of caution and watch the weather reports.

With my correction to prior statements about the frost date handled, it’s time we get into the real substance of today’s garden topics. In the last post we got waylaid because I stopped the normal order of things to discuss frost and how some plants have defenses against it. At the time I thought we had a relatively long wait before we could plant out the warm season stuff but research revealed the information in the paragraph above and now, we are back on track. April is a pretty heavy month, because it and the last two weeks of march ideally is when you should be doing the real heavy lifting because it is just cold enough that you are not straining, but warm enough that you are not shivering. This week’s post will cover the planning of a bed, and the next post will cover the soil science that supports it.

About bed design, it’s not a complicated thing to do.  The actions that you undertake to create a garden bed are no different then a sculptor’s work with a featureless block of stone int hat you start with an idea of what that featureless patch of earth is going to be, and then you act in measured amounts to make it look like what you imagine. There are errors and such along the way of course, but that’s part of the learning process. The final result is your imagination brought into reality, and the reward may literally be the fruits of your labor. This discussion leads to a question I get a lot as a professional in the field of Horticulture.

“How do you design garden beds?”

The answer is a lot simpler than most would believe, as it follows five stages.

1.      Visualize the Project – I often try to imagine what the bed might look like, and what I intend to put in there and what that bed might look like say, five to ten years after construction. I also consider what impacts new bed-idea will have on the surrounding landscape such as if or if not, it will alter water runoff, if it needs extra irrigation and what maintenance it will need and how often it will need it. At this stage a very rough concept sketch might be drawn.

Sorry if this image is a bit light, I used a new scanning method.

2.      Measurement & Drafting – The second stage involves me taking the needed three-dimensional measurements to estimate what the project most likely will look like. Although precision isn’t absolutely necessary at this point (see image), when I draw out a three-dimensional version of the project it helps with stage three.

The upper portion is a top-down view while the lower half is a rough three dimensional view as seen from the back of the house.


3.      Refinement & Estimation – In order to estimate the full cost of building a bed, I need reasonable measurements and research into the cost of materials and the relative amounts of materials that are locally available. The refinement of the drafted plans in step two are either just a more precise redraw, or a computer aided refinement for clarity purposes (see image).


4.      Final Survey – A fair number of gardeners forget this step, but it is important because it helps you lessen the incidences of ‘Discovery’. ‘Discovery’ is a Horticulture term that refers to the things in the landscape that you accidentally encounter that were not seen at any stage of the process prior and they may pose a serious problem for your project. Discovery might be buried pipes (call 811 if you are not sure folks!) electrical lines, buried stonework (yes, the foundations of brick walls can sink over time) and that’s just the basic hazards. You might save yourself a lot of trouble if you say spot that yellow jacket ground nest you missed before. The final survey which can accompany a photo-survey of the work site can help document your progress for outside scrutiny and if you want good input a picture is literally worth a thousand words.


5.      Actualization – For those of you into psychology, this isn’t some Maslow’s hierarchy of needs kind of stuff. This is the stage at which you have a plan, did your research and have all the materials ready and the time set aside, you and anyone helping you make that dream happen.  There is room for learning at this stage especially if the bed you are building is part of a greater plan. After you are done you can do a critical review and see how to streamline the process or just move on to the next operation, either way you have accomplished your goal.


 Given that the above project has been delayed thanks to my neighbor's constant disrespect for property lines, I do not have pictures of this project going any further at the time of this delayed post. I will however, post an update and or edit in photographs as the project progresses so that all of you out there can see the whole process. Below are this week's garden
It's been a running joke for years that those elusive few blue Bearded Iris on premises evaded photography and were imaginary only, well here is the proof.

This poor crested Iris has had a rough two years, it's story is one of perseverance (see below).
 I bought these in one of those bulb packs in 2017, and then forgot about the pack entirely. later the same year I uncovered it and found the shriveled remains of a single iris rhizome that by all accounts should have been compost so I tossed it in the raised flower bed and figured it would just become fodder. Boy, was I wrong, this bulb sprouted, but did not bloom the first year and I was surprised and decided to let it keep trying, in 2018 it came back, but wasn't too happy in it's location. So I then transplanted it to the pictured location in the compass bed, and amazingly it loved it there and this is the first year it bloomed. No matter how delicate a plant may look, you might find out that deep down you have a tough as nails survivor that only needs the right opportunity to amaze you. I should note the day lilies in the right-hand corner of the picture also had it rough, they were in the front bed and endured frost damage and being run over by the neighbors cargo van, as an act of mercy that bed was evacuated this year and it's occupants, four Shepard day lilies and two Cayenne Red Cone flowers were transplanted to rear beds to give all those perennials a renewed fighting chance.

 
Viola hybrid 'Heart Throb'
 As the final garden photograph of this post, we have Heart Throb Violets, which is a cultivated hybrid of the fairly common English Violet (Viola odorata) which is also known as Sweet Violet because of it's sweetly scented flours and the use of them in confections. If you pay attention to what herbicide companies claim it's is a terribly invasive species that is out to deprive you of the American Dream, steal your significant other and apparently is better at every aspect of your job so it will get you fired also. Now for those of you who read this blog regularly you know I have a favoritism for violets because they have so many herbal uses, also cultivated versions have pretty foliage and flowers in other colors than violet or blue so this is a versatile garden perennial that is semi-deciduous. These plants are very good at breaking down tougher compounds in leaf litter and turning that into topsoil, also it might be possible they have a beneficial link to earthworms as their dense canopy of foliage  may or may not provide shelter when rain forces worms out of their burrows. Volets are a partial to full shade perennial that prefers moist (but not wet) soil that is a bit on the clay side but does perfectly well with compost-enriched potting soil. It might go dormant during the winter especially if in a pot. Overall it's a well behaved medicinal herb to have around.

With all that garden goodness covered this is the part of the blog where I have to advertise for the Fayetteville City Market. Now I know you readers probably don’t much like advertisements, but by booth at the City Market helps to cover the costs of running the test garden and literally maintains the Research & Development budget that is used to bring you the information that has made up the backbone of this blog. Also, as of the start of 2019, my booth can now process credit or debit cards thanks to the acquisition of s a Square reader so your payment options have doubled. With that said, if you want to get some GMO-free, Organic vegetables, herbs and fruiting shrubs come on down to the Fayetteville City Market on 325 Maxwell Street in downtown Fayetteville between the Hours of 9:00 am and 1:00 pm on Saturdays. Even in bad weather the market goes on though you might have to look for me under the ‘arches’ of the Transportation Museum’s front entryway.

Plants & Stuff Available Now:

Herbs:
Basil, Sweet: 3” - $3.00
Etruscan Santolina: 3” - $4.00
Eucalyptus, Dwarf: 3” - $4.00
Fennel, Black: 3” - $3.00
Garlic, Jerimiah’s Heirloom  3” - $3.00
Lavender, ‘Elegance Purple’: 3” - $3.00
Rue, Marbled: 3" - $4.00
Tansy, (Feverfew): 3" -$3.00

Fruits & Vegetables:
Lettuce, Cimarron: 3” - $3.00
Lettuce, Parris Island: 3” - $3.00
Mustard, Red Giant: 3” - $3.00
Peppers, Tabasco: 3” - $3.00
Peppers, Thai Dragon: 3” - $3.00
Potato, Dark Red Norland: 3" - $3.00
Tomato, Black Cherry: 3” - $3.00
Tomato, Chocolate Cherry: 3” - $3.00
Tomato, Glacier: 3” - $3.00
Tomato, Gold Nugget: 3” - $3.00
Tomato, Sungold: 3” - $3.00

Garden Perennials:
Coneflower, PowWow Wildberry Mix: 3” - $3.00
Salvia, New Dimension Blue: 3” - $3.00
Milkweed, (Asclepias tuberosa: 4" - $4.00
Milkweed, Whorled: (Asclepias verticillata): 4" - $4.00


Coming Soon:

Carrot, Amarillo
Carrot, Atomic Red
Carrot, Black Nebula
Carrot, Lunar White
Coneflower, Cayenne Red
Datura, Black Currant
Datura, Indigo (rare!)
Datura, White Ballerina
Lupine, Carolina
Parsnip, Hollow Crown
Pomegranate, Dwarf: 6"


These days I am generally at Leclair’s General Store once a week, for the weekly Sustainable Neighbors meeting at 5:30pm through 7:00 pm. If you have questions then I will be there to answer your questions. Since our meetings have an open-door policy you don’t need to sign up for anything or join anything, you can come on in ask for us and join the meetings. If not, you can always send me questions through this blog or visit the farmer’s market or pay attention to what Sustainable Neighbors is doing at the link below.

https://www.meetup.com/SustainableNeighbors/

                        This brings to a close the seventh LITFM post of the new year, stay tuned the next episode which should be posted on the 19th of April. There will be more garden updates and other cool stuff.

*Authors note: This post was delayed due to a heavy allergy flare-up. Don't worry folks, it was written before the due date and only required posting but, for a few days I was VERY sick, things are on the mend now and the next update which is also already written should get posted on time. Sorry for the delay and thank you for reading.