A Real Garden Update

 

Before I start with the garden, you can see some of the starts we have growing in the greenhouse yet to be planted in the garden. Above are some tomatoes, basil, leeks and something else that has flown my mind. Unseen on the other side are some summer squash plants that I just put seeds into pots so they aren't much to look at yet.

We've been getting some nice rains of late which have been nice after two severely dry years. Fortunately, now that the garden is steps behind our house, we can easily go out and plant for an hour in the evening and not have to wait an entire week when our garden was a 2 hour round trip drive away. In the foreground are a number of rows of peas, nearly decimated by rabbits but staging a comeback. In the far left there are some radishes, a row of lettuce that I harvest just after snapping this picture for a nice supper of salad. Next to the lettuce are some failed basil and a very thin stand of carrots and a different type of radishes. I'm not sure why we didn't get a good stand but I suspect the type we planted just wasn't hardy for our conditions. Beyond the peas and the failed radishes are a couple rows of onions that are doing quite nicely.

Above is a swath that we have carved out for a strawberry bed. My wife's father loved to raise strawberries and thus they have a soft spot in my wife's heart. Unfortunately, the row in the center was mowed off by rabbits and thought to be dead. I bought a bunch more, smaller ones to replace them and the eaten ones have stage a comeback. These are all everybearing strawberries, a kind I have never raised. The ones my parents planted when I was a kid were the ones that ripened in June and then were done for the year. 

Above is a section we carved off for potatoes, most of which have now broken the surface and look quite healthy. We have raised decent crops of potatoes the last few years but none that were really big like the ones I remember in my childhood. I tried a different planting method this year. Instead of planting two or three potatoes per hill, I put a single potato in and then another a foot apart and so on to create a row. I'm hoping that with only one potato per spot, that perhaps they will grow better tubers and then planting them a foot apart (used to plant them two feet apart), we will just have a continuous row of potatoes to dig up.

Beyond the potatoes are some beans that I just planted, two rows of French green beans and six rows of dry shell beans of various sorts. Also unseen is a row of okra seeds that we saved from last year that I also just planted in a failed row of parsnips that never came up. The remainder of the garden is growing up in volunteer daikon radishes that the deer destroyed last fall. I just left them until it is time to plant our tomatoes and peppers which won't be too long now.


One of dozens of pictures I have of deer walking the perimeter of our garden looking for week spots in the defenses.


Comments

  1. You must know the perfect height for a deer fence because I have seen them jump smaller fences easily. The ease with which they did it was impressive.

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    1. I have seen them jump fences as high as ours but usually when spooked or pursued. It seems to keep them out for perusal grazing.

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  2. That's fantastic progress! You've put a lot of work into it, to get your new garden established. The deer are worrisome though. I hope your fencing does the trick.

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    1. It has thus far worked well and I have several years experience that it will continue to be that way.

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  3. Rather than growing vegetables why not concentrate on venison and rabbit meat?

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    1. Hunting laws within city limits unfortunately. I used to have somebody out in the country shoot me a deer every year but that fell through a long time ago.

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  4. You just know those deer are cursing under their breath!

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    1. I'm worried they are going to get my asparagus patch outside the fence just for spite even if they don't like the taste.

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  5. So much potential. I hope you can keep all the critters (and insects) at bay!

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    1. We haven't had any problems with insects yet at this garden and the ones we had at our prior garden were fairly easily dealt with.

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  6. Looks like it will be a bumper garden year for you folks. Or the rabbits. One way or another, someone will be eating good in the neighborhood.

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    1. I hope you are right about the bumper garden year. Thus far, we've only harvested a bumper crop of lettuce but that is pretty easy to grow.

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  7. Quite impressive, Ed! I love when someone is winning the battle with wildlife!

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  8. Your garden is well on the way. Good planning gets you there.

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  9. The advice we were given on deer fences long ago is if the animal believes it will risk breaking a leg, they will not jump it unless either severe hunger or severe fear are involved. Risk/reward ratio.

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    1. I would agree with that statement too. Once, i saw a deer attempt a tall fence as it thought it was being pursued by a vehicle. The rear legs clipped the wire and it flipped through the air and broke it's back upon impact.

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  10. So your rabbit zapper isn't working? Poor wabbits...

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    1. It has been working well thus far. I haven't seen any signs of predation since I turned it on.

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  11. That's very exciting! (and will be so much easier) I love homegrown strawberries and green beans. They have loads of flavor. I have everbearing strawberries and they are nice but don't produce as much along the way as the June ones. There are advantages to that.

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    1. That is what my wife thinks. I'm of the mind that I would rather just pick a bunch and then preserve what we can't eat in a timely manner. But I'm going to pick that as a hill to fight a battle. I have let her have the victory this time.

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  12. OK, well good to know I'm not the only one who has certain crops that just never come up. Tomato plants are looking good!

    My cat would not have any issue with that fence 😒

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    1. I'm guessing the electroshock therapy required to climb it might be enough to stop your cat.

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  13. Wow! The garden is going to be busy this year. Good luck with all of your crops and keeping those pesky animals out of there. May I suggest a nice, robust basset hound to dissuade the garden visitors?

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    1. I'm sure even rabbits would get tired of getting licked by fat basset!

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  14. That's going to be an awesome garden. Looking forward to seeing it progress. Funny with all that greenery around your home, the deer want to get into your garden patch!

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    1. Everything is always "greener" on the other side of the proverbial fence.

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  15. You garden is looking great! Poor starving deer:(

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