Tuesday, March 30, 2010

Pictures of the Yard

The main garden
 Last year I dug a 1 foot deep trench around it and put chicken wire in it.  I filled it in and put a 4 foot fence on it.  It's attached to the chicken wire with tywraps.  No woodchucks in here.  The rabbit liked the cucumbers though.

Clubhouse plot
The picket area is wider and shallower then the 1st year's garden.  In the pickets are garlic.  The pickets along the back are so I don't mow over the 2 rows of fava beans I planted a week ago.  The front right will probably be dill.  I'm hoping for lots of pickles.  To the left you can see the clubhouse my brother in law built for my son.  The woodchucks have made space under it.  I tried to pull the mint that had overrun the plot out.  I threw the roots near the entrances.  If it doesn't die, it might annoy the woodchucks into moving.
Garlic
The 1st garlic sprouts up.
Mystery plant
This came up in the square foot plot I had.  We had lettuce mixes planted that never headed.  And we didn't pick it because we were not quite sure it wasn't weed.  It went to seed, neglected.  And this came up.  Lettuce?  Something from the grass underneath?  I'm not sure if we could eat it.

1 comment:

  1. My husband is being modest when he describes the work that he does to make this garden so successful. For example, the trench he dug around the garden took him several weeks. He buried the chicken wire 18" under ground so that the woodchucks wouldn't dig far enough. We were heartbroken the year before when almost all of the zucchini had a woodchuck bite. I started the plants from seeds in the basement and took good care of them. They were my babies. We broke even that year- 50% of the food went to us; 50% to the woodchuck.

    Through the off season, Tom spends time reading and researching techniques and other cool ways to geek out the garden. It makes the winter months pass more quickly. There is also so much excitement when the seed catalogs arrive. Tom develops lists after lists after lists of his wish list of vegetables. I know that he has ordered much more than could ever fit in our one acre yard. Of course, we also have play areas for our children so the entire acre isn't reserved for the garden. As we continue to grow the garden each year, I bet we will get closer and closer to using up all available space, but for now, the children can play (and eat along the way).

    Our children are unusual (according to our friends with children)in that they love vegetables. They love the typical kid favorites of green beans and tomatoes, and they also love the not so typical veggies like :brussel sprouts- I remember our daughter crying because the last brussel sprout was eaten; beets, tomatillos.... you get the idea. We believe it is because they have been involved in the process and have watched these beautiful creatures emerge from mere seeds that we have cared for....

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