It's Easy Being Green

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Gardening

Master Gardeners & Their Teaching Tools

Posted by Nate On August - 6 - 2009ADD COMMENTS

This weekend my wife and I were looking for some free things to do with the baby where perhaps, a little fussiness on her part would be allowed.  We made some stops on our errand list and then headed over to the open house put on by the Southwest Indiana Master Gardeners at their demonstration gardens.

Looking through the historical kitchen garden at the gazebo taking center focus in the Southwest Indiana Master Gardeners Demonstration Gardens.  It's located in Evansville, IN at the former site of an old state hospital, now long gone.

Looking through the historical kitchen garden at the gazebo taking center focus in the Southwest Indiana Master Gardeners Demonstration Gardens. It's located in Evansville, IN at the former site of an old state hospital, now long gone.

The event is an opportunity for the Master Gardeners to showcase their skills and chat with people interested in learning the hobby of gardening.  Wherever I’ve lived, I’ve found the Master Gardeners to be the “go-to” resource for the best information on how to make your garden grow in the particular region you’re at.  They can offer insights into local pests and diseases, what grows best and what you shouldn’t waste your time on and maybe new things to look out for.  Master Gardener programs generally work in partnership with the local agricultural extension office which provides another amazing source of gardening info.

The demonstration gardens feature many All-America Selection Winners, not only in the flower features but also fruits and vegetables.  I took notes on the varieties that seemed to be thriving so I can try them out in my own garden next season.

The demonstration gardens feature many All-America Selection Winners, not only in the flower features but also fruits and vegetables. I took notes on the varieties that seemed to be thriving so I can try them out in my own garden next season.

Not only did we get to wander through several different garden styles like a water garden, rain garden, butterfly and bird garden but they also had several different vegetable and fruit demonstration gardens as well.  One of the goals was to showcase two different ways to grow your own food, either organically in raised beds or in normal garden plots.  They also showcase many All-America Selections; plants that are nationally tested and proven locally for the past 75 years.

The berry demonstration garden showcased a plot of strawberries, blueberries and another plot of vining berries.  Blackberries and raspberries were trained to climb up the arbor that separated the two plots from each other.

The berry demonstration garden showcased a plot of strawberries, blueberries and another plot of vining berries. Blackberries and raspberries were trained to climb up the arbor that separated the two plots from each other.

It was great being able to walk through the demonstration gardens and get some ideas for our gardens of the future and the advice dished out by the Master Gardeners was great too.  Now I’m considering taking their classes this fall and becomming a Master Gardener myself.

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Zuchinni season rockin’ and a rollin’

Posted by Nate On July - 14 - 20091 COMMENT

My two zuchinni plants have grown to encompass probably about four square feet of garden space a piece now and are popping out some whoppers!  The zuchinni plants really seem to suck up all the rain water they get which in turn produces some that look like they’re vying for world domination.

This week's harvest from the backyard zuchinni plants

This week's harvest from the backyard zuchinni plants

This picture shows this week’s total take.  We’ve been eating a lot zuchinni and are skulking around for some more recipes.  Usually we just saute it up with some butter, herbs and wine and eat as a side dish.  I know I’ve seen recipes for stuffed zuchinni that looked pretty good so I guess I need to go track that down again.

Do you have any great zuchinni recipes?  What do you currently have a bumper crop of in your garden?

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We got a round of thunderstorms rolling through southern Indiana around 4 a.m. and another spout of rain.  The other half of garden bed I’ve been waiting to complete turning and getting ready for planting was primed and ready to go after the rain this morning and it was overcast so I wouldn’t char my skin.

I still have seedlings of cantaloupe, cucumbers, pumpkins, tomatoes, lettuce and a few other random things still waiting to be planted.  I finished weeding out the major chunks of grass and then raked in a layer of Schulz Enriched Gardening Soil for Flowers and Vegetables.  I’m using this as a quick ammendment while my compost gets good and hot and as a holdover until I can put together a raised bed system for next season.

I was a bit surprised though when I dumped out my bag of soil ammendment and found some trash.  Schulz was kind enough to include bits of shredded plastic and even foil cigarette wrappers (menthol to be exact) in my bag of garden soil.  I’m no hort expert but I’m guessing there hasn’t been a new study saying smokes for your garden generate whopping yields!

Free trash included in my bag of garden soil ammendment

Free trash included in my bag of garden soil ammendment

I’ve sent Schulz my findings and will see what they have to say about the matter.  In the meantime, it looks like tomorrow will be planting day for Phase 2 of my veggie garden.  Meanwhile my Orange Oxheart Heirloom tomato is under attack by aphids.  It looks pretty piddly right now despite the fact that it’s the tallest tomato plant in the patch.  It had a flush of new blooms at the top but all have turned brown and are dieing.  Since I take an organic approach, I got down on bent knee today and squashed and picked off as much bugs as I could.  We’ll see if the poor thing can recover.  The cherry tomatoes and roma’s have all put on a new flush of growth with all the rain and are looking good.

My sweet corn has finally emerged and is taking off quick.  I wouldn’t be surprised if it does end up making the “knee high by July” standard.  Lemon cucumbers are sprouting new leaves after about a week or two of transplanting.  Zuchinnis are putting on new growth and new blooms are emerging.  It looks like a fruit or two have already taken hold and are sucking up the free water.  My eggplant is flowering and will hopefully bear soon.  Yellow wax beans and the limas are off to the races along my fence line.  They’re beginning to bush out and my late season pea vines are taking advantage of the overcast days and have reached about 6-8″ tall.

How is your garden doing?  Let me know!

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Rogue gardener “steals” mint

Posted by Nate On May - 20 - 2009ADD COMMENTS

Since I’m a rogue gardener, I’m also not shy about “stealing” plants.  Actually I’m pretty sure it was my wife who turned me onto the act, lasciviously telling me to uproot certain plants so she could divide, steal and replant so nobody would ever know.  Now I “steal” on my own without having to be told.

There are so many plants out there that require dividing because they multiply and sometimes at great rates.  Iris plants are just one such plant that benefit from frequent dividing.  The benefit to you is that you get more plants, so-called clones that you get to insert into your garden in another spot or give away to friends for planting in their gardens.

The other day I was working near a nicely landscaped series of garden beds and much to my surprise, noticed large, vibrant mint plants rambling throughout the bed.  Mint of course will take over anything if you let it because it sends up runners anywhere it can.  I simply plucked one of those runners from the soil, made sure to get some whispy roots on that plucking and dropped it in a glass of water at home.  It’s been sitting in a sunny window for about two weeks now and is about ready to find some soil I think.  The roots look great!  Now I’ll have my own mint plant thanks to “stealing”.

Other plants that you can “steal” and root in water include tomatoes (check out my previous writing on that), basil, avocado (the pits), pepper, willow, african violet, pothos, coleus, sweet potato vine, gardenias and spider plants.  I’m sure there are many more out there.  If you have a plant that you like to “steal” and plant or root in water, leave a comment and share with your fellow gardeners.

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Ramblings of a rogue gardener

Posted by Nate On May - 17 - 2009ADD COMMENTS

When it comes to gardening, I’m like a mint plant:  rogue and rambling throughout the landscape, putting down roots wherever I see fit.  I guess that’s just how I roll and I kind of like it.  I’ve learned you can’t really be prim and proper with a vegetable garden anyway because inevitably, the darn things grow in ways you never expected and couldn’t contain even if you tried.  That’s why I go rogue.

I got my first vegetable bed planted earlier this week and two nights of soaking rain have helped to water it in good.  I planted 10 tomato plants all together: 4 roma, 4 cherry, 1 heirloom orange oxheart and 1 unknown plant that already has a tomato.  I also planted two zuchinnis and an eggplant in that tiny plot.

Last night I took advantage of the cool weather and finished my work with the pitchfork, overturning another plot of the backyard to plant in.  It’s supposed to dry out this week which will make it much easier to work the heavy Ohio Valley clay soil that I’m learning to wrestle with.  I’ve never seen soil so thick and claylike in my life, now imagine trying to figure out how to grow stuff in it!  After living in Arizona though, another poor soil condition, I’m just learning to deal with it and hopefully ramp up compost production so I can begin enriching and lightening the clay in our garden beds.

I also ended up coming upon quite the stack of free seeds from a fellow gardener who just had surgery and won’t be planting this year.   Last night I started rampling about the yard, poking seeds in just about every spot imagineable.  My thought is why not use every available inch of space or bare ground to grow some food for us.  So I followed the fence line, scratching a trench in the clay and planting Alaska peas, Henderson lima beans, Cherokee Yellow wax beans and Golden Bantam sweet corn.

The method would probably throughly confuse any “classical” vegetable gardener who likes to have everything in nice little neat rows.  That’s not me though!  I hilled up the sweet corn and planted about 6 plants to a hill and am hoping the line of bush beans and peas will just grow up against the fence at the edge of the lawn.  We’ll see how my rogue method works.  I can’t wait!

Meanwhile, I still have dozens of seed packets waiting for some bare earth and have work to get to.  My seed collection is verging on old, so I think I just need to plant everything that’s old and get it out of rotation.  I know a lot of it is already past prime and won’t germinate.  I’ve had some of these packets for at least 10 years if not more (I know, don’t judge) and most seed has a shelf life of only about 5 years.  It’s time to purge!

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Get your garden on

Posted by Nate On May - 9 - 20091 COMMENT

It’s been a whirlwind past few weeks as we get into the final days of my wife’s pregnancy.  I can’t believe how quickly times has flown by and how much I’ve had to get done.  Admidst all that, I’m ramping up for the Summer garden season and am getting ready to get our vegetable patch going.

I probably should have started my seedlings a lot sooner but since this is my first season here in the Midwest, I’m a little behind the curve.  We’ve been saving our used cardboard egg cartons and just turned those into a seedling factory a couple of weeks ago.  They work great and don’t drain water all over the place and they save space too.  Eventually, you’re supposed to be able to just clip the individual egg cups apart and plant the whole thing just like a peat pot.

Another egg carton seedling tray with lemon cucumbers and yellow squash reaching for the sky.
Another egg carton seedling tray with lemon cucumbers and yellow squash reaching for the sky.

I had a few loose seed packets left over from previous years so I started some lemon cucumbers, zuchinni, yellow squash, Trip-L Crop Climbing Tomato, Benchmark Tomato, Jumbo Tomato and some bush beans.  So far, the sprout factory is off to the races with with many of the squash plants winning.  Some are even ready to be potted up because they’re getting a bit leggy now.

My next task is to get the future garden plot prepared for planting.  We’ve been inundated with rain for the past three weeks or so and it seem like we’re finaly going to get a short dry spell.  That will hopefully allow me the chance to actually get out and get some soil turned over and ready to go.  The composter is set up and already on a roll.  We just cleaned out the rabbit hutches and that provided a lot of great compost material, along with our usual kitchen scraps and trimmings from the bushes and flowers around the house.

So, how does your garden grow this time of year?  Are you a Midwestern gardener with some time tested tips?  Let me know what you’re growing and what you can always rely on for a bumper crop harvest!

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Lawn before gasoline

Posted by Nate On April - 11 - 2009ADD COMMENTS

Long before gasoline powered mowers, gardeners used different tools to trim up the lawn.  Whether it was a push reel, human-powered lawn mower or something as simple as a scythe, people lost the desire to use some hard work to keep up with the grass in their gardens.  Then came along the gasoline powered mower and the rest was, well history.

I remember as a kid watching a neighbor of mine struggling with his electric lawn mower.  I always thought that was quite the novelty, knowing only one person who actually plugged their mower into an extension cord as opposed to a gas pump.  It always seemed a bit of a struggle for him though, wrestling with the extension cord he was dragging behind him in the yard.

Black & Decker's new 24 Volt Cordless Mulching Mower

Black & Decker's new 24 Volt Cordless Mulching Mower

That’s why I got excited about Black & Decker’s new 24 Volt Cordless Mulching Mower.  It’s brand new to the market and seems like a fantastic edition to anyone’s arsenal of lawn care equipment.  The mower is Energy Star certified and plugs into the wall outlet to recharge itself.  The unit isn’t suggested for large lots as it can only cut about 1/3 of an acre per charge but for smaller lots it’s ideal.  Estimates show it will cost about $10 per year in electricity to operate their new mower.  Compare that to about $5 in gas every two mows.

Why else is it such a great idea?  Americans use 800 million gallons of gas every year just to mow our lawns.  In that process, we spill more gas than the Exxon Valdez spilled into the ocean back in 1989.  Gas-powered mowers are also responsible for about 5% of our air pollution each year.  It might be hard to believe those facts but when you consider American’s lawns take up three times more land than the corn currently grown, you can see just how big of an impact your lawn can have.

If you’re interested in entering a contest to win Black & Decker’s new 24 Volt Cordless Mulching Mower, head over to the Alternative Consumer Blog and enter yourself!  You can also win an electric sweeper there too.

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