Friday, December 27, 2013

Raspberries

I'm in the process of developing my gardening goals for 2014, but one thing I know for sure is that I want to learn more about how to take great care of the plants I already have. First and foremost, the raspberries.

I was so pleasantly surprised that the raspberry plants I got from my friend last spring did extremely well. Not a single one died, and they all produced a lot of delicious raspberries. The nicest thing was that they waited to ripen until we got back from vacation, so we didn't miss any of them. I want to be good to them in return.

My raspberry canes currently run along a fence that divides my side yard from my backyard and then along the side yard fence that divides my yard from my neighbor's. The guy that does her yard work tends to be brutal - cutting the grass extremely low, hacking away at perennials, and chopping off any bits of raspberry cane that peek through their side of the fence. I need to learn how to control these plants and keep them in the safety of my own yard.

That means pruning and training. Apparently (according to the University of Minnesota Extension's website, Raspberries for the home garden) I was supposed to have cut down the canes that produced fruit last year at the end of the summer (because I have summer-bearing plants), but I didn't know about that until just now. Looks like I can still do it early in the spring, although I might get reduced yields. Now I know better.

They also recommend fertilizing with ammonium nitrate, which I won't do. I will use some finished compost and some of the fertilizer mix I made two years ago, though. And maybe I'll plan to mulch with grass clippings to add more nitrogen.

Pollination helps produce a lot more fruit, so I wouldn't be surprised if the borage I planted next to the raspberries helped last year. The bees absolutely loved that stuff.

Here's my action plan for the raspberries this spring:

  • Cut back the canes that produced fruit last year (I hope I'll be able to tell which ones to cut).
  • Thin the new canes (primocanes) to 4-5 sturdy canes per foot. I don't think I'll actually need to thin them, but we'll see. If I do thin, I'll either extend the hedge down the fence line or make another row in the side yard. Probably the former.
  • Tie up the canes. I can probably get away with tying them to the top of the fence. Then trim them to 12 inches above where they're tied. 
  • Dress with finished compost and organic fertilizer.
  • Water regularly.
  • Plant borage near them again.



Monday, June 17, 2013

Spring garden photos

It's nearly summer, but here are photos of the springy things in my garden:

The backyard

Drawer planter box - peas, lettuce, carrots, scallions

Main square foot garden - tomatoes, basil, peppers, parsley, broccoli, eggplant,
borage, arugula, mizuna, kale, lettuce, and spinach.

Eggplant

Lettuce, peas, carrots

Small perennial bed - sorrel, taragon, chives, onions, white bleeding heart, shasta daisy, some other stuff

Peas!

Heuchera

Rhubarb

Just a clover flower. I saved this plant and weeded out the columbine because I don't know what I'm doing yet.

Sedum

Flowers from the unruly bushes in our front yard.

Raspberry blossoms

Another raspberry blossom

Experiment: planting in unfinished compost. Going well so far. Echinacea,
broccoli,  jalapeno peppers, parsley, rosemary, thyme.

Broccoli

Nasturtium

Chive blossoms

Oregano

Pink bleeding heart

Aaron got me this cute fish from El Burrito Mercado

White bleeding heart

Tuesday, June 4, 2013

Welcome, garden

2012 was a terrible year for my garden. It was like being super excited about being pregnant, giving birth, and then never bothering to water or weed the baby and not even picking the green beans before they turned into giant woody monsters.

This year is going much better. I managed the excitement of the pregnancy by 1) letting myself do some exuberant planning but then scaling it way back and 2) combining planning with action - I started seeds inside! And they did really well! While I certainly am not on track for my original goal of eliminating lawn in the backyard, I have fully carried out my scaled back version of backyard plant-heaven and will soon make it a backyard sit-around-and-grill-heaven (patio!!!).

These are all the things I've put in the ground - either at my house or at my community garden plot - so far this year:

Seeds I started inside
  • Sun gold cherry tomato
  • Cosmonaut volkov tomato
  • Brandywine tomato
  • King of the North sweet pepper
  • Early jalapeno pepper
  • Rosita eggplant
  • Echinacea (purple coneflower)
  • Thyme
  • Gigante d'Italia parsley
  • Broccoli

Plants I got for free (from friends, community garden donation)
  • Welsh onion
  • Shasta daisy
  • Fern
  • Obedient plant
  • Tarragon
  • Oregano
  • Sorrel
  • Hydrangea
  • Calendula
  • Snap dragon
  • More stuff

Plants I bought

Just a black-eyed susan from the Feline Rescue plant sale.

Seeds!
  • Golden beet
  • Red beet
  • Peas
  • Bush beans
  • Pole beans
  • Lettuce mix
  • Arugula
  • Mizuna
  • Spinach
  • Kale
  • Borage
  • Calendula
  • Nasturtium
  • Carrot
  • Shintokiwa cucumber
  • Lemon cucumber
  • Basil
  • Lemon basil
  • Zucchini
  • Scallions
  • Catnip
I'll try to remember to post pictures soon.