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The First Time Vegetable
Gardener
Did I hear you correctly? You're just
"starting out" in the rewarding
(and often exhausting) hobby of
gardening? Think you'd like to grow your
own vegetables, instead of limiting your
choices to that natural-looking,
neatly-arranged assortment of mostly
foreign grown produce in the supermarket?
Are you concerned that, in all
likelihood, most supermarket vegetable
offerings may contain substances
(additives, pesticides, and other
chemicals used in their production) over
which you have absolutely no control, and
that you'd prefer not to serve to your
family?
Then you're among a growing number of
consumers with a yearning to take control
over the quality and content of at least
some of the food consumed, and have made
a firm decision to grow their own. Below
are some helpful tips for the
health-conscious neophyte veggie
gardener. . .tips not cast in stone, but
ones that will improve your chances of
success and satisfaction.
First, your new garden's location. Most
vegetables grow and mature best in full,
uninterrupted sunlight. You've probably
noticed that the big, profitable
market-growers don't have too many trees
in and around their production fields.
Eight to ten mid-summer hours is
preferable, but that may be a bit
difficult for many home-gardeners. Try
for an absolute minimum of six full hours
of direct sunshine during the brightest
part of the day. Save the shady spot in
your yard for the hammock. For the
beginning vegetable grower, 650 to 1,000
square feet of space is manageable. Be
careful not to bite off more than you can
comfortably chew! If you find you need
more space, you can always expand the
following year.
If your new garden space is currently
lawn or weeds, here's a word or two of
caution: tilled into the soil, crabgrass,
Bermuda grass, dandelions, and many other
aggressive weed species will re-grow from
the tiniest fragment and quickly return
to haunt any gardener. Take the time to
remove all weeds -- leaf, stem and root
-- before starting the garden. Most
experts correctly recommend that you
"peel" off the top two or three
inches of turf before you begin
preparing the soil to receive valuable
seeds or transplants. And you should know
that rototilling a patch of lawn is
probably the most common and tragic
mistake made by overly-enthusiastic
novice gardeners.
Soil preparation is next. Don't begin
until the ground is drained well enough
that a handful of soil squeezed into a
lump breaks apart when dropped from about
chin-high. Resist the temptation to
disturb soil that's gooey and sticks
together. I've always preferred to
prepare a new garden soil with a spade. .
.and I like to drive that spade
completely to the "hilt" and
turn my soil upside-down -- literally.
That's ten to twelve inches deep.
Homeowner-size rototillers rarely have
the ability to cultivate any deeper than
four to six inches. Not enough!
Having said that, Ive never been a
fan or proponent of
double-digging to the
oft-proclaimed depth of 16 to 24 inches.
Realistically, root systems of the
overwhelming majority of common
vegetables perform admirably in improved
soils cultivated to a depth of a foot or
so. Exhausting -- and frequently
discouraging -- double-digging is not for
me!
Soil that's been lawn or field weeds, and
hasn't been cultivated for several years,
is probably dirt-poor, so to speak. As
you turn your new food-growing plot
upside-down, mix in organic material such
as compost or sterilized cow or horse
manure to make it rich, deep and loamy.
Three or four inches worked in deeply
would be great! Peat moss can be used to
break up heavy clay soils but should not
be relied upon to add nutrition or
beneficial biology to your soil. Peat
moss is quite literally nutritionally and
biologically dead and adds nothing
of any lasting benefit to the soil.
Now's the time for a soil test. A mailer
and complete instructions are available
at your local Cooperative Extension
Service office. Cost for a test is in the
range of about $12. . .good insurance for
improving your chances of success right
from the start! While at the Extension,
ask about their selection of very helpful
publications to help you get off on the
right foot. Most are free.
Select your seeds, sets, transplants, and
roots carefully and, based on your
preferences, availability and quality. At
nurseries or garden centers, never settle
for tall, spindly vegetable transplants
that are root bound, or appear to have
been neglected in their tiny containers,
or ones that have already begun to bloom
or have set fruit. Those are
"dead-end" -- and the furthest
thing from a bargain. Make your purchases
early enough in the season to ensure
strong, stocky plants that have a solid,
healthy appearance and color. Reject any
transplants that have excessively curled
leaves, and those showing signs of
nutritional deficiency (bronzing or
yellowing of lower leaves, for example).
And never accept young veggie
plants from displays infested with aphids
or small, winged, "gnats" or
moths.
Most nurseries and garden centers will
carry one or more lines of acceptable
quality packaged seeds. Personally, I get
my seeds from well-known and reliable
local sources when possible, and I always
stay away from the bargain racks at
markets and those high-volume,
high-traffic big-box stores. I like my
seed fresh, and I take comfort in the
assurance of optimal, carefully
controlled storage conditions.
Fertilizer is, of course, an important
consideration. I prefer to avoid use of
bagged, granular, non-natural mixtures
for use in soil intended for producing my
food. Yes, you can use the recommended
10-10-10 (a "balanced"
commercial plant food), but for me, the
jury is still out on the long-term health
consequences of non-natural fertilizers
and plant food. In my mind, a safer
choice would be an organic mixture of
naturally-occurring plant nutritional
elements available at most large
farm-'n-gardens and garden centers.
Always follow directions printed on the
package and the recommendations
included in the results of your soil
test. You'll have a better grasp of just
how much fertilizer and lime to apply
once you have those results in-hand. Get
the recommended fertilizer and any other
suggested amendments thoroughly tilled-in
a few days before you actually sow your
seeds or plunk in your transplants.
There is actually more to achieving real
success in the home vegetable patch. But
now you have a basis from which to begin.
So, as soon as spring arrives, off you
go! Enjoy your new garden -- and keep a
stiff upper lip, a smile on your face and
a song in your heart! One final thought:
don't be afraid to ask questions. A
successful neighborhood gardener is a
tremendous resource. So also is the local
library. And your state's Cooperative
Extension Service can put you in touch
with a Master Gardener or two for some
first-rate and accurate local gardening
assistance.
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