The Garden

Hey guys…good morning to you! Welcome back to Ridin’ Out the Recession, and we’re so glad to have you today!

Alright, we hope you all are fine, and life is treating you good. I know that now, some of our Northern neighbors are beginning to see some weather change…for the better. We’ve had absolutely beautiful weather here in Central Florida now for the last month and a half, and I gotta say…spring is sure a wonderful time of the year!

Once more, thank you guys for such great support in our little dilemma Deb and I are faced with. I’m only saying quickly, that we appreciate every one of you! In regards to anything life may throw at any of you as well, please know that our door is always open to you all!

As you know we replanted the skips in our old style, larger garden. The seeder was having a hard time with the ford hook lima beans because of the size of the seed. They kept hanging up in the drop tube, blocking off the drop of the seeds.

Deb and I hand planted the skips, and coming back home from town this afternoon, those little fellars are busting out everywhere. I thought the skips might have possibly been from some other sort of problem, but I’m convinced now it was just the seeder not being able to handle that large of seed.

The corn…this I’m beginning to believe may well be a problem with the seed. It’s came up, but very, very spotty. I even reseeded all 5 rows and very little of that is coming up. It may be the soil, but it’s the same soil we used last year, with even more manure tilled in. We’ve even moved it over in the garden from where it was planted last year.

You may be right Kunoichi, I may have to become a commercial fisherman and lay fish below it next year!! LOL!

I do know corn just saps the soil, but we planted peas across the whole garden last fall, I thought that would help, plus with the extra manure…I don’t know?? Anyone have some suggestions in this regard?

I will compost this entire garden heavily over the winter, and till it in. I’d like to add a couple loads of a good topsoil-sand mix, and then possibly a load of clay.

At that point, till it in well, and I believe the clay content will help with holding the moisture a little better. Any thoughts on that as well would be appreciated.

Unless you’re on an old lake bottom, our area of Florida is really, really sandy. Where we live is called “the Ridge,” because around us is a big sand ridge.

But, through visiting with all you guys, I’m really beginning to see the light in regards to continual building of the soil. As I’ve said earlier, we have been burning so many types of material we could have been using in a garden area it ain’t funny. Once again…old dog, new tricks.

Well, with the ford hook skips looking like they’re handled, besides the corn, everything else is doing fine.

The green beans, Henderson limas, and speckled butter beans all look good. The cucumbers and squash started off slow, but have now “grabbed another gear” themselves, and look fine too. The tomatoes, eggplants, and peppers, are coming on as well!

This garden was planted about three weeks after the raised bed garden. Once we planted this garden, rain became an issue very fast, or I should say the lack of it. But, I believe we’re now on the right track, and it will be time well spent just shortly.

The canning end of it isn’t far off now. I hope we’ll be able to throw up some videos of this once we get started with it.

Now those dern raised bed gardens?? Those scoundrels are really doing well. Good, good dirt, plenty of sun, but afternoon shade, and two out of three times we water it, we use “Mississippi Queen’s” Cow Tea concoction! It works people, and it works well!

Once more, cow manure in a stocking, pantyhose, whatever you gals call em, just stuff in the cow manure, tie an end, put this in a large barrel or container, fill with water, and let sit til’ the mix becomes dark brown. Try it…you’ll like it! We do!

For people living in suburbia, I swear, this is the ticket. I’m sure lasagna gardens work well also, but I’m seeing this first hand, and seeing, is believing! These are going to do very well production wise, versus area planted. Honestly, I was surprised.

I took a few pictures of each for you, but understand the raised beds have about a three week jump on the other garden. Regardless of this though, the raised beds are kicking the other garden’s butt right this minute. Better soil, better care…big difference!

How about a joke today? I got it this morning, and Deb and I both thought it was funny. Maybe it’ll put a smile on your face as well!

A lady goes to her priest one day and tells him, ‘Father, I have a problem. 
I have two female parrots, 
But they only know to say one thing’ 
’What do they say?’ the priest asked. 
They say, ‘Hi, we’re hookers! Do you want to have some fun?’ 
’That’s obscene!’ the priest exclaimed, 

Then he thought for a moment….. 

’You know,’ he said, ‘I may have a solution to your problem.  I have two male talking parrots, which I have taught to pray and read the Bible… 
Bring your two parrots over to my house, and we’ll put them in the cage with Francis and Peter. 
My parrots can teach your parrots to pray and worship, 
And your parrots are sure to stop saying…  That phrase…  In no time.’ 
’Thank you,’ the woman responded, ‘this may very well be the solution.’ 
The next day, She brought her female parrots to the priest’s house…. As he ushered her in, 
She saw that his two male parrots 
were inside their cage holding rosary beads and praying… 
Impressed, She walked over and placed her parrots in with them… 
After a few minutes, The female parrots cried out in unison: 
Hi, we’re hookers! Do you want to have some fun?’ 

There was stunned silence… 

One male parrot looked over at the other male parrot and says,

‘Put the beads away, Francis, 
Our prayers have been answered!

Thank you all for coming today! We look forward to seeing you all again!

God Bless everyone!

Dub

String Beans & Speckled Butter Beans

Corn…see the skips

Henderson Limas, to the left of garden hose, Ford Hooks, to right

Reseeded Ford Hooks busting out of the ground

Deb “checkin out the maters!”

Tomatoes in the Raised Bed…and Deb

Eggplant, Bell Peppers, and Onions

Won’t be long now!

This entry was posted in Ridin out the Recession. Bookmark the permalink.

3 Responses to The Garden

  1. z1queenie says:

    We use something called grid gardening for our raised beds. The theory is that your typical garden truck grows in the top 6 inches of soil. We took a sod cutting shovel and cut the grass off the dirt, hoed it up a bit and took

    You take four 2″ x 6″ x 8′ boardsand cut one of them in half. You make a 4′ x 8′ square and fill it with dirt to the top of the board. We used top soil, composted cow manure and grass clippings. Then you take an extra piece of 2 x 6 and use it to level your dirt.

    You then mark it off with string for your grid. You have 3 strings going the long way and 8 strings going the short way. You now have 24 squares approximately 1.5′ x 1′. We put in tomatoes, cabbage, herbs, red and green peppers, peas, beans. We took 9 foot furring strips and nailed them to the long side of our box and strung up between them with twine and the pole beans went nuts.

    I think we got too ambitious becuase the tomatoes, while they produced, they didn’t produce like they probably could have. so this year we now have a total of 3 grid gardens. The first one is going to have the short crops in it, the next is going to have the medium stuff, and the last one is going to have the tall stuff like tomatoes and beans. We are also going to try to grow cukes and peas on the lattice that you can buy at any lumber yard.

    I wish I could put pics in here because it really looked good. Google grid gardening and you should find pics of what it can really look like.

    I love this column. Keep up the good work.

  2. Kunoichi says:

    Hmmm… is it just the angle of the photo, or are those corn skips all in the foreground and not so much in the back? It looks almost like a vertical patch across the rows, with a few looking very yellow. They look almost “burned.”

    Have you tried testing the ph levels of your soil? If it’s too acidic, you might want to be adding gypsum or bone meal instead of clay. Corn likes soil on the acidic side (5.5 to 6), but too low, and it can no longer make use of the nitrogen, calcium or potassium.

    Might be worth picking up some test kits and see.

    Gosh, you have a nice big garden!

    *nostalgic sigh*

  3. Bonnie Hollingsworth says:

    I guess we have really been blessed! I’ve never done a soil test, just “wing it” like so many other old-timer gardeners. I have a tendency to just do what my daddy taught me. One of the things, though, was to rotate crops. As for nitrogen, he said that peas put nitrogen into the soil but things like corn rob the nitrogen from the soil. Those were the two crops that he faithfully rotated and always had good yields on both.

    As for the raised beds, our garden is just a little plot of ground down below the house. We did use a raised bed for our strawberries, and really goofed it up. We used landscape timbers. It is 8 feet wide and 12 feet long. Now, we find that we cannot weed easily across an 8-foot span without stepping in among the plants. Can’t be done by old timers like us! Mistake! Oh, well, they are gowing good, come back every year, and we get a good crop of delicious berries. Up here we cover them with straw of some kind over the winter. This year we have planted another kind of strawberry on one of the banks and are just going to “let them go” to see what happens!

    This is a great thread (gardening) and Dub and Deb do us all a good turn! Not only do they offer sage advice for “Riding Out the Recession”, but it gives readers a chance to trade ideas. Those include both sucesses and failures and we all profit.

    Batten the hatches; hard times is a-comin’, folks, and we all need to be as prepared as we can! If you live in a condo and have no ground, learn to grow bean sprouts. They are nutricious and yummy! At least learn to grow a few veggies in containers. Like growing your flowers better? That’s okay; there’s some flowers that you can safely eat or fry the blooms for food. Investigate, learn, and keep reading Dub and Deb!

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

*

You may use these HTML tags and attributes: <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <strike> <strong>