Show me your garden
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I had bought a big thing of it 50$ at lows to built the trellis... And didn't even use 1/2 of it so got the idea to try a few feet here and there of different beans (the stakes used are just 7$ for a 6pack at lows too and used zip ties to hold together
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I know ur excited!!!0
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ettaterrell wrote: »I know ur excited!!!
Lol yes I am we are going to get lights and stuff today0 -
Forgot to put words with my photos. First to know - I have never in my life had a garden, so it may get wrecked by my inexperience. I am enjoying seeing the things pop up though. Right now I have carrots, spinach and lettuce planted - this weekend I'd like to get my tomatoes and cucumbers going. I have the herbs in a pot inside...so far the only one that seems to be failing is the cilantro. I cut it back to see if it will come back to life. If not, no big deal . Oh, and the sprout picture is from a week or so ago - much more progress has happened since then!0
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Deena_Bean wrote: »Forgot to put words with my photos. First to know - I have never in my life had a garden, so it may get wrecked by my inexperience. I am enjoying seeing the things pop up though. Right now I have carrots, spinach and lettuce planted - this weekend I'd like to get my tomatoes and cucumbers going. I have the herbs in a pot inside...so far the only one that seems to be failing is the cilantro. I cut it back to see if it will come back to life. If not, no big deal . Oh, and the sprout picture is from a week or so ago - much more progress has happened since then!
Gardening is so fun and calming to me.. and watching things grow that you've cared for is so rewarding
So congrats and I hope you enjoy it as much as I do! One quick note from the pictures I see is the herbs are planted in one bucket... Basil alone is a very large plant and needs at least a 3 -5 galon bucket if ur not doing in the ground... Same with most herbs... Mint and Rosemary too get pretty big! I have grown mint before and it filled a 5 galon bucket... I am growing Rosemary this year for first time but what I've read so far has me thinking it will be going in the ground instead of a container... So you see having all those plants in just one container will be way over crowded. IMO... I'm just learning to but I read a lot...... So have learned a great deal about gardening and learn more every year.. Good luck!!
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My basil plant one year grew 3 to 4 ft tall! Lol2
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ettaterrell wrote: »Deena_Bean wrote: »Forgot to put words with my photos. First to know - I have never in my life had a garden, so it may get wrecked by my inexperience. I am enjoying seeing the things pop up though. Right now I have carrots, spinach and lettuce planted - this weekend I'd like to get my tomatoes and cucumbers going. I have the herbs in a pot inside...so far the only one that seems to be failing is the cilantro. I cut it back to see if it will come back to life. If not, no big deal . Oh, and the sprout picture is from a week or so ago - much more progress has happened since then!
Gardening is so fun and calming to me.. and watching things grow that you've cared for is so rewarding
So congrats and I hope you enjoy it as much as I do! One quick note from the pictures I see is the herbs are planted in one bucket... Basil alone is a very large plant and needs at least a 3 -5 galon bucket if ur not doing in the ground... Same with most herbs... Mint and Rosemary too get pretty big! I have grown mint before and it filled a 5 galon bucket... I am growing Rosemary this year for first time but what I've read so far has me thinking it will be going in the ground instead of a container... So you see having all those plants in just one container will be way over crowded. IMO... I'm just learning to but I read a lot...... So have learned a great deal about gardening and learn more every year.. Good luck!!
So, since I'm in an apartment, Miss @ettaterrell, and I don't have any windows that get good sunlight, but I do have a daylight lamp, do you have any pointers for how I could go about doing a countertop/indoors herb thing? Like not much bigger than a chia type thing? If I could grow my own fresh herbs, I could definitely use them more in my cooking and such... I'd love to do something...but I'd have no idea where to start... LOL1 -
I have a seed starting room set up in my spare bedroom that I can grow herbs from I think things like basil won't be able to grow inside or if u do just have 3- 5 gal buckets or containers for things like basil and Rosemary and get the shop lights from lowes... These florestent lights are perfect for starting seeds and I would think you might could pull it off, I'm just starting this year with thyme and I'm putting in a smaller container just to see if I can keep it cut back enough to bring in side when I need to and keep in smaller container threw out the year. I think you might be able to do Rosemary that way too if you keep it cut back..but have my doubts about basil.... Basil is a herb u have to keep cut back if u ever let it flower (what is called bolt) then the leafs flavor change and u need to just ditch it. It also depends on what hers your wanting to grow? And if u have room for enough lighting.
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They have them so u can hang from roof and just buy extra chain to be able to raise and lower closer to plants.. I just had these old shoe racks in shed and they worked perfect for me lol And I use what ever to raise the plants closer to it..1
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ettaterrell wrote: »I have a seed starting room set up in my spare bedroom that I can grow herbs from I think things like basil won't be able to grow inside or if u do just have 3- 5 gal buckets or containers for things like basil and Rosemary and get the shop lights from lowes... These florestent lights are perfect for starting seeds and I would think you might could pull it off, I'm just starting this year with thyme and I'm putting in a smaller container just to see if I can keep it cut back enough to bring in side when I need to and keep in smaller container threw out the year. I think you might be able to do Rosemary that way too if you keep it cut back..but have my doubts about basil.... Basil is a herb u have to keep cut back if u ever let it flower (what is called bolt) then the leafs flavor change and u need to just ditch it. It also depends on what hers your wanting to grow? And if u have room for enough lighting.
Admittedly, I don't know what I want to grow. I use more Italian herbs than anything, and I've never had fresh other than a few sprigs of anything. I do not have much space really at all. Even your pictured set up is probably more than I would be able to do at first. I'm sincerely considering starting with a chia herb garden thing and going from there (figuring out what I'd actually use, etc.). I'd like to have chives, because my guy loves them, and I know that's one you can use and keep it going, and just whatever else I run across. I sincerely don't know... LOL0 -
Does anyone know how easy it is to grow Marjoram? It's a favorite spice, and almost impossible to find in my area at a reasonable price for some reason...0
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I grow marjoram. Most herbs and spices are not hard to grow. Just make sure you give them enough light and well watered every 2-3 days. I am not a gardener. My husband does all the gardening and he really does not pay that much attention to my herbs. All my herbs do very well with little care. I just need to remember to snip them more often.1
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Awesome!0
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I was organic raised bed gardening until I gained all the weight. That was 4 years ago. Now that I lost a substantial portion of my weight, I can do it again....YAY! I will be moving my raised bed garden in the days ahead. Its on the edge of a large tree that is cutting out some of the sun during the morning. So I will move it 75 feet to the west. I also cut down a 16" ugly spruce that was shading my evening sun.
I plan on planting a "lo-carb" veggie garden. Some dill for my pickles.
@ettaterrell I plan on making a cucumber trellis just like your bean trellis.
I plan on making a rain barrel to water the garden with (the garden is about 200 feet from the house and I don't want to have to deal with a long hose.)
Also, all you avid gardeners, do a YouTube/Google search for:
BioChar This is "probiotics" for the soil!
I plan on making some and incorporating it into my soil.
Our city makes "Rodale Certified" compost, I can get about 3 cubic yards (1000+ lbs) of it for $15, they load it into my trailer. Or if you want to shovel it yourself, its free. Really cool. They use huge machines that mix leaves and green grass clippings in huge long piles as long as a football field. Then they monitor the temperature and moisture assuring that it heats up to 140 degrees. Then they grind it up again and compost it more. All scientifically professionally made. I wonder a little about it though, because they are using the community's grass clippings, which could have harmful stuff in it. Maybe they test it? IDK but they are Rodale Certified (I guess they test it?)
I have seeds in peat pots on a warming mat now, I hope the heat makes them sprout ok.
Our last frost in at the end of this month, I hope to it ready for Memorial day weekend, the traditional planting time for my area (Rochester Hills, Michigan ~ north of Detroit).
Lastly, I am planting "heirloom" seeds. I have never done them before, I hope they work out. Has anyone else tried them?
Here are some pics:
Ugly tree meets Dan the Man with Chainsaw in Hand!
It loses...
I hope this helps,
Dan the Man from Michigan
Keto / The Recipe Water Fasting / E.A.S.Y. Exercise Program
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You know, speaking of probiotics for the soil - I have a HUGE SCOBY HOTEL that probably needs to move on to the next stage in it's life, as I'm running quickly out of room. I've been told you can turn it into the soil for lots of food stuff. If anyone is will to pay shipping, I'm happy to send as much or as little as you like. Several inches worth... At least one 80 oz jar completely full, and 1/3 full in three other jars. is what I have atm.0
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KnitOrMiss wrote: »You know, speaking of probiotics for the soil - I have a HUGE SCOBY HOTEL that probably needs to move on to the next stage in it's life, as I'm running quickly out of room. I've been told you can turn it into the soil for lots of food stuff. If anyone is will to pay shipping, I'm happy to send as much or as little as you like. Several inches worth... At least one 80 oz jar completely full, and 1/3 full in three other jars. is what I have atm.KnitOrMiss wrote: »You know, speaking of probiotics for the soil - I have a HUGE SCOBY HOTEL that probably needs to move on to the next stage in it's life, as I'm running quickly out of room. I've been told you can turn it into the soil for lots of food stuff. If anyone is will to pay shipping, I'm happy to send as much or as little as you like. Several inches worth... At least one 80 oz jar completely full, and 1/3 full in three other jars. is what I have atm.
Il buy all of them unless someone else here wants them too. I heard they are good to put under your plants when you plant them. Although I am making Kombucha now, I am doing the continuous method and mine aren't ready to split up yet.
Thank you! (I'll email you later).
Dan the Man from Michigan0 -
I was organic raised bed gardening until I gained all the weight. That was 4 years ago. Now that I lost a substantial portion of my weight, I can do it again....YAY! I will be moving my raised bed garden in the days ahead. Its on the edge of a large tree that is cutting out some of the sun during the morning. So I will move it 75 feet to the west. I also cut down a 16" ugly spruce that was shading my evening sun.
I plan on planting a "lo-carb" veggie garden. Some dill for my pickles.
@ettaterrell I plan on making a cucumber trellis just like your bean trellis.
I plan on making a rain barrel to water the garden with (the garden is about 200 feet from the house and I don't want to have to deal with a long hose.)
Also, all you avid gardeners, do a YouTube/Google search for:
BioChar This is "probiotics" for the soil!
I plan on making some and incorporating it into my soil.
Our city makes "Rodale Certified" compost, I can get about 3 cubic yards (1000+ lbs) of it for $15, they load it into my trailer. Or if you want to shovel it yourself, its free. Really cool. They use huge machines that mix leaves and green grass clippings in huge long piles as long as a football field. Then they monitor the temperature and moisture assuring that it heats up to 140 degrees. Then they grind it up again and compost it more. All scientifically professionally made. I wonder a little about it though, because they are using the community's grass clippings, which could have harmful stuff in it. Maybe they test it? IDK but they are Rodale Certified (I guess they test it?)
I have seeds in peat pots on a warming mat now, I hope the heat makes them sprout ok.
Our last frost in at the end of this month, I hope to it ready for Memorial day weekend, the traditional planting time for my area (Rochester Hills, Michigan ~ north of Detroit).
Lastly, I am planting "heirloom" seeds. I have never done them before, I hope they work out. Has anyone else tried them?
Here are some pics:
Ugly tree meets Dan the Man with Chainsaw in Hand!
It loses...
I hope this helps,
Dan the Man from Michigan
Keto / The Recipe Water Fasting / E.A.S.Y. Exercise Program
Love the chain saw!
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Don't mind the weeds. It's been raining a lot here, and my back's been bothering me (camping last weekend didn't help matters), so I haven't been able to get them all and we haven't had time for the family to work together to get them all cleared out yet.
My thyme is flowering! I'm using it for ground cover. I have two varieties of thyme. This one is Elfin Thyme. I have a more mat-like one that hasn't flowered yet, called Creeping Thyme.
Onion! You can also see one of the strawberry plants on the left side, and my coriopsis on the left corners. Plus more Elfin Thyme in the bottom right. Not sure what the blue flowers are in the top, but I think it's Deadnettle. I need to go look at it again.
My two little "plants that could." The left is a variegated ornamental grass of some sort. We call it Dragon Grass, because it looks like the Madagascar Dragon Tree we used to have. It looks shabby right now, because it has to grow back from being pruned, but it will get about 6 feet tall and should fill out the gaps. In the fall, it grows these cool tassels that stand another foot or two above it, then the whole thing turns brown for the winter. It was in the garden when we moved in, but was overtaken by yuccas, so I relocated it, and it spent the first summer on the verge of dying (I thought it'd never take root), but has flourished since.
The right is my blueberry...bush. As you can see, it's not very bushy. It's actually looking better this year than it did last year. It fruits every year, though, so it's doing well. It just doesn't do much growing.
Coriopsis (center right), Creeping Thyme (bottom center), Elfin Thyme (bottom right), Pig Squeak (the broad-leafed plant top center), Sage (the tree-like thing top center, hopefully it lives, it did so well last year ), and strawberry, onion, and yucca (top right corner). That yucca will probably get pulled out of there. That stuff is at bad as the weeds when it comes to spreading.
That strawberry-yucca-onion cluster from above, plus a good view of the Creeping Thyme that I'm hoping will surround those pavestones. The idea was to use the thyme to "edge" the garden and keep the lawn plants out of the garden. There are also the remains of the pink hyacinths by the light, and one of those stupid bush lilies (I hate them, because they are everywhere around here).
Comfrey! And a strawberry plant, and another one of those stupid lilies.
I think that grass-like one is a cluster of garlic. Not sure offhand, though. More strawberries, with some what we think are Asiatic Lilies, and marshmallow on the far right.
A better view of the marshmallow plant, as well as a look at my kale (yes, it's flowering! Those yellow flowers are from the kale), and another onion. Like I said, don't mind the weeds (though I do kind of wish I'd been able to harvest the dandelions before they seeded).
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@DittoDan by "heirloom" seeds are you referring to tomatoes? We grow a lot of different types of heirloom tomatoes. Although we haven't grown it by seed. There is a great book that talks about all aspects of growing heirloom tomatoes. https://www.amazon.com/Epic-Tomatoes-Select-Grow-Varieties-ebook/dp/B00KLNAJCK?ie=UTF8&keywords=heirloom tomatoes&qid=1462549457&ref_=sr_1_2&s=books&sr=1-20
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@DittoDan by "heirloom" seeds are you referring to tomatoes? We grow a lot of different types of heirloom tomatoes. Although we haven't grown it by seed. There is a great book that talks about all aspects of growing heirloom tomatoes. https://www.amazon.com/Epic-Tomatoes-Select-Grow-Varieties-ebook/dp/B00KLNAJCK?ie=UTF8&keywords=heirloom tomatoes&qid=1462549457&ref_=sr_1_2&s=books&sr=1-2
Heirloom is any seed that is not a hybrid seed. In other words, you can use the seed from the heirloom plant for the next year with no loss in performance, taste, etc. If you do that with a hybrid seed, the plant will not grow very well the next season.
Here's a good definition:
http://www.halcyon.com/tmend/define.htm
Tomatoes have many heirloom varieties. Which ones do you like the best?
I hope this helps,
Dan the Man from Michigan0 -
Wish I could figure out how to post pictures on MFP!0
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I drag & drop them in the reply box.
Web site on a Chromebox.
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I figured out how to post pic! Yay! These show our garlic and tilled garden ready to plant. The rhubarb and the first blossoms on the bleeding heart.1 -
I've already got flowers showing on my zucchini, but I've got some bugs eating my jalapenos! Hmmm, at least I'm feeding something with my garden! Lol!3
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My strawberries are starting to flower and fruit! I found the first little starts of strawberries yesterday.3
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I've just about got harvestable broccoli and collards!4
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I am glad y'all are as excited about planting as I am! I don't have pictures yet but so far I have a lot of basil, German & lemon thyme, two big Rosemary plants, sage, pineapple sage, as well as Greek & Italian oregano for the herbs. My kids planted a dried avocado pit and dried cherry seeds..lol. They check them every day!!
Since normally I have the "thumb of death" I only plant herbs. However this year i bought 3 baby tomato plants. The purple Cherokee has matured beautifully and has some fairly large tomatoes already. The German queen has a few small fruits, and the pink brandywine has some flowers. We will see if I battle the squirrels. I put the basil near the tomatoes because I read the worms hate basil... Otherwise I have no clue and look forward to learning as I go!!2