Friday, May 24, 2013

My First-Ever Garden!!

I have very fond memories of gardens from my childhood...the one in Zanesville, Ohio that seemed like an entire field of beans, the modestly sized one in Portage, Michigan that was carefully tended by the deer and rabbits, and the one I helped my parents plant at a neighbor-sponsored community garden...I was so excited to make beet chips with that production, and I never did.

When Chris and I moved into an apartment with garden plots, I immediately wanted one. And a  month or so ago, my sweet husband went to the office and picked one out...the huge one on the corner. :) ...and for the past month, it has been enthusiastically befriended by every weed--and
tree!--that grows in Utah.

So, yesterday, after a few hours of planting a plethora of flowers in Ruth's new garden, the mud between my toes whispered to me and I felt a surge of excitement to plant my little vegetable garden. Ruth, Elise and I went to this ADORABLE little nursery in Orem--seriously, I want to live there--and picked out the plants I had planned and several we impulsively fell in love with. ...And after a whole morning of gardening, Elise still had the kindness and energy to stay with me and plant. (Ruth had to take Evelyn home for a nap, but she lent me her gardening tools.)

I had assumed that, since it was just a small plot, we wouldn't spend much time...pull out a few weeds, maybe turn over the soil, and viola! a perfect garden.

The weeds had other ideas.

Elise and I spent about 3 hours just preparing the soil of this tiny 4x5 plot. The weeds did not want to be weeded, and the trees were very thick and very deeply rooted in the dusty rock that some fool called soil. And someone before us put a ton of mulch in the garden, along with a lot of BIG rocks...so we filled 4 or 5 bags with all of that junk before we even got to all the roots. After a LOT of work, and about a dozen watering-cans of water (Seriously, that soil was a dry, solid ROCK), we finally started turning over the soil and mixing in some planting soil. About this time, Elise's hand ripped open (she had an enormous blister) and we went inside to clean it and bandage it up. I was feeling pretty awful about having her help around now, and getting ready to call it quits, but she went right back outside and we kept working. (Thankyouthankyouthankyou, my sweet hardworking sister!!)

Eventually, we got around to planting, and it was so fun and SO satisfying. This is what we fit in our little garden:
6 red lettuce
6 lettuce
1 zucchini
6 green bell pepper
2 strawberry
1 row bush beans
1 row tricolor beans
1 row sugar snap peas
1 row green onion

It is such a beautiful little garden, and I was so excited about it that I couldn't bear to be done with it...so I gathered up some of the rocks I'd removed previously and painted them to be markers. Then I started worrying about the paint washing off in water, so I found some shoe water proofer and sprayed them all...It worked fabulously, the water beads up on the rocks!! So so cool.

I can't wait to show my family when they come out for all the weddings!!

4 comments:

  1. Oh my gosh. Those are the cutest row markers I've ever seen! Seriously so cute, Rosalind--those look like something you'd see on Etsy!

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  2. I am so excited to see your garden! In Utah gardens need to be watered every day, but on the other hand, no deer or bunnies to eat things that you want to eat yourself. And the rocks are adorable.

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    1. I've been watering it 3x a day...it gets so dry out here! If I leave it too long, the soil just about turns to dust. Today I had a big scare...I decided to skip the morning watering and just do afternoon and evening. I came back from church to find the soil parched and all of my plants, especially my lettuce, wilted. I had a sudden vision of a garden full of dead, dried-out plants.

      Thankfully, Chris stayed calm and gave everything an extra dose of water...when we came back around 9, everything was revived. Sticking to a stricter schedule from now on!!

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  3. The most important thing is to water very deeply--you may not need to do it 3x day, but make sure the soil is thoroughly saturated. When you dig down a bit, the moist soil should be more than just the very top. I think 1 inch of water is the standard for a deep watering.
    A deep watering less often is better than a superficial watering all the time. You want the water to get down to the roots.
    Have fun!!

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