Sunday, April 10, 2011

Updates...

So we've been getting a lot done in the garden, though it still doesn't look like much yet. All of the photos are below.  It was beginning to feel a little overwhelming, I ended up turning down a job because of the anticipated watering, weeding,  harvesting and subsequent freezing, drying and canning that is sure to come.  So I had to take a break for a minute.  We're about two weeks behind schedule for planting, but I think there's some room for error.  We had started hardening off the cabbage, leeks and lettuce and then they took a nice long vacation inside of our nice warm house for the past two weeks.  They've been set out again this week, so hopefully they'll survive when we plant closer to the weekend.  The nice thing is that with so many of these crops we have plenty of seeds left and I'll get a second chance in the fall if things don't work out in the spring.  Every time I'm out there, I'm reminded that all of my hard work and planning is such a tiny fraction of the end result, which helps to take some of the pressure off.  

There has been so much rain (not nearly as much as PDX, I'm not complaining) that it has been hard to find enough consecutive dry days to dig out more beds, so we've been busy doing other things.  Dave is building a fence, I built the compost bin and trellises, Bea has been making best friends with the worms.
Here's what we've been up to:

Fence building - We have never built a fence before.  We also don't have a book on fence building, so most of what is happening is a combination of some internet research and trial and error.  Dave is doing a great job.  In our backyard, the possible invaders we've seen are, a family of five deer, one old raccoon, one really, really old groundhog.  The groundhog was a bit of an obsession. Every time we'd see a neighbor, they would ask us if we've seen the groundhog.  The family who owned this house and land before we did farmed the entire backyard.  Evidently the groundhog was a real pain in the ass.  One neighbor has a huge pile of rocks behind his shed that the late Mr. Duerbeck threw at the groundhog. Duerbeck died about ten years ago, so it is possibly the oldest groundhog in the world since they have a life expectency of 2-3 years.

At first I thought he was kind of sweet, but after reading more, now realize he's more like an oversized rat.  They technically are rodents, most closely related to the squirrel and are also called woodchucks, or land beavers.  I think the latter name is especially appropriate, because the first time we saw it I was pretty convinced it was just a confused beaver who had wandered off from the resevoir near our house.  Then I saw it chase after the neighbors cat and made an awesome beaver chasing pussy joke.  Anyway, the fence is really important so these animals don't eat all of our food.

Deer can jump an 8 foot fence, raccoons and woodchucks can climb fences, and bunnies, who we haven't seen, but are pretty sure will show up at some point, dig underneath of them.  Based on our requirements, the materials available near us and our budget, our solution is this: One welded wire fence, four feet high with a four foot wide gate - hope for the best.  We'll use trellises at the bottom of the garden to grow squash up and place them three feet inside of the fence.  Deer have terrible depth perception and evidently won't jump into any area that they don't feel like they can land safely in - we're counting on that.  Hopefully planting squash around the corn patch will keep the raccoon out and we'll try to trap the woodchuck if it ever shows up again.  I shoved an old blueberry bush in his hole - don't figure it could be that easy, but we haven't seen him since.  Here's Dave driving the t-posts...



And because so much of what is going on is utilitarian, I wanted a really beautiful garden gate.  We have lots of fallen branches from the cedar tree out front.  So Dave is putting together a frame and I'm finding and cutting the branches to fit.  Eventually we'll stain or paint it.


While Dave was driving the t-posts and putting up the fence, I was building a compost bin out of pallets we got for free.  I think this scored my first hardcore gardening point.  It's ready for the immature waste, I've been collecting food scraps in the freezer and the grass is almost long enough to mow.  The bin is 4'x4', one layer is equal to about one wheelbarrow.  


I also built some trellises.  Two pieces of electrical conduit bent, clamped together and then fitted over rebar.  Buying the supplies at the hardware store was like a shining moment in my life.  It cost about $100 to build eight with some extra rebar, but we can reuse them every year and they're sturdy and tall enough for our indeterminate tomatoes and squash to grow vertically.  I've left the netting off until we get everything planted.
      
We also learned that Bea has a limit to how much compost she wants to shovel.  When we would suggest it she started looking at us like this:


That mad face was inspired by my talented friend Kim, but clearly she needed another backyard activity, so I decided to build her a teeppee, why not, right?  More rebar, a two day hunt for bamboo poles, some drilling of said poles, questionable internet directions and we've got this.  
      

Again, not totally complete but now our new activity is painting the teepee, which she loves.  It will take weeks to finish and can be done indoors or out which is pretty much the perfect kid activity.  I bought a butterfly bush, some native grasses and some annual flowers to plant around the outside so it can feel like a real hideaway.  She'll be able to chase bugs, pick flowers and hide in a shady spot while we weed and take care of the garden.  



So now our backyard looks like this, which I think is way more interesting.


Eventually the plan for the level where the teepee is, is to have a natural playscape with a slide built into the hill, big sandbox, something to climb, more places to hide, and a water station.

I also planted strawberries.  Some June-bearing and some Ever-bearing.  Strawberries are susceptible to some of the same diseases as tomatoes, so you're not supposed to plant them where tomatoes have been. That is however, exactly where our strawberries were planned to be.  I pulled out a lot of old tomato plants earlier this spring but since they were planted before we bought the house, I have no idea if they were diseased, or if the variety was resistant.  I decided on a wilt resistant june-bearing variety, Surecrop for half and Ever-bearings for the other half. 14 total, thought we may add more depending on how much space we have left.  
     
And here they are mulched with straw and covered with some impromptu cages I made to protect them while the fence is being finished. 

Finally, the blueberry bushes are starting to get their leaves.  Here they are at sunset:


5 comments:

Bex said...

Very AWESOME! I love the teepee and natural playscape idea, that's going to be such a great addition to the garden. The worm beds look amazing and I'm totally impressed about the trellises and the protective cover over the strawberries. You are kicking some serious ass! Keep the updates coming! I love it!

Dale said...

Wow, how wonderful! You're going to turn me into a gardener yet, Tele.

theresa said...

WOW! So impressed and proud of all three of you! All of your planning is really coming together! Love the teepee too!

Kimberly said...

I love the teepee... we are in the fence process too... lots of work.

Bex said...

I had a dream that we were visiting you guys last night on a tour bus of your awesome yard. You were running a bed and breakfast. :-)