GardenWatch

Monday, February 29, 2016

First Planting

In commemoration of leap day, February 29th, I felt I needed to post a progress update.  It is Monday, and this past weekend I planted the first batch of lettuce.  I still have today left to plant the other half of the leafy bed, with Kale and Chard.  But even if I don't get it done tonight, I will at least have reached my goal of getting something into the finished bed by the end of February.

The weather this weekend was between 32 and 38 degrees.  Today, it is projected to get up to 70 F.  By the end of the week, it will be back down in the 40s.  This is the challenge of February.

Thursday, February 25, 2016

Winter Challenges

Winter means different things in different locations.  Here, the threat of winter is not so much the deep cold.  We seldom get temperatures below 30 F;  and nights in the lower twenties are an extreme rarity.  We will receive significant snowfall perhaps twice a winter, and that is merely a snowfall over 2 inches, usually in late January or early February.

Instead, what we are usually faced with are soaking rains causing saturated ground, and gusting wind.  Because of our flat terrain and low elevation, the ground drains very poorly, and gardens dug into the ground will usually remain saturated.  The solution is to build raised beds to dramatically improve the drainage.  With raised beds and low tunnels to give a modest amount of frost protection, but more importantly rain and wind protection, winter gardening should be fairly straightforward. 

This would be true except for the other factor of this area: gusting winds.  Winter storms can bring with them tornadic winds that will rip apart row covers, and poly film stretched over pvc hoops is especially vulnerable.  The danger is that you have a winter garden that you've nursed for several months, but one severe windstorm will tear your covers to shreds and then leave your garden exposed to desiccating winds or soaking rains, or both on alternating days.

So the bottom line is that structural integrity is the primary factor in securing the low tunnels.  In the videos, you see happy gardeners digging a shallow trench with a hoe and covering the loose plastic edges with a few inches of soil.  That is simply not happening here.  You'll be chasing your agribon into your neighbor's yard after the first weekend. I've had the wind move concrete blocks off the plastic.

So now I'm wrapping the ends around 2x6s and clamping the boards to the top of my raised bed perimeter. with 4" C-clamps.  It does secure the row cover, but it makes it more difficult to get into the bed when you want to harvest a few leaves for your dinner salad.

The result, however, is that we're creating an excellent winter microclimate.  Free from the wind and driving rain, with their feet dry but leaves moist inside the dome, and with plenty of sunlight, winter plants have what they need to thrive.

 

Wednesday, February 24, 2016

Markers February 2016

The state of the mountain:
The upper bed has been prepared and has been covered with a tarp for the last 6 weeks.  The lower two beds have also been covered with tarps for 6 weeks, but the beds beneath them have been too wet to work.

This past week I put up the hoops  (8' grey electrical conduit) and covered them with plastic to further seal out the moisture.  The rainy weather has been constant for at least the last week, and it snowed on the 15th (last Monday)  so the pattern of having the most miserable weather in February has been holding constant.

However, I have swiss chard seedlings started (Bright Lights) and ready to plant.  At the Walmart garden center I found 9-cell packs of Kale and Butter Crunch Lettuce.  Both of these are ready to plant in that upper bed, which is scheduled to be the Leaf bed this year.

I wish the spinach or bok choy seeds had come up by now, but neither has done anything.

The middle bed is too low, and is inundated with ground water.  We need to create a proper raised bed in that location to help the drainage situation.

I need to get large flat pavers to hold down the ends of the plastic row covers, and 2x6s for the sides.