Thursday, April 10, 2014

Should I throw this away?

Hello all -

This will be a short post about waste management in the gardens.

When I started as a gardener at EHCG, I had no previous experience with community gardens. Instead, I had some experience with home gardening, more like landscaping, in which tools and supports and supplies were always bought new. For a novice like me, it seemed that if you wanted something to use in the garden, you ought to drive to a big box store to buy it.

Thankfully, EHCG is able to provide for most gardening necessities internally. This is accomplished in part by good management of old supplies, broken tools, leaves falling in Autumn and shared resources. We really throw very little away. The following graphic summarizes a few of the ways that our garden workers and gardeners re-use or recycle resources, and ultimately what we can produce from these investments.


From that I'd like to segue into a discussion of when, how, and where to dispose of unwanted materials.

Communal items: broken tools, carts, poles

If you are using a tool and it breaks, or find a broken tool, please don't throw it in the dumpster or claim it as your own! Just a few weeks ago I met a gardener who had found a broken communal tool, with a pink handle, which he decided was trash, fixed it, and wanted to keep it as his own. You can imagine that I was very sad to explain that we needed to take it back. We (almost) never throw tools away! If you see something broken, either find a garden worker to give it to, or leave it by the shed. We collect and repair broken tools every year, sometimes multiple times a year. We also repair carts. If you see a broken cart, please don't use it, and bring it to our attention so we can do something about it. The cart beds are really expensive so we want to do our best to take care of them instead of replacing them.

Items you may inherit or find: tomato cages, bricks, wood, structures

If you are a new gardener this year, you may have "inherited" a mess of cages and other structures. Many of these inherited items are perfectly good, and can be used in your plot this year. If you inherit something you don't want, please leave it at the Share Shelf (by the bulletin board at the front of the gardens) instead of putting it in the dumpster. There are many spendthrift, crafty gardeners who may see treasure where you see trash. I myself have never paid for a tomato cage as I have collected plenty left in the trash.


Other things you can donate

If you picked up three packets of lettuce seeds at the Seed Fair but only used 10 seeds and realized you don't need that much lettuce, you can always leave your extra seed packets on the Share Shelf (front of the gardens by the bulletin board). The same goes for plants. Whether you start your tomatoes at home under a light, or buy a flat of transplants at the plant sale or farmer's market, please keep in mind that if you have more transplants than you have plot space, there is another gardener at EHCG who would love to be provided a free plant. Leaving resources on the Share Shelf is a great way to make certain that someone, somewhere will benefit.


Dead plants, weeds

The correct destination for organic materials such as dead plants and weeds is the weed pile, NOT the dumpster and also NOT the path in front of your plot and certainly not your neighbor's plot. Some gardeners choose to let some amount of dead plants or weeds pseudo-"compost" in their own plot. I do this: while hand-weeding small weeds, I place the removed weeds in the paths within my own plot, on top of leaf cover, so that as I walk in my own paths the weed are destroyed but their organic matter is incorporated back into my soil. However, if you have more than a handful of weeds, especially large volumes of dead plants, please do everyone in the gardens a favor and cart them over to the weed pile. These will get turned into mulch the following year to close the loop (of nitrogen, of nutrients, of waste).


Surplus produce

There are some plants that just can't help but yield in excess. If you show me someone who has eaten every single cherry tomato they grew in a season, I will show you either a liar or someone who is not very good at growing cherry tomatoes. Spinach, lettuce, tomatillos, and raspberries behave the same way. The good news is that we have a process in place at EHCG to transport surplus produce to St. Vincent's food pantry to be distributed to those in need. I will write a separate blog post later in the spring to discuss details.


Actual garbage

Once you have turned broken communal items in to the garden workers, donated tomato cages to neighbors, hauled weeds to the weed pile, and dropped off a pound of cucumbers in the donation bins, you may still have real, genuine, honest-to-goodness trash left in your plot. This may include black landscaping plastic inherited from last year; packaging from seeds, plants, structures; the coffee cup you brought to the garden in the morning. If it isn't broken, compostable, or good to eat, take it to the dumpster!


One final word: the way we handle our resources and our trash significantly impacts our neighbors, and future gardeners as well. If you make the effort to incorporate nutrients into your soil in the form of leaf mulch or compost, you will enhance the soil health for yourself and those who come after you. If you litter and cast disposable items around the garden, you make gardening that much less enjoyable for everyone else. If you throw weeds in the dumpster instead of the weed pile, you deprive us of the opportunity to turn trash into treasure. Be mindful of how your choices affect those around you, and you will have happy neighbors and happy plants.

Monday, April 7, 2014

Crop rotation and companion planting

Hello all -

Following up on a suggestion by a reader of this blog, I have decided to write a few words about crop rotation, and the related concept of companion planting. I hope that guidance related to good crop "neighbors" has found its way into your gardening plans.

If you have grown vegetables and herbs before, you may have noticed that the various plants have their own spectrum of needs, ailments, and behaviors. Genetically-, or more specifically, phylogenetically-related plants take the same nutrients out of the soil and are vulnerable to the same pests and diseases. One example of this is the vulnerability of both turnips and arugula, Brassicaceae family members, to the flea beetle, a very small, black beetle that leaps from the soil onto greens such as these, leaving  scores of tiny, tragic holes in its wake.  Alternatively, some traits that significantly impact plant health may have no origin in closely-shared genetics. While not a Brassicaceae member, eggplant, in my experience, is highly prone to flea beetle attack.

The personalities of the crops we plant can inform us of how, when, and where to put them down. It is wise to separate crops with similar nutrient and pest profiles by time and space. One way to accomplish this is crop rotation, a practice whereby the same crop, or type of crop, is not planted year after year in the same spot but rotated to someplace else in the garden. For instance, one might choose to plant garlic, the scourge of many garden pests, in the ground to replace last year's arugula or turnip plantings, and rotate the planting of these Brassicaceae to a spot that most recently housed lettuce or carrots. Another method is companion planting, a practice by which crops that are "good neighbors" are planted in close proximity, and "bad neighbors", such as those that consume large amounts of nitrogen, or those that attract the same pests, are kept far apart. Companion planting also frequently involves the use of flowers, allia, and other plants you might otherwise not have cultivated, for the purpose of promoting or repelling various fauna, pests or otherwise. Both crop rotation and companion planting are good strategies to minimize loss and maximize output, without relying on pesticides or other chemical additives not permitted in organic gardening.

Two key consideration for both crop rotation and companion planting are 1) nutrients and 2) pests.


Nutrients


Some plants are givers, and some are greedy. The nightshades, including eggplants and tomatoes, are among the heavier feeders. A plot planted year after year with only eggplants and tomatoes will become nutrient-deficient, and eventually fail to deliver adequate minerals, or macronutrients and micronutrients, to ensure healthy, productive plants. While unrelated, corn and Cucurbitaceae (melons, squash, cucumbers) are also heavy feeders. "Greedy" crops such as these give you a good reason to invest in some soil amendments for your plot, including compost, leaf mulch, and even coffee grounds. However, even with soil amendment, it is in your best interest to move your Nightshade/Cucurbitaceae plantings around your plot from year to year, replacing them with plants that contribute positively to the condition of your soil. This year, for instance, I am replacing last year's sowing of eggplants, for instance, with green beans in the same spot. Green beans and other legumes are nitrogen-fixing, meaning that they host beneficial bacteria in their roots that convert gaseous nitrogen in the air to a useful, water-soluble form in the soil. I have also sown peas, another legume, into the spot where I grew my butternut squash last year, and fava beans to replace tomatoes.

People have been using legumes to supplement the soil nitrogen lost to the cultivation of heavy feeders for a very long time. Native Americans developed this technique long ago, and planted beans (for nitrogen), squash (for ground cover), and corn together under the name of the "Three Sisters". Whether you plant legumes and heavy feeders together in the same season, or rotate the former in to replace the latter from year to year, you will be using the inherent nitrogen-fixing capacity of the legumes to its full potential.

Even if you don't plan to take advantage of this property of legumes, it is a good idea to rotate tomatoes, eggplants, peppers, melons, squash, and corn around your plot from year to year. In addition to depleting the same nutrients out of the soil, these crops, when planted in the same place year after year, also promote the recruitment and establishment of serious garden pests.



Pests



Flea beetles, as I mentioned above, are a striking example of why you don't want to plant your broccoli, kale, and brussels sprouts in the same place from year to year. Flea beetles love the Brassicaceae family, and will hang out all winter in the soil, patiently awaiting your return to the gardens, and the paralleled return of their staple crops. (This is not quite as true of large, vernalized, overwintered kale plants, which generally have tougher leaves are are less vulnerable to the tiny bites of the flea beetle.) Flea beetles will also attack your eggplants, but in my experience have no idea what to do with tomatoes, lettuce, carrots, green beans, or most other crops. Move your Brassicaceae around and replace them with a crop that doesn't look like lunch to a flea beetle.

Another good example is the tomato hornworm, which is attracted to tomato as well as dill. Move those tomatoes around!

Some flowers and herbs are thought to be repellent to many garden pests, including the flea beetle. I find that insect pests completely avoid garlic, onions, chives, and shallots, just one more reason to plant Allia in the garden. Lemon grass, with its fragrant stalks, it also effective. Nasturtiums, beautiful sprawling flowers whose petals can be eaten in salads, recruit predatory insects to hunt down the offenders.


If you are interested in learning more about companion planting, there are extensive, dedicated resources available online. I find the wikipedia entry on companion planting particularly simple and helpful.

I will leave you with an excerpt from Robin Mittenthal's gardening manual, From the Ground Up:

"Rotate crops so related plants don’t stay in the same place. Broccoli, cabbage, Brussels sprouts, collard greens, kale, radishes, kohlrabi, rutabagas, turnips, and cauliflower are all very closely related (they’re in the same plant family, known as “Brassicaceae,” or the mustard family). As a result, they take the same nutrients out of the soil and are vulnerable to the same pests and diseases. As much as you can, move these crops around your garden so that no two related crops occupy the same space for two years in a row. There are other groupings of plants that should not follow each other: Potatoes, tomatoes, peppers, and eggplant are in the family “Solanaceae” (sun-loving family); Carrot, parsley, celery, parsley, dill, and parsnip are in the family “Apiaceae” (carrot and parsley family); summer squash, winter squash, pumpkins, watermelon, cantaloupe, and cucumber are in the family “Cucurbitaceae” (gourd family); Chicory, endive, salsify, dandelion, lettuce, Jerusalem artichoke, sunflowers, and globe artichoke are in the family “Asteraceae” (aster family); Beets, chard and spinach are in the family “Chenopodiaceae” (goatsfoot family); and onion, garlic, leek, and chives are in the family “Liliaceae” (lily family)."

Happy gardening!

Monday, March 31, 2014

The gardening season has arrived!

We had a wonderful Seed Fair this past Saturday!

All told, 316 plots checked in, and about 700 people filed into the community center gym including children and grandparents. 

EHCG gardeners selecting seeds at Seed Fair 2014


Committee members Adam and Sandra hosted a gardening workshop, which received many positive reviews. We unprecedentedly sold out of row cover (!!!) and are working on ordering more to sell a new round of the stuff. 

The final orientations were well-attended; my group swelled to about 30 people, all new gardeners at EHCG eager to get into their plots and get seeds into the ground. 

On a personal note, I did get my fava beans, spinach, carrots, peas, radishes, and beets into the ground! I threw down some poppy seeds as well for good measure. I also buried about 50 egg shells and several months worth of coffee grounds into the section of my plot that will soon host tomato plants and basil. Coffee grounds are a wonderful soil amendment! I will discuss this more in a future blog post, later in the season as EHCG begins to truck in its own supply of coffee grounds from local coffee shops.

Looking forward, we will host a cold weather plant sale at EHCG on April 20, a Sunday. Cold weather plant sale items will include broccoli, Brussels sprouts, cabbage, cauliflower, collard greens, kale, and lettuces. Transplants range from $2.50 - $2.75 in various pack sizes, ex 4 broccoli/pack and 6 lettuce/pack. We are also working on getting row cover and compost for the cold weather plant sale, but those items are still TBA. Photos of last year's plant sales are below.


Cold-Weather Plant Sale - April 2013
A wealth of lettuce!
Scott Williams of Garden-to-Be standing proudly behind a wall of lettuces.
 Warm-Weather Plant Sale - May 2013
Army of tomatoes. Scott provides a large array of varieties,
including heirlooms, that varies from year to year.
Brandywine tomatoes. You may want to do some research about
different heirlooms before purchasing transplants, as flavors,
colors, productivity, etc vary widely.

Finally, a forest of basil.

Complete list of plants to be sold at the 2014 plant sales at EHCG:




What will YOU plant this year?

Friday, March 28, 2014

Seed Fair 2014

Hello all -

Seriously, the Seed Fair for EHCG is tomorrow!

All plots assigned for both EH and UH community gardeners will receive 15 tickets (15 tickets per plot, not gardener). You can redeem these for everything from arugula to zucchini, and they are totally free! Residents and students, show up bright and early at the Eagle Heights Community Center at 9 AM - or even earlier if you want a good place in line. All other registered EHCG gardeners enter at 10 AM. At 10:30 AM there will be a workshop covering planting basics. A big thanks in advance to all of our volunteers completing their work day by lending a hand tomorrow morning.

The final orientation tour will also be tomorrow, at noon. Yours truly will be leading one of the tours at Eagle Heights, in addition to one other EH tour guide and parallel tours at UH.

Time to get serious and get planning! If you haven't yet, check out my sample month-to-month plan, and do some investigating into when to put seeds (or plants) in the ground. I recommend using the search bar for the planting guidance page - it's quite long and you may only be interested in a handful of the entries. Although by all means, if you have the time I appreciate you reading it all the way through!

Our garden worker Will has also recommended the site Smartgardener.com, which I am told is slick and has all crazy kinds of features. Check it out!

One final note - we are recruiting a new co-chair to replace Josh Parsons, who after his many years in the gardens has finished his PhD and is moving on to a new job. If you are interested in this volunteer position, please email me (mirrielees@wisc.edu) or the registrar (ehgardens@rso.wisc.edu) so we can discuss more.

I will update this post after the Seed Fair with news and photos.

Happy planning, seed fair-ing, and gardening!

---------------------------------------------------------------------------

Quick edit - photo from last week's orientation at EH:


Will Waller took this picture for us right at the entrance of EHCG.

Thankfully it will be warmer this weekend! I'm sure we're all looking forward to saying good-bye to the ice and hello to sunshine!

(Disclaimer - we have no financial or other affiliation with smartgardener, just an interesting online tool with no commercial endorsement from us.)

Sunday, March 23, 2014

Opening Weekend 2014

Hello all -

Yesterday was Opening Day at EHCG! We had several dozen gardeners come out for the Orientation tours, and with plot assignments up in the gardens and posted online things are really in full swing.

Maybe I should say "full spring" because, compared to this time last year, we are in amazing shape. (You can look back at the March 17 post in this blog for comparison). One year ago, late March in the gardens meant a heavy snow cover and no signs of frost. Walking around the garden yesterday, I spied onion shoots emerging from the soil in many plots, young spinach, and strawberry plants regaining their green color! My tulips are beginning to come up as well. Plots up the hill at EHCG are doing well a little earlier, as they experience an earlier thaw than those of us to the west.

I hope that everyone has had a chance to find their plot at Eagle Heights or University Houses gardens. If you are a first time gardener, please be careful to confirm that you are indeed in the right plot before digging in. A quick check with a garden worker will resolve the situation for those of you who are uncertain.

Our annual Seed Fair will be held next weekend at the Eagle Heights Community Center. All gardeners registered with us will receive 15 (FREE) tickets redeemable for seed packets. We boast an impressive diversity of seeds donated by many local businesses. I advocate for experimenting a little if you have extra tickets - an open mind is how I discovered fava beans at the Seed Fair last year, and now they are probably my favorite thing to grow (and eat!). Expect an email this coming week with more details from the registrar.

I recommend doing yourself a favor and doing some research before picking seeds. Some seeds need to be started inside before being transplanted outside, such as broccoli, cabbages, tomatoes, eggplant, peppers, and basil. While you can certainly choose these kinds of seeds at the Seed Fair, if you don't have the time and resources for germinating seeds inside and growing them for the required span (typically 6 weeks or more), it might be a good idea to spend those tickets on direct-planted crops such as lettuces, beans, all root vegetables, and even squashes. Transplants for these fussy sorts of spring and summer crops can be bought at the cold and warm weather transplant sales we are hosting in April and May (more information in future blog posts). Also, you might want to distribute your seed selections between spring or cool weather crops, and summer or warm weather ones.

It may be helpful for you to consult several resources to plan your garden. The last post I published on this blog went over the planting guidelines for the more common crops grown in our gardens, informed significantly by Robin Mittenthal's From the Ground Up gardening manual, a much more comprehensive resource. Several planting guides for timing exist online, including a spring planting calendar I really like. Individual seed packets will generally also give planting information, although I find some disagreement from brand to brand. I have also posted previously a month-by-month garden plan, which is by no means perfect but a basic framework of how one might plan their planting to fit everything in, at the right time.

This certainly sounds like a lot of planning, and of course feel free to throw caution to the wind and scatter seeds with abandon. I think that most plants can be grown chaotically, and have heard some argument that this may confuse pests who are more attracted to large homogenous plantings, as though they are some miniscale monoculture. I prefer to plan because otherwise I will reach early June without space for melons or ground cherries, and bolted spinach that was planted too late to enjoy.

With that said, happy gardening! See you at the Seed Fair.

Wednesday, March 5, 2014

Planning for the 2014 season: time and space

For many a beginning gardener, there is a significant disconnect between the food he or she wants to grow, and the plant that must be cultivated to grow it. 

Most of us did not grow up on farms, or around agriculture, or even with the luxury of backyard tomato plants. The connection between our produce and the plants that produce them has been severed. Try to conjure the image of an artichoke plant. Can you? What about asparagus? What about broccoli? Zucchini? Struggling with this sort of visualization is very par for the course for first-time gardeners, as most of us have exclusively interacted with trimmed, packaged versions of these crops in the produce section of the grocery store. 

Another challenge is the time required to germinate and raise a plant before its produce can be harvested. While an annual like zucchini takes a mere two months from planting to fruiting, asparagus is a minimum 3 year investment before a single spear can be savored. And when to plant them? Too early, they die of spring frost; too late, the harvest itself is lost to winter.

Planning around the size and time requirements of your crops is a major obstacle between you and a satisfying harvest. Fortunately, many generations of gardeners before you have encountered, tackled, and fine-tuned solutions to the spacial and temporal needs of every food crop under the sun, and resources abound online, in print, and around the garden. This blog post will review common fruit, vegetable, and herb planting guidelines, giving date ranges specific to southern Wisconsin. If you are located outside of this region, you can use other tools to determine good planting dates (here is an example I have used before).

Planning guidance after the jump.


Tuesday, January 21, 2014

2014 season: a prelude

Hello all -

January 21st may seem like a strange day to write a post about gardening in Wisconsin. Here in Madison, several inches of snow obscure the soil, and nightly below-zero temperatures are a weekly occurrence.

However, January is a great month for making plans for the upcoming 2014 season. If you're anything like me, you'll be starting seeds indoors within the next few weeks, are still deciding on heirloom varieties, and are facing an inevitable late-spring dilemma in which you realize that no, you don't have space for both 10 tomato plants AND tomatillos AND a healthy green bean crop.

I like to draw out my plot, month by month (or at least season by season), sticking plants here and there until some sort of design emerges. I have done this in years past by hand, but have decided to go with a powerpoint this time. My hope is that the powerpoint format will be easier to edit in the future than the hand drawings, which take hours as I become consumed with the details.

While you may prefer not to put your plans into writing now - or at all - there are a few principles that are helpful to keep in mind while putting seeds and plants in the ground. My next post, the first week of February, will touch on 1) timing, 2) space, and 3) companion planting. For now, I will simply share my plan as an illustration of one way to see a garden space through the growing season.



March
A born risk-taker, I adhere very literally to the phrase "as soon as the soil can be worked." Depending on the snow and state of the soil, this can be as early as mid-March. (Last year, we still had snow in the ground in late April, so sometimes plans have to adapt to Mother Nature.)
Ideally, I will be planting spinach, peas, fava beans, and root vegetables by the end of March. These crops are frost-tolerant, so I am not worried about losing them. I have had a lot of advice in the past about waiting longer, but have never lost a spring crop to frost, and will continue to take the risk. If you are risk-averse and/or can't stand the thought of resowing these seeds, it may be in your best interest to wait until early or mid-April.
If you choose to plant peas, remember to provide a support of some kind (the upside-down brown triangle represents the trellis in my plot).



April
Aside from sowing second crops of the early spring vegetables, I spend April patiently awaiting the bounty planted in March. I also put down black plastic over the soil where I plan to plant heat-loving crops, such as tomatoes, eggplants, and peppers. While not universally popular, I find that the black plastic method does speed up the growth and fruit production of these plants, as well as keeping weeds from popping up.
Speaking of weeds, April is a prime month for weeding. While the soil is still too cold for most of your food crops, several weeds find this month a perfect time to germinate and slowly conquer your plot. I will post sometime in the next few months a guide to weeding. Just remember to be vigilant.



May
By May, it's safe to say that the growing season is well underway!
Whether your buy your summer transplants at the Eagle Heights Community Garden warm-weather plant sale, at the farmer's market, at Home Depot, or even start them yourself at home, now is the time to get them into the ground.
Crops to transplant in May include: squash (summer, such as zucchini, and winter, such as butternut), tomatoes, ground cherries, tomatillos, warm weather herbs such as basil and melons.
Crops to sow directly include: green beans and corn.
Note that I have planted/transplanted some of these crops through the black plastic to speed up growth and fruiting.



June
I prefer to wait until June to put fussy, heat-loving crops like eggplants, peppers, and melons outside. This decision is partly because I plan to keep harvesting my peas, carrots, and radishes into mid-June, and am willing to wait until I have harvested the last good sugar snap pea pod to put my melons in the ground. Having a limited gardening space means that you sometimes have to stagger crops, intentionally putting off a summer crop to allow a spring crop to run its course.



July
July is mostly a month for harvesting. It's too late to put most summer crops in the ground, and too early for the fall crops. The fava beans, and any remaining spring crops, will shrivel up by July, and can soon be replaced.



August
Once the fava beans have run their course, an early crop of fall root vegetables can be planted. Most of the summer crops are still going strong.



September
By September, several summer crops have stopped producing, and can be replaced by more fall crops. I like to plant large amounts of spinach, as it can be frozen easily. In places you don't plan to plant fall crops, a heavy pile of leaves make a nice mulch to prevent weed growth.

Come October, a hard frost will inevitably kill almost everything in your plot. A final harvest of tomatoes, peppers, eggplants is accompanied by the harvest of winter squashes, a harvest long in the making. My spinach frequently grows through lights frosts, but with few exceptions I am done gardening for the year.

---------------------------------------------------------

What do you plan to plant this coming year?