Vegetable Gardening In Eden, Liberty and Huntsville
Producing your own food, living off the land. Isn’t that all part of the American mystique? Even if you don’t want to go back to nature completely, planting a little vegetable garden can satisfy your desire to till the soil. Even the most brown-thumbed among us can bring up a little food for the dinner table if they follow some basics. In the Ogden Valley that means don't plant before May 25th unless you have a way to keep them from freezing, like a warming tunnel with lights or greenhouse. May gets us all excited to plant, but if you put those tomatoes in the ground you may be replanting if you don't plan on a hard freeze sometime in May.
To get started just follow these simple guidelines:
Get your gear together. A few things you’ll need: a hoe, gardening gloves, a spade or spading fork, a steel bow rake, a trowel, a wheelbarrow, a garden hose long enough to water all parts of the garden and a wide-brimmed hat. Fight off the urge to buy cheap supplies and spend the money for quality tools.
Have a plan! Choose your gardening plot with sunlight in mind. Most vegetable plants need at least six hours of direct sunlight daily to produce flowers that in turn produce fruit. If you have no available area that’s not shaded by trees or buildings, you can plant a small plot of leafy vegetables, which don’t need as much light.
If your deck or patio is the only area with full sun much of the day, plant a container garden there. Another consideration is adequate drainage, which is essential. If your area doesn’t naturally have this attribute, you can improve it by installing agricultural tile or digging drainage ditches. Your chosen area shouldn’t have low patches where rainwater collects and stands.
Regardless of the type of soil you have, you can improve it to support a vegetable garden. By testing the soil with a hardware store kit, you can figure out what it needs before you plant, whether it’s organic material like grass clippings, compost or manure, or commercial fertilizer. Your soil may need to be tilled with a mechanical tiller to mix in organic matter and kills weeds before you plant. Visit your local nursery for recommendations.
Seeds can be sown directly into your garden plot or germinated and started indoors in containers. The best method for success can be found on the back of the seed package. Follow directions to the letter for best results. If you are growing in Liberty, Eden or Huntsville of the Ogden Valley you want to make sure the varieties you buy will produce in less than 85 days. You can have watermelon in your Ogden Valley Garden, if you buy the right kind with short production times. If you buy transplants (many gardeners do this with tomato plants), select ones that are about as tall as they are wide, dark green in color, vigorously growing, and free of spots or lesions on the leaves which indicate disease problems. Transplants of this description usually give greater yields than larger and older transplants.
If you get less than one inch of rain per week, you’ll need to water to your vegetables one inch of water every week. Unlike with lawn grass, don’t wait until your plants start to wilt before you water them – remember that these plants are working to hard to produce food, so you’ll want to work equally hard to cultivate and protect them. Water during the morning using a drip irrigation hose to keep water off the foliage. Adding mulch around your plants will help control weeds, prevent moisture loss and discourage pests.
In order for vegetables to be tasty and tender as possible, they must grow quickly. Read the back of the seed packet for recommendations on fertilizing to produce as much fruit as quickly as possible. Remember that the more nitrogen present in fertilizer, the more foliage your plants will produce. This is of course good for leafy vegetables, but cuts down on fruit production in other vegetable plants. For this reason you’ll want to use the proper mixture or nutrients in your fertilizer.
Thinning your plants will increase fruit growth as well. By cutting away excess foliage, you give the plant more resources to spend on the fruit. When thinning larger plants, use a knife to cut the stem at ground level, which won’t damage root systems of the remaining vegetables.
Many people won’t plant a vegetable garden simply because they don’t want to weed it. But if you do it early enough and often enough, weeds won’t be a problem. Remember that weeds rob your vegetables of water and nutrients. When you see a weed, immediately pull it up by the roots. Again, using mulch will inhibit weed growth and germination. If, for instance, you go away on vacation and the weeds take over, use the square foot method to control them – weed at least one square foot of your garden each day, applying mulch immediately afterwards on the weeded area. Before long, your garden will be virtually weed-free. Use weed and pest control chemicals wisely, remembering that pesticides kill the good bugs along with the bad bugs. Always follow package directions carefully.
Remember to always start with the end in mind. Plant a little or a lot but don't get overwhelmed. If you've never gardened before just plant your 2 favorite things this year and next year add 1 or 2 or more.
Whether you plant in containers, square foot garden or row garden doesn't matter, it all works. Just find what works for you and work your plan. A good garden plan and a little work will yield scrumptious rewards.
Happy Gardening!