September

September

Monday, December 28, 2009

I Have Completely Changed!

I have officially changed my philosophy of gardening. It is already a challenge to have a vegetable garden in the desert of Arizona, but a year ago, I went to a gardening clinic that was taught by two Master Gardeners here in Maricopa County and they showed me a whole new way to garden.


It is called Square Foot gardening, and it was developed by an engineer named Mel Bartholomew. He has published several books and his official web-site is:  http://www.squarefootgardening.com/

Anyway, the Master Gardeners were both AZ natives and had been gardening here for many years. They had learned about this new method a few years earlier and were sold on it and now I am also.

The theory of it is to use square foot sections and to use them efficiently and you will increase your harvest while using less space. Let me explain.





You start by leveling your area where you are going to put your square foot planting boxes. I (yes, ME!), built four 4x4 boxes and one 2x4 box using 2x6 pieces of lumber. I placed them in the area where my garden has been for the past 17 years. I put weed cloth under each box to prevent weeds from growing up into the boxes.


Next step is to mix the garden mix to fill the boxes. Mr. Bartholomew has a special recipe that he developed which is 1/3 vermiculite, 1/3 peat moss, and 1/3 compost. The initial cost of this is a bit, but it is the only time you will have to do it. From here on you just keep adding compost which is quite inexpensive or free if you make your own compost, which I do.




After mixing and filling the boxes you then need to make the square foot grid. I just bought inexpensive molding from the hardware store and we put it together one night for a family activity. Doesn’t Michael and Bruce (my husband) look like they are having more fun than they can handle?!?!?!



You can attach this to the garden boxes or just lay them on it which I did to make it easier when mixing in more compost in the future. Now you are ready to plant! I received a handout showing what and how many plants to plant in each square foot. Basically, you need to determine if it is a small (ex.-radishes, 16 plants per square-foot), medium (ex.-beets, 9 per square foot), large (ex.-leaf lettuce, 4 per sf), or extra large (peppers-1 per sf). Then you map out your garden and decide what you will plant.







Several of the large plants can be planted on a trellis so they take up even less room because they are growing up, this is called vertical planting. I was amazed at how much I was able to plant. More than I had ever fit into this same gardening space.



After planting, I put together a drip line with one head in each square and attached it to my faucet so I just turn on my hose for an hour and it drips onto each section to water it evenly. ***Note-I did use a sprinkler for the first 2 weeks until all the seeds had sprouted, then switched to the drip system.


Here are a few pictures as of today:









I have already harvested 1 batch of lettuce and radishes since I planted in September and as you can see, now in December it is going strong.


The selling points of using this method of gardening are: 1-I don’t need to solorize the soil in the summer, 2-the ease of weeding is tremendous, and 3-since you can garden in Maricopa county year-round, it means less time in the hot summer you need to spend maintaining the garden.

Now I admit, I have only been doing this for 4 months and I will let you know how I feel about it in July and August when it is 115-120 degrees out there, but since I usually didn’t garden in the summer, I will try it this year to see if I like it or not.

So, I recommend you check out this method. It does take some work to begin with but the time savings so far in the actual gardening has been less than the building of the garden so I have come out ahead time-wise.



That time savings means more time for other things I enjoy doing! Like playing with my train in the garden!  Mel Bartholomew teaches workshops all over and he insists this method can be adapted in any climate and location. Try it and let me know what you think!

9 comments:

Sweet Life Garden said...

Yea! Your garden looks amazing. I love this method of gardening. All that digging and shoveling is a thing of the past. I'd love to check it out sometime.

Jan said...

I am so impressed I would love to come see it some time!!

Judi said...

I think I may have to try this next spring! We always have good intentions for our garden, but it seems we only ever grow an abundance of weeds vs. food!

jordiegirl said...

That's a brilliant idea - well done with your garden.

markandaubrey said...

This is huge in Utah. We are going to try it this summer. Yours looks amazing!

Goodrich Goodnews said...

I've been trying to get my husband to help me do this for the last few years. I'll show him your blog. Thank's for the inspiration!! Now, how do I dog proof this. They think squash are chew toys!!!

Angie said...

You're so empowering!

Carrie said...

The pictures reveal the fruits of your labor! I will have to come by and look at it during the next few weeks. It looks fabulous and I'm glad it was a "family project". Thanks for always being the one to get things started in the neighborhood. Are you getting ripe tomatoes with flavor?

Tami Allred said...

Your garden is beautiful. I've been square gardening for 4 years out here now and it is the best. Although flowers seem to be the healthiest. Too bad we don't get to garden year round though.