Sunday, September 23, 2007

Watering System

With water restrictions here in Adelaide the only watering we are allowed to do is by hand with a watering can – as you can see from my plot layout this is a very time consuming job and a bit of work on my back and wrists. Luckily as at the 1st of the October we can water either on a Saturday or Sunday (depending on your house number) for up to 3 hours at specified times, with drip lines. So with great excitement this morning I decided to put my dripper system from my old garden back into my new vegie patch.

Well it took me hours to separate all the old clamps, joiners, ag pipe and dripper hose. I relayed it out and joined it up and it only does about half of the vegie beds. Off to the shop to get more to do the rest. A friend came around and I put her to work as well. I’ve done about quarter of it, I’m still thinking about the best way to handle all my fruit trees in pots, but I did find this nifty little device at my local bunnings

You fill the stem with soil or sand and then stake it into the soil and up end a bottle (2 liter seems to be the biggest that will fit) full of water into it. It slowly leaks into the soil, watering the plants. I think the theory behind them is for use for when your on holidays but unless you have some one coming into fill them up every couple of days I dno’t think they would work because they drain in about 1 hour or less. However it is quicker to fill them up and plonk them in if you do have some one watering your garden while your away. Also It’s a lot eaiser on my wrists than the watering can until I come up with how to attach them to the dripper system.
I will upload some pictures of the layout of the dripper system when I finish put it all together but before I bury it under the mulch layer. Stay Tuned!

Tuesday, September 18, 2007

Garden Layout

To enlarge this image click on it and it should open in a larger format.

Code:

P = pots, V= Veggie Patch, Straight numbers Actual trees
P1 = Custard Apple (Annona atemoya) African Pride
P2 = Coffee (Coffea arabica)
P3 = Panama Berry, Strawberry Tree, Capulin, or Malay Cherry (Muntingia calabura)
P4 = Hawaiian or Tropical Guava (Psidium guajava)
P5 = Fig Black Genoa (Ficus carica)
P6 = Kiwi Fruit or Chinese Gooseberry (Actinidia deliciosa (male))
P7 = Camellia Sinensis (Tea Plant)
1 = Kiwi Fruit or Chinese Gooseberry (Actinidia deliciosa (Female))
2 = Apricot Moorpark
T1 = GoldMine Nectarine
T2 = Elberta Peach
T3 = Charlotte Columnar Ballerina Apple
T4 = Mandarin Imperial
T5 = Williams European Pear
T6 = Sensation Pear (Pyrus communis Sensation or Red Sensation)
T7 = Polka Columnar Ballerina Apple
T8 = Lots A' Lemons Dwarf
H1 = Veronica Oxford Blue
H2 =
H3 =
A = Apple Mint
B = Chamomile
C = Comphrey
D = Greek Oregano
E = Mint Julep
F = Parsley
G = Peppermint
H = Thyme Pink
I = Thyme White
J = Sage
K = Yarrow
L = Curry Plant
M = Choc Mint
N = French Lavender
O = Bay Leaf

Z = Empty

Check out Spring/Summer plantings to see what is actually in the vegie patches




Spring/Summer 2007 Plantings

Garden Beds
Bed 1
4 rows seeds - greenfeast peas (full length of bed x 4)
Bed 2
Green Harvest Perennial Rocket Seed 1 row Planted 27/09/2007
Green Harvest Rocket Seed 1 row Planted 27/09/2007
Green Harvest Warrigal Greens Seed 2 rows Planted 27/09/2007, 1 row Planted 14/11/07
Salad Shaker Cheap as Chips Planted 30/08/2007
Top Taste Gourmet Mix 8 Seedlings Planted 30/08/2007
Top Taste Dwarf French Beans Golden Grove Nursery 11 Seedlings Planted 10/09/2007
Green Harvest Bush Beans Seeds Planted 27/09/2007 1/2
Green Harvest Purple King Climbing Beans Seeds Planted 27/09/2007
Bed 3

Living Colour Continental Burpless Cucumber - 4 plants
2 rows length of bed Cucumbers - grown from seed 23 plants Planted 16/10/07 13 plants died
Zuccinni from Neighbour - 6 Plants - died
Living Colour Zucchini Gold Rush 4 plants Planted 13/11/07
Bumper Harvest Egg Plant surpreme 18 Plants Planted 13/11/07
Bed 4

6 red cherry tomatoes - grown from seed Planted 16/10/07
8 Grosse Lisse - grown from seed Planted 16/10/07
4 Mighty Red Tomatoes seedlings Planted 24/10/07
5 Black Russian Tomatoes - grown from seed Planted 14/10/07
5 Green Zebra Tomates - Grown from seed Planted 14/10/07
4 Yellow Cherries - Grown from Seed Planted 14/10/07
5 Roma Tomatoes - Grown from Seed Planted 14/10/07

Bed 5

Top Taste Tioga Strawberry - 1 Plant Planted 30/08/2007
Top Taste Red Gauntlet Strawberry - 1 Plant Planted 30/08/2007
Nellie Kelly Sweetie Strawberry 1 Plant Planted 10/09/2007
Top Taste Tioga Strawberry - 1 Plant Planted 24/10/07
3 rows of strawberry seed Planted 16/10/07
Top Taste Strawberry Sweetheart 8 Plants Planted 14/11/07
Top Taste Strawberry alinta Planted 08/11/07
4 Top Taste Butternut Pumpkin seedlings Planted 24/10/07

Bed 6

Living Colour Red Hot Cayenne Capsicum (Pepper) - 8 Plants
17 Top Taste Sweetcorn Seedlings 3 rows Planted 08/11/2007
Bed Under Fruit Trees
Green Harvest Moon and Stars Watermelon - 2 rows x 3 seeds
5 seedlingsNastursiums grown from seeds
8 coliban potatoes - grown from sprouted shop potatoes
Fruit Trees - Pots
Custard Apple (Annona atemoya) African Pride
Coffee (Coffea arabica)
***Panama Berry, Strawberry Tree, Capulin, or Malay Cherry (Muntingia calabura) Died***
Hawaiian or Tropical Guava (Psidium guajava)
Fig Black Genoa (Ficus carica)
Kiwi Fruit or Chinese Gooseberry (Actinidia deliciosa (male))
Camellia Sinensis (Tea Plant)
Fruit Trees - In Ground
Lots A' Lemons Dwarf
Polka Columnar Ballerina Apple
Charlotte Columnar Ballerina Apple
Mandarin Imperial
Williams European Pear
Sensation Pear (Pyrus communis Sensation or Red Sensation)
Elberta Peach
GoldMine Nectarine
Herbs/Spices

Apple Mint
Chamomile
Comphrey
Greek Oregano
Oregano(from Neighbour)
Mint Julep
Parsley
Peppermint
Thyme Pink
Thyme White
Sage
Yarrow
Curry Plant
Choc Mint
French Lavender
Bay Leaf
Seedlings Died/no grownth Planted
Rock Melon
Cucumber
Beans
Strawberries
Basil
cherry tomatoes
Grosse Lisse Tomatoes
Green Zebra Tomato
Roma San Marzano Tomato
Black Russian Tomato
California wonder Capsicum
Golden Calwonder Capsicum
Purple Tomatillo
Cherry Yellow Pear Tomato
Passion Fruit Black
Marvel of 4 seasons Lettuce
Saladbowl Red Lettuce
Saladbowl Green Lettuce
Gwenda White Lettuce
Lollo Rossa Lettuce
Marvel of 4 seasons Lettuce
Saladbowl Red Lettuce
Saladbowl Green Lettuce
Gwenda White Lettuce
Lollo Rossa Lettuce
Green Zebra Tomato
Roma San Marzano Tomato
Black Russian Tomato
California wonder Capsicum
Golden Calwonder Capsicum
Purple Tomatillo
Cherry Yellow Pear Tomato

Newspaper Pots

In anticipation of my seeds (mentioned in post "The Beginning" I have been thinking about how to plant all of them - I have already used up pretty much every container, seedling tray and anything else suitable I have laying around. I figured there must be a easy cheap way to do it, so surfing the net I went. I came across the following web site:

http://www.geocities.com/newspaperpots/

Newspaper pots - what a great idea - easy, recycling so that's good and it cost me nothing but time. So I've been making lots of them in anticipation. Whats really good about them is when the plant is big enough then no fiddling around getting the plant out of the seedling tray in one piece just plonk the whole thing in the ground and the paper breaks down and the plant is on its way. Less stress on the plant so in theory this should yield a higher success rate.

Some things I did think of however were:
1. You will need to be careful not to over water because this will cause the paper to breakdown prematurely.
2. With seeds that may take a while to take off it may be worth while doubling up buy making up the pot out of 2 sheets or placing one pot inside another.

I think the second option may be better because the double sheeted may be to thick to breakdown quick enough where as the pot inside a pot, the outside pot can be removed when its time for planting if need be.

First thing this morning as I'm sending the munchkins off to school the posty arrives with my package - so I know what I'm doing over the next few days. For a list of what I'm growing this spring/summer see my post labelled Spring/Summer 2007. There is a list there of all the vegetables I'm planting and as the season goes on I will rate the success of these.

Saturday, September 15, 2007

Growing Pineapples

A friend and I were mucking around on the net looking at garden information and we came across how to grow pineapples at home from the top of store bought ones so we thought we'd give it a go - It's now a competition to see who grows the best one - I will post here with the information I find and the progress we make.

Sunday 16th September
Ok Time for research - I have brought the pinapples - not as easy as you think - 3 stores before we found one that didn't chop the tops off the fruit - now to find out how to go about doing this. One of my favourite sites Tropical Permiculture has some great pages on pineapple growing -
http://www.growing-tropical-permaculture.com/growing-pineapples.html#growing-pineapples-overview

and here is another site

http://wierdling.longboys.net/images/pineapples/pineapples.html

They both have instructions on how to grow from the tops of pineapples but one has you soaking in water one does not - What to do what to do - Try both of course!


19 Sept 2007

I have eaten 2 of my pineapples now and have them soaking in a glass - they went in on sunday the 16 Sept - check out the picies - for some reason the smaller one of the two has started turning brown - oh well I will keep going and see what happens.
This is the larger one
This is the smaller one

Manure Tea

I have just had my first attempt at manure tea on my garden. Lots of research I did on organic gardening all seems to talk about manure tea and compost tea and the huge benefits to the soil. Putting something back for getting something out of soil - keeping everything in balance, so I decided to have a go. My first thing was to find out the difference between compost tea and manure tea. Well the obvious is one uses manure one compost. Some of the information I looked at seemed to say that if you don't use aerators for compost tea not only would the good bacteria die off but you will increase the bad bacteria. None of the information I found on manure tea even talked about aerating beyond just agitating the manure tea a couple of times a day - so this made my decision for me, plus the fact that my compost heap is yet to yield compost yet. I used the following

1 part Compost or Manure to 10 Parts water
Brew for a week
agitate daily
Dilute the concentrate at 1 part Tea to 4 parts water
I got this from the Gardening Australia website:
http://www.abc.net.au/gardening/stories/s2002063.htm

I love this website because not only can you watch the show but it is one of the few websites I have found that even if you miss the show all the information including transcripts are on the website for free.

Here is the summary of my first attempt

Wednesday 4/9/07 20 litres of water left open to evaporate off chlorine
Thursday 5/9/07 2 litres Cow Manure in Hessian bag added
Wednesday 12/09/2007 1.5 Ltr Tea topped up to 9Ltrs with water on all Fruit/vegetables/herbs
left over poured straight onto empty bed 1
NB To much in total - reduce to 10 litres starting water
1.5ltrs of tea to 9 ltrs of water isn't exactly 1:4 but it was easier to measure out than 1.8 ltrs ( I must get some measuring cups and jugs for the garden) but I decided to err on the side of caution for my first go. As you can see the 20lts was also to much and I can't seem to find out how long you can keep the stuff for - I am planning to do this once a week on a Wednesdays - ( The day I am down to only one helpful munchkin, cause the top three are at school and number four is at kindy, much easier to deal with yucky manure with only one!!) so I will just do 10 litres and see how that goes. - Will keep updating

Friday, September 14, 2007

The Beginning

Well as I said in my description here I am stuck in the burbs and I have decided to massacre our front yard and turn it into a mini farm. I will try and add photos as my garden progresses. I have also started some seeds off in old seedling boxes, trays and anything else I can get my hands on, covered them in plastic. I've done tomatoes - cherry and full size, basil, peas, beans, strawberries, rock melon. I was also a bit naughty and went nuts on line and bought $100 dollars worth of seeds - oops hubby will not be happy when he sees the credit card!

I have also planted 2 kiwi fruits (male and Female), Black Genoa Fig, Tropical Guava, Panama Berry, Arabica Coffee, Custard Apple, 2 x Camellia Sinensis ( The tree used to make Tea), all in pots and 2 apples - Ballerina Polka & Charlotte, 2 Pears - Sensation and Williams, an Imperial Mandarin, a Lots-o-Lemon's, a Elberta Peach, a Goldmine Nectarine, a Bay Leaf Tree, and we had an existing Moorpark Apricot tree.

I have used some old pavers around the beds (raised with some old sleepers we had in our back garden before we built onto the house). Instead of laying them on the straight I have laid them on the diagonal which leaves little triangles of soil up against the beds with I am going to use for herbs and things.