What Are Some Tips for Successful Gardening?

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Gardening is a cherished activity for many participants, with roots tracing back to childhood experiences and family traditions. Organic gardening methods are favored, emphasizing the use of natural techniques over chemicals. Current gardening efforts include cultivating perennials like blueberries and raspberries, alongside plans for vegetable and herb gardens. Participants express a desire for more space to garden, reflecting on the challenges of apartment living and the joy of nurturing plants. The discussion highlights cultural differences in gardening practices, particularly contrasting American and Spanish lifestyles regarding home and garden ownership.
  • #2,101
The first shows the Taylor Way PTO tiller mounted on the tractor.
Wow. They really look good together.
I hit a really big rock when deep-tilling my garden, with no bad effects.
Could you get the sucker out of there so you don't hit it again? Did you check the tines to see if one got nicked? My new little tiller will disengage the tines if there's too much load. Which was good on the really hard stuff that hadn't been tilled for a few years.
His garden spot is only about 25'x40', but that's plenty for a guy in his 70's to tend.
Well I not quite that old but as I mentioned in chat Sunday, mine is getting smaller. Probably about the size of yours.

Thanks for sharing turbo.
 
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  • #2,102
I'll probe around with a digging-bar to see if I can locate the boulder and excavate it. The spring-loaded slip clutch actually did slip briefly, then re-engaged, so it worked as intended. I haven't checked for mechanical damage to the tines, but the clutch slipped so freely that I doubt there is any "ouch". That Taylor Way tiller is really heavily built. Of course, any PTO attachment being driven by a ~30 hp diesel had better be pretty rugged.

The garden is just about 60x40 or larger, which is just about the size of yours. I have more usable space than before, though, because the edges were a bit irregular before the new tiller chewed things up and the tilled depth was not real consistent near the edges. No problem with that now. The tiller is very heavy and it buries itself with no hesitation.
 
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  • #2,103
turbo-1 said:
The garden after tilling.

Man, that's beautiful. *Respect*
 
  • #2,104
Max Faust said:
Man, that's beautiful. *Respect*
Thanks. I've invested in equipment to get such results, as well as amendments to the soil. I garden organically, and there is a lot of "dancing" with the soil and plants to reach a balance that optimizes output. You didn't read the thousands of posts prior to this, so a bit of history. My wife and I bought this place out in the boonies, and we wanted a nice garden-spot. The soil here was very rocky with lots of clay, and the pH was too high because the previous owner kept flogging it with lime and MiracleGro.

It has been five years, and I'm pretty happy with the way the soil is looking now. I have been trucking in peat and composted manure little by little over the years with my pickup, but last year my garden was all torn up because I had heavy equipment and trucks ripping things up to install a new drain field for my septic system. Before the truckers were done, I had 14 yds of rotted manure and 14 yds of coarse sand trucked in. Manure to boost nutrients, and sand to boost drainage. I spread it with my loader and tilled it in. This spring, I re-tilled the garden spot, and I hope mother nature plays nice this year so I can get a good crop of habaneros and other chilies. The last two summers have not been real nice to gardeners.
 
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  • #2,105
Well, I'm just happy that *somebody* will go through the trouble of making nature work as nature is supposed to work rather than mindlessly floating with the stream. Really. I live in the UK now, but I spent 3 memorable years at an old (like 1500's old) farm in Norway (my homeland) experimenting with this and that just a few years ago. I also used to be a professional garden designer for some very rich people who paid very well for that sort of thing, so I have been lucky like that. The closer to *nature* the better!
 
  • #2,106
Max Faust said:
Well, I'm just happy that *somebody* will go through the trouble of making nature work as nature is supposed to work rather than mindlessly floating with the stream. Really. I live in the UK now, but I spent 3 memorable years at an old (like 1500's old) farm in Norway (my homeland) experimenting with this and that just a few years ago. I also used to be a professional garden designer for some very rich people who paid very well for that sort of thing, so I have been lucky like that. The closer to *nature* the better!
I wish someone would pay me to design their gardens. I'd pick up yet another vocation. Of course my designs would involve soil-optimization and recommendations for sustainable output, including companion-plantings.

I am horrified by big companies like Monsanto that want to flood the market with GM seeds that do not reproduce, and that are resistant to Monsanto's herbicides and pesticides, so that farmers can use more and more of them.
 
  • #2,107
turbo-1 said:
big companies like Monsanto that want to flood the market with GM seeds that do not reproduce

I agree.

My main point of objection is that this streamlining of genetically designed crops is an accident waiting to happen - as soon as some hitherto unknown "superbug" figures out what their weak spot is, and chooses to take advantage of that, in the arms race of existence. Plurality of crops used to be a good defence. Nature has no mercy for the lazy. The consequences can be very dire indeed.

But I suppose the point is that *some* people will make *some* money here and now.
 
  • #2,108
My garlic-beds are at a neighbor's place, because he won't have time to garden this year, and he offered to let me have his main garden-spot when my garden was all torn up by heavy equipment. I dropped in there as I walked my dog this morning, and the garlic is almost a foot tall already. If the warm weather keeps up, I'll be harvesting garlic scapes by early June and harvesting mature garlic by early July. Ironically, my garlic is planted in a spot with richer soil than his garlic-beds, so mine has quite a head-start on his.

Without garlic beds to maintain in my own garden spot, I'll have room to plant extra squash, beans, root vegetables, etc to keep his family in fresh vegetables during the season. Note to self: Give away a LOT more garlic this year, to let people get started with their own crops. I saved way too much for personal use, and there's more than we will use hanging in the cold cellar. I gave lots of bulbs to two ladies in the area that garden, and gave my aunt and a niece enough to get them started, but should have hooked up a few more gardeners. Nice hard-neck Red Russian garlic and German garlic are lots tastier than the soft-neck varieties usually sold in stores. For any gardening PF'ers, if you get a chance to pick up good hard-neck garlic, these are the two to look for. Russian is rich and pungent, and usually has 8-12 cloves/bulb. German is a bit milder and generally produces larger bulbs, but with only 4-5 huge cloves/bulb. If you're going to save a portion of your harvest for next season's planting and are just getting started, Russian propagates 2-3x faster than German just based on clove-count, so that should be your first choice. We didn't eat any of our German garlic from the first season - we saved it all for re-planting and used the Russian garlic for cooking instead. Now, we're well - supplied with both varieties and use them according to preference. Stir-fries and casseroles with mild-flavored ingredients usually get German garlic, while hearty stews, New England boiled dinners, and spicy marinades for BBQ usually get Russian garlic.
 
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  • #2,109
Someone I know grew what he called 'elephant' garlic one time---if I remember, the bulb was about the size of a baseball and tasted fairly 'normal' for garlic.
 
  • #2,110
rewebster said:
Someone I know grew what he called 'elephant' garlic one time---if I remember, the bulb was about the size of a baseball and tasted fairly 'normal' for garlic.
Elephant is very mild and sweet, and might even be minced raw into salads because it's so inoffensive. It's not really a garlic (either soft-neck or hard-neck) but a variant of the leek. It does not keep very well, unlike the hard-neck garlics I grow, which are still nice and firm 9 months after last season's harvest.
 
  • #2,111
turbo-1 said:
Argh! Not fun at all, rewebster! I had my own little struggle with public utilities before I put our last place on the market. The cellar had started getting damp, despite having been bone-dry for the previous 15 years or so. I called in a plumber, and he got in touch with the water company. Even though all the faucets in the house were turned off, there was water flowing through the entrance line to the house. That feed line had sprung a leak, and even though the leak was ahead of the meter (giving the water company motivation to repair the line, I thought), they refused to make the repairs because the leak was under my foundation. I had to pay the plumber and a mason associate of his to make several big holes in the concrete floor (it took a few times to find the leak), repair the line, and then patch the floors. $$$$$ and no fun. Had to make the repairs, though, prior to putting the house on the market.

"no fun"----yeah, that's been my exact thinking about all of it all along...

The water company (the city, in my case) stops responsibility at the feed valve which is in the easement (the area from one foot on the house side of the sidewalk to the street)-

--easement is a funny thing--the city owns it but is my responsibility along with the sidewalk maintenance. I've heard if there's no sidewalk the city/county/state/whatever can own up to approx. 16 feet (1/2 of a rod, if I remember right) away from the edge of the street.
 
  • #2,112
It appears that my amaryllis are finally happy with their new surroundings.

This year, they didn't bloom in December as they normally do. I attributed that to the move into the new house that disrupted their pattern, and getting used to the new lighting conditions. Well now, it seems that they're settled in, and started blooming all at once (all 3 of them - they must talk to each other. I just knew it!). It is a few months late, but it is worth it because the flower stalks seems to be a lot longer than before, and each one of the plants are putting out 2 to 3 flowering shoots each!

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This is the front bay window of the new house where they now live. It is south-facing, so has a lot of light.
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It appears that this flowering habit is contagious. Both of my orchids are showing signs of putting out the flowering shoots as well! We'll see how that will turn out. The 3rd orchid is still a baby and will probably not flower for at least another year.

Zz.
 

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  • #2,113
Amazing :smile:
 
  • #2,114
Beautiful, ZZ. I'd love to have a sunny bay window like that. We've got small casement windows under deeply overhanging eaves, so sun is at a premium.
 
  • #2,115
Poorly.

My Chia pet is completely bare now. :(

Guess it's time to reseed.
 
  • #2,116
I have a couple of spots, in which I'd like to put some flowers, on the North side of my house. I'd like something that will come back each year, and doesn't take too much work to tend (I have enough other jobs to do). Any suggestions on flowers that would do well in the shade?

Winters get down to -40 here, if that influences the selection.
 
  • #2,117
NeoDevin said:
I have a couple of spots, in which I'd like to put some flowers, on the North side of my house. I'd like something that will come back each year, and doesn't take too much work to tend (I have enough other jobs to do). Any suggestions on flowers that would do well in the shade?

Winters get down to -40 here, if that influences the selection.
It can get real cold here in Maine, too, and bee-balm does really well here. It spreads like mint and comes back year after year. It attracts bees, butterflies, and hummingbirds, so that's a plus.
 
  • #2,118
turbo-1 said:
It can get real cold here in Maine, too, and bee-balm does really well here. It spreads like mint and comes back year after year. It attracts bees, butterflies, and hummingbirds, so that's a plus.

Looks good. Does it do well in shade? I'll see if I can find some the next time I'm at the greenhouse.
 
  • #2,119
NeoDevin said:
Looks good. Does it do well in shade? I'll see if I can find some the next time I'm at the greenhouse.
It is shade-tolerant, though partial sun is probably better. We have it planted on the north side of our house, which gets shade most of the day.
 
  • #2,120
Another very hardy plant is chocolate mint. My wife planted a bit of it last year, and it's spreading like crazy. It's coming up all over, propagating through rhizomes. Still, it would be best to start with bee-balm because the blossoms attract so many beneficial critters.

Bee-balm has all kinds of medicinal uses and makes very nice soothing teas, so grow a large patch. It spreads very well.
 
  • #2,121
What is chocolate mint?
 
  • #2,123
  • #2,124
Evo said:
Interesting, I'd never heard of it, sounds good. Do you need to contain the roots so it doesn't overtake everything like regular mint?
Yes. It's very aggressive.
 
  • #2,125
BTW, bee-balm is in the mint family, but it is pretty well-behaved compared to some. Chocolate mint is well-adapted to this climate and we keep it well away from any vegetable crops. It is on the north side of our house and is usually in shade, yet it spreads like crazy.
 
  • #2,126
Thanks for the suggestions. I'll see what I can find around here.
 
  • #2,127
Oh no! Just found a groundhog living underneath the shed. The local hardware store sells traps. Any tips on what groundhogs like to eat so I can catch it? I want to get it out of there before it starts eating my new berry bushes and tomatoes when they start producing fruit.
 
  • #2,128
Groundhogs love fresh fruits and vegetables. Get a properly-sized Have-a-Hart box trap and bait it with fresh apple slices. Dirt-pig gone!

If your tenant doesn't fall for the apple slices right away, I would suggest slices of carrot. Groundhogs need to put on a lot of weight in the spring, and slicing the bait so that it has a nice aroma should do the trick. It might be a good idea to drape the trap with opaque cloth, so that it appears like a tunnel to the varmint.
 
  • #2,130
PhaseShifter said:
So it's the same thing as peppermint?
Not the same thing, but in the same family. There are LOTS of variants in the mint family. This stuff spreads like crazy, and people who grow it often split their patches and re-plant or give some away. If you find someone who loves growing their own herbs and perennials, you may be able to get some for free. Same with bee-balm, though it doesn't spread as aggressively as chocolate mint.
 

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