It took long time to find appropriate topic. Surprisingly, my recent car accident helped me to find satisfying topic. Under influence of painkillers I ended up buying a bunch of perennial plants for garden. So, I decided to learn how to care for them so that money is not wasted.
We have rather big yard, front and back that is at the moment full of weeds, ground squirrels mounds, dog poop, and wild bunnies which one of my neighbor feeds. So my gardening will face a loads of challenges.
Plus to make thing worse, we live in mountains, 7000 feet, in the area that has high desert climate. Last frost date is June 15, and first frost date is September 17th. Tough.
My gardening knowledge is limited. I've grown up in mountains, but the ones that are wet and fertile. So dealing with constant drought like conditions and way more pest than I ever encountered is new for me.
Anyway, I'm still recovering from accident and I am reading bunch of gardening books. Each of them says that the most important thing is to plan your garden. Before ordering plants.
I guess I have to improvise and plan garden before my plants arrive....
Anyway, I learned yesterday that my strawberries are on a way, so things got serious. I ordered 12 plants of 3 different wild strawberries variety. Even under those blasted painkillers, I was thinking that wild strawberries should be fine here since I've seen them grow in mountains, and our neighbors have ordinary kind that is quite happy....
Anyway, I started reading books on organic gardening, and learned first time in my life that you can combine different plants to achieve role reserved for pesticides, and that kitchen scraps combined with wee bit of paper can make a nice fertilizer.
So for now, we started composting. At the moment, that is a heap of kitchen scraps with a improvisation on dry material. Apparently, you have to combine 2:1 for dry and wet material (carbon : nitrogen) to achieve proper decomposition that does not stink.
And non stinky compost is important. We have very dangerous combination of neighbors. Bears and weekend dwellers. People who have here only weekend houses are ignorant about bears, thinking that those are just big pets or Disney movie characters. So they feed them, or if they do not feed them, then they leave trash laying around even for a week at the time. This attracts bears, especially in the late summer and autumn, when bears eat a lot to prepare for winter. Of course, those same eejits that leave food for bears also think it is cute when bear appears and starts eating trash. So they usually get out with camera and aww around it. And bear learns that people are not dangerous, and that people means food. Later that same bear starts breaking into houses, cars, or even attacking people who have attractive smells on them (think about fruit based shampoo). In the best case scenario only one bear ends up killed. Punished for human stupidity. In the worse case (when human is attacked), any bear in vicinity will be killed.
So, that is danger we have, and since I do not wish to have a bear in my yard, smelly compost is big no-no. Because, yeah, bears would come and eat the kitchen scraps from compost. And then decide to get into the house to snack on my pets, food from cupboards and fridge. Definitely situation to avoid.
At the moment we are succeeding, our compost is not smelly, but my husband is tending it, and mixing it almost every day.
So, back to the strawberries. We picked location for them, in a front yard. Apparently strawberries are perennial so they cannot go to the location we decided to put our vegetable garden. Now, I'm trying to find out which companion plants go with strawberries and what kind of soil, mulch, and rest of goodies they need. At the moment I'm happy because it seems like that thyme which I already have in location goes well with strawberries, so I do not have to remove it.
According to the books I read, I will need to enrich the soil, which I plan to do with pot soil, since we do not have compost ready, and put alfalfa straw as a mulch around strawberries. Of course I need to put chicken wire inside the designated bed because of ground squirrels. I have all of that. So, hopefully everything will go fine when my strawberries arrive.
Hey! Great to see you blogging again,
ReplyDeleteand what an adventure you have started: high altitude gardening. I'll be interested to hear how it progresses.
How funny that drugs led you to gardening!
Thanks.
ReplyDeleteYeah, it does sound funny. Although it was not so funny next morning when I realized how much money I spent....
That's why I decided to go ahead with it. This way each time I look outside I will remind myself to be careful with shopping in the future!