Monday, June 3, 2013

In the Garden

When we moved into our new house in February, we knew that there was a big garden hidden under the snow. This spring we had a big clean up day with John's parents and his sister Christi and her family and over the past couple of weeks it has warmed up enough to start planting. 

Here's the before picture:


Quite a tangled mess. 

And here's the after-the-clean-up:


All of the boxes were already there. On the right are raspberry canes that need some serious pruning that we'll do in the fall. 

And here are some pictures with plants and the trellises:


The round thing will be for strawberries. It's has a sprinkler in the top tier and a frame over it for netting. 


The triangular bed is mostly herbs. Off the top of my head: oregano, chives, green basil, purple basil, parsley, sage, rosemary, thyme, tarragon, pineapple sage and dill. Along the trellis in the triangle are squash, peas and watermelon (cross your fingers for a late frost). In the other boxes are tomatoes (7-8 different kinds), tomatillos and ground cherries from Christi, cucumbers (straight and pickling), carrots, beets, bush beans, chamomile, feverfew, spinach, chard, dwarf sunflowers, and some other flowers. 

We got started a bit late this year because there was so much clean up and I put it off until we got a big crew together, so hopefully we'll have a good season. We'll do a good job cleaning up in the fall, and we'll get the raspberries under control, and next year will go better. We'll get more plants started inside the sunroom in the house and be on top of things. Special thanks to Christi for sharing some of her plants with us. She brought a number of the herbs, too. 

Behind the shed we found a bunch of old windows from when they put in the new ones and I think it would be fun to make a greenhouse, or at least some cold frames with them. I'd like to figure out a year-round gardening system. But for now, we have a good start!

7 comments:

  1. Wow! It's awesome!!

    We love ground cherries. But we call them husk cherries. Is that the same thing?

    Seriously, I'm so jealous. It's a lovely garden. Nice work!

    ReplyDelete
  2. Very impressive. It looks beautiful,

    ReplyDelete
  3. I'm very impresses. We aren't doing anything because of the painting. I'll just maintain what we have.

    ReplyDelete
  4. Woot woot! I LOVE all the trellises, etc. I second Tini. It's a LOVELY GARDEN! I am going to have to google some of the things you planted. Feverfew? Heard of it but no idea what it is... or why you would want to plant it. If you find some good plans for cold frames, send them my way. We've got some windows that I saved just for that purpose. The people across the street got new windows and had the old ones leaning up against a dumpster. I asked if I could have them. :) Can't wait to see more pics with everything filled out! I hope the kids are being good weeders for you.
    Tini--I looked around to see if husk cherries and ground cherries are the same thing and it looks like they are--however, it's a pretty big family. I guessed a couple years ago that tomatillos and ground cherries were related but never looked it up and it is here in this wikipedia article. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Physalis BUT ground cherries are much sweeter than tomatillos (as you probably know). I bought tomatillos thinking they were ground cherries my second year of gardening here and was never able to find actual ground cherry plants in the store. (That year was the only year I saw tomatillo plants---but they have come back volunteer very nicely so, thankfully, I haven't had to worry about it... although I DO save seeds every year just in case.) But back to the ground cherries. This year, I found some ground cherry seeds in a bigger town and bought them and started some. That's what Biz's are. The second link I found looking up husk/ground cherries was this http://forum.earthbox.com/index.php?topic=4676.0 and whadduya know? I bought Aunt Molly's Ground Cherry seeds from Seed Savers. Looks like we got a winner Biz! Send some seeds to Tini! :) If either of you want other seeds from what I've got, let me know. I'd be happy to send you some!

    ReplyDelete
  5. Bizzy! I need a garden like that! The only thing our previous owners left us in the backyard was an aboveground pool with toxic sludge in it. Your garden looks fantastic. I'm envious and happy for you all at the same time.

    ReplyDelete
  6. Nice! What about the flowers in the front yard. What did they end up being?

    ReplyDelete
  7. So pretty! I would love to buy a house with a pre done garden. How we struggle in Texas to make things grow. We have had so many failed attempts, it's depressing. Good luck and enjoy!!!

    ReplyDelete