I have always been a fanatic about gardening. Over the years I have had some fairly good results planting conventional gardens, but it has never been as successful as what I thought it should be.
Usually the garden would start out looking great and I would spend huge amounts of time weeding and watering and then later in the season when rains came quite frequently the ground would stay so wet that I could not get in the garden to maintain it properly and weeds would finally win the battle.
Also, it seems that once the ground got saturated the plants started to rot. The plants that would be most susceptible to this would be my squash. The tomato plants themselves held up through all the rain, but the tomatoes would start to rot before they would get ripe.
I tried every concoction I could find to prevent this from happening, but nothing seemed to work.
Someone told me about a concept called Square Foot Gardening. I found a book about it written by Mel Bartholomew and started reading it. What I read in the book made sense so I decided that this year I would give it a whirl.
I built a container for my plants out of some wood that I had laying around in my shop and this afternoon I finally had a chance to get something planted in it.
I went to a local plant nursery and got some "special" soil that they had and a bag of "worm castings". I think that it is soil that is taken from an earthworm farm after they get through crapping in it for awhile. While I was in the nursery buying this stuff a lady asked me if that soil grew worms. She acted like she was serious! I told her that it would and that Cheerios were really doughnut seeds.
After that I went to Lowe's and bought a bag of mushroom compost and a bag of cow sh.. I mean manure.
Once I got home I mixed all the this stuff together in a specially designed soil combining container. OK, so it was an old kids swimming pool, but it worked.
As you can see from the pictures in the slide show, I was able to get 16 plants in a relatively small area.
Check back every few weeks and I will post some pictures so that you can see how things are progressing.
Who knows, you may decide to try it yourself.
Oh by the way. That ratty looking fence you see in some of the pictures is my neighbor's fence. I've already told him that I would replace it for him since he doesn't seem to be concerned about it.

3 comments:
Looks like you are doing something you enjoy. Man, I've tried planting tomatoes since I could eat my weight in them. Unfortunately, they do not make anything in the ground. Then, I tried "Mater dirt", a concoction from Auburn University (maybe that was the problem). I put those plants in 5 gallon buckets with holes drilled in the bottoms, and they were beautiful plants, but no tomatoes. Too bad I don't enjoy eating the plants, althought I've never tried them. Maybe they would be good.
Hey, I'm trying to DM you on Twitter and I can't seem to get it through, and I can't find your e-mail address anywhere...
And your blog looks good...
It came through on my phone, thanks!
That's amazing!
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