This is harder than you might
think to decide what to plant. In my previous post I listed a number of plants that I bought, but I admit that I am using years of experience about how many and what types for my garden. Even though I have never done this type of garden, I have gardened before now.
If you are starting small, you have to limit yourself to a handful of
plants. If you are growing vegetables start with what you like to eat and what
you can't find fresh locally. Corn takes a lot of space and remains in the
garden a long time before it's ready to be eaten. If you have corn farms
nearby, you might want to use your small garden for vegetables that give a
longer harvest, like tomatoes, lettuce and beans. My husbands said - NO corn in the garden for just this reason. He said , if you want corn go to the farmer's market, they always have it and it is good.
Flower gardens can be even harder. Start with what colors you
like. Rather than basing your dream on a photograph from a magazine, take a
look at what your neighbors are growing successfully. They may even be able to
give you a division or two. The Men's Garden Club of Villa Park is having their plant sale May 9 & 10 and many of the plants available have come from local gardens so not only can you find out how they did, but you know they grow here!
Probably should not start with this! |
Take a walk around a couple of garden centers and read the plant
labels. Then play with combining the plants that strike your eye until you find
a combination of 3-5 plants that pleases you. Make sure all the plants have the
same growing requirements (Sun, water, pH...) and that none of them are going
to require more care than you can give them.
Keep the variety of plants limited. It makes a better
composition to have more plants of less varieties than to have one of this and
one of that.
Let the planting begin
Sometimes you have to
plant when you have the time, even if that's high noon on a Saturday. But the
ideal time to plant is on a still, overcast day. The point is, stress your new
plants as little as possible. Here are a few easy steps to follow:
·
Water the plants in
their pots the day before you intend to plant.
·
Don't remove all the
plants from their pots and leave them sitting in the sun for the roots to dry
out.
·
If the roots are
densely packed or growing in a circle, tease them apart so they will stretch out and grow into the surrounding soil.
roots |
·
Bury the plant to the
depth it was in the pot. Too deep and the stem will rot. Too high and the roots
will dry out.
·
Don't press down hard
on the plants as you cover them. Watering will settle them into the ground.
·
Water your newly
planted garden as soon as it is planted and make sure it gets at least one inch
of water per week. You may have to water more often in hot dry summers. Let
your plants tell you how much water they need. Some wilting in noonday sun is
normal. Wilting in the evening is stress.
·
Mulching
You
hear a lot about mulching, but it really does make a major difference in
a garden. Mulch conserves water, blocks weeds and cools the soil. Organic
mulches like shredded or chipped bark, compost mulch from old leaves and grass, or event straw, will also improve the soil quality.
Plastic mulches are
nice in a vegetable garden to heat the soil around warm season crops like
tomatoes, peppers, melons and squash. Whatever mulch you
choose, apply it soon after planting, before new weeds sprout. Apply a 2-4 inch
thick layer of mulch, avoiding direct contact with the plant stems. Piling
mulch around the stem can lead to rotting and can provide cover for munching
mice and voles.
·
K
Keeping a Record
Keep
a record of what you have planted or better yet, keep the labels that came with
your plants. This will help answer any questions about what the plant may need
if it starts looking poorly and will remind you next year of what you liked and
what didn't work. It also helps to take pictures and label them. You'll
remember color combinations and favorite plants.
· You can start a garden journal (check out one of my early posts for two types which will work great.) With a garden journal you can record how plants
perform, when flowers are in bloom, how large a harvest was and all kinds of
information that will help you make a better garden next year.
Hopefully when you were
selecting plants you did some background checking and didn't select too many
prima donnas. All plants are going to require some maintenance. The idea that perennial plants require less maintenance than annuals is wrong. Choose a few good gardening books and read up on the plants you choose, so you have less surprises.
It may happen that one of your choices isn't happy and dies. That is a fact of gardening life and not a sign you cannot do this. Move on and replace it with something else. I love to grow thyme. Thyme dies. Plants you have had flourishing for multiple years, just die. Each year I choose a new variety of thyme to grow, just in case one of my long-term residents, takes a bad turn. This year, I will be trying several new plants!!
Water Needs
At the very least your plants will require an inch of water a week. If it rains regularly, good for you and your garden! If not, don't let your plants get drought stressed. Once a plant is stressed it will never recover fully in this growing season.
My first challenge of the Community plot was an email informing me that the water is not turned on at the garden and that they will be repairing leaks and that the water may not be fully functional for some time. I think this means I will need to bring filled watering cans when I plant later this week.I shudder to think about filled watering cans in my car!!
Enjoy the Garden
You've heard the saying
"Stop and smell the roses"? Gardeners can be the worst at taking that
advice. We're so busy with our heads down at soil level, pinching, pruning and
pulling every weed, that we often don't appreciate what we've created until
someone else tells us.
Step back and enjoy what you've accomplished.
Come back Friday and Saturday for the details of my garden planting for this year!
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