A Work in Progress . . .

Wasted space about to become useful! 2/12/19

Part of the challenge of gardening on an urban lot is tucking in as many veggies as possible in whatever spots are available to you! This area, roughly 9’x3′ of useable growing space, has been my compost area for several years. Using the “slow method”, I had three separate piles going at all times. But due to limited space, I decided that the slow method wasn’t giving me maximum results and took up valuable dirt space that could be used for growing edibles. So, last year I chopped down a shrubby useless tree-thing (you can see the stump being used as a hose holder), shoveled out 5 wheelbarrows of awesome compost into my garden beds, and planted some veggies.

Then life happened. Do you see the back fence? On the opposite side of the fence is where the air conditioner lives. After 42 years, our air conditioner went out. Pretty good life-span for an ac unit, especially here in Central California where we get several weeks of triple digit days during the summer months. So, the fence came out and the ac crew trampled my lovely kale, grape tomatoes, chives, and even the beans climbing up the fence, back into compost. But, losing a few kale plants was a small price to pay for having air conditioning!

So, I got the area cleaned out and re-planted a few weeks ago. I did cheat and planted a few dozen bean seeds along the fence but I doubt they come up. February is too cold for seed germination. So I will be planting the climbing areas in earnest in another month or so. I was smart and bought my purple beans early this year. Last year I waited too long and had to plant regular green beans. They tasted great but I missed half of them because they hid so well among the leaves! In the past, I’ve always kept my own bean seed but due to life interfering with my gardening ambitions, I haven’t been able to save any for a few years. So, I’m starting fresh this year!

I also have to confess to buying kale and brussel sprouts starts from the nursery. I did start several dozen kale seeds that I had saved from last year. They were growing great until they weren’t. I watered them one day and the next, slugageddon! One of the drawbacks to living where we have fairly mild winters is that a gardener is doing battle with the slimy hoards 12 months out of the year. Sigh, so instead of being self-reliant, I supported our local economy, which is also a very good thing! LOL

2/12/19 All planted! Kale, Brussel Sprouts, Chives, and a few bean seeds against the fence.

Two weeks later, and all is growing well, except the beans! LOL It’s hard to see, but I’m using weed eater cord for the beans to climb. We had two spools from our now defunct weed eater that wouldn’t fit into our new one. Waste not, want not, right? Today’s pictures below:

2/25/29 The brussel sprouts have grown a few inches and are really loving all the rain we’ve gotten in the past two weeks. But I should probably put some more Sluggo out . . .

2/25/19 The kale, chives, and weeds are really taking off. Even though we’ve had some light frost, this area of the yard is fairly protected. In another two weeks, I should be able to start using a few kale leaves in our salads.

Update 3/12/2019

The beans are up! Wow, it’s too early but they don’t seem to have been held back by recent frost and heavy rains! Depending on which chart you use, our last frost date is anywhere between February 20 and April 12. Personally, in my adult gardening life, I can’t remember a frost after March, so chances are good that these beans just might make it! If not, I can replant! I should also note that this is in a fairly small, sheltered corner of the yard.

The kale have many more sets of leaves!

Egyptian walking onion babies that I rescued from the lawn and tucked into this section.

Where did 2018 go?!?I

Wow, where did the time go? So sorry I’ve been neglecting this blog. I started it so that I would have an online journal of when I planted things, which recipes work best when I have an overabundance of an herb or vegetable, and a place to record some of the crazy meanderings of my mind while weeding a garden bed!

Nope, didn’t happen quite as planned this year. But then, when do things ever happen according to plan? I won’t bore you with details but once again health issues and family obligations got in the way of my blogging ambitions. But not to worry, just because I wasn’t writing about gardening, doesn’t mean I wasn’t gardening! And frankly, most days I either had the energy to write about gardening or take care of my garden. So mostly, I took care of the garden although this years Fall garden was pretty much a failure. I did get in 200 garlic and 100 onions. As soon as I finish searching them out from under all of the weeds, I’ll let you know how they are doing! And the 36 kale plants I started and never got around to putting in the ground became slug food. One day they were there happily growing in their tray and a few days later, slimeageddon! LOL

Last year I also started gardening a new section where I had previously been slow composting for the past 10 years. It was growing great – pole beans, kale, chives, a couple of volunteer cherry tomato plants, and a few wandering herbs. Then our air conditioner died and that little bit of yard I had reclaimed was laid waste by the air conditioning crew traipsing back and forth to remove the old unit and put in a new one. Sigh . . .

The good news is that the area is cleared up and I’ve started replanting. I’m looking forward to harvesting significantly more green beans than I did last year! And remember the cucumber overload? The garlic dill slices I made last year have been a huge hit! I will definitely be planting too many cucumbers again this year as well as increasing my Egyptian Walking Onion Beds. The dried onion powder is the absolute bomb in my spice cabinet! But there were also a few failures. I’ve made garlic powder in the past and thought it was too much work and not worth the effort or electricity. This year I read about roasted garlic powder and thought that might take less time in the dehydrator and be tastier than store bought garlic powder. Nope. Definitely cheaper to buy garlic powder in bulk than to make it myself. The roasting before dehydrating didn’t magically transform the process. So, I continue to live and learn. Projects planned for the next few months of 2019 include:

  1. Finish pruning the fruit trees.
  2. Downsizing and replacing my Jerusalem Artichoke beds.
  3. Removing the raspberries and replacing them with more sweet potatoes.
  4. Finish my ornamental sitting area in the back corner of the yard. (It’s too shady to grow anything edible in!)
  5. Find a dedicated area on the back patio for my tropical fruits!
  6. Trying to limit my plantings to things/quantities that we can use!

It’s good to be back chatting, planning and hopefully, tracking my progress! Here’s to a very productive New Year!

Repurposing a Bed Frame

We recently moved our daughter and most of her furniture back home when she graduated from college.  One of the things we didn’t move was her bed frame and mattress.  They were old to begin with and after 4 years of living in an apartment complex built in the 1940’s that came with bedbugs, we decided we would not be moving it back to the house!

So, Hubby set to work dismantling them both into smaller sections so they would fit into the apartment dumpster.  Don’t feel too badly for him, I suspect he has a secret fascination with seeing if there is something he can’t deconstruct with his Sawzall!  In the middle of the bed frame deconstruction, I noticed a few items that I could easily repurpose: 4 wooden slats and a metal panel.

Where is that bed frame now?

Wire panel from bed frame being repurposed as a trellis for pole beans.  I had just been researching investing in cattle panels, but couldn’t justify spending more money than the product I was growing would have been worth.  So glad I waited!

The four bed slats, two cinder blocks, and a can of spray paint.

The four bed slats repurposed into wood storage for our fire pit!  Super easy project and it’s nice to have the wood neatly stored in plain sight.  

It’s not hoarding if you use the things you’ve rescued! Never you mind about the rolls of rescued chicken wire I have stashed in the garden shed!

 

 

 

 

Redneck Grey Water System

Until this year, California has been in a severe drought.  Watering has been severely limited.  So, while I was willing to let what little lawn I still have left go brown, I needed to come up with a system to capture the grey water from my washing machine to keep my roses, iris, and redwood trees alive. This is a post I made on another forum in 2015:

Okay, after several hours of contemplation, measuring, and more research, I decided to follow the KISS plan. The upside is that my laundry room will only look like crap when I’m doing laundry instead of having a plastic flexible pipe running along the wall into the bathroom and out the bathroom window. Although I got the most darling little wall hooks to hold the flexible tubing with . . .

I just have to find out where our spade drill bits are. Dh used them last and they weren’t put back where they usually go. In the meantime, my elaborate plans ran up a hardware bill of almost $90 in parts. My new plan will cost $25.78 and while not a permanent set up, it sets up and tears down very quickly and will ultimately be more user friendly without making our house look any more redneck than it already does!

I’m following these plans:’
http://www.instructables.com/id/Simp…ywater-System/

and I’m mostly following the warnings from this site:’
http://oasisdesign.net/greywater/misinfo/

The one exception being is that I will be draining directly onto my backyard grass, which I know is a “no-no” but I have three large redwood trees and I’ve always deep watered them by flooding the lawn. I’ll take the necessary precautions and I’m not overly worried about safety hazards in that area. Most of the water will go into my rose & iris beds and my potted ornamentals. I’ve got to get this done. I promised myself that I wouldn’t do anymore laundry until I finished this project and I’m almost out of clean underwear!

 

This is my elegant set-up! It ended up leaking when the barrel was full, but not when I filled it partially full for my test run. Since then, I’ve fixed it with a bit of silicon. The hose runs through the garage to the front yard or I run it out the back door to the back yard. Not the least bit elegant but fully functional and I did it all by myself! (I am not a handywoman) I’m thinking that if I really get into this, I can put a diverter valve under the laundry room sink and hook up my hose directly under the sink. But that will take a bit of plumbing know how, which I don’t have!

Update:  This system has worked well for me and is still going strong two years later.  I have to confess that during exceptionally busy times in my life, I don’t bother with this set-up.  But I really like the Oasis laundry soap and use it regularly.  I think it important to use bio-compatible soap whether you’re watering your plants or flushing it into the sewer.