right now

right now

Apr 27, 2015

Weekend Work

Definitely nothing pretty going on in the garden, but lots of work accomplished this weekend.  Let's start by horrifying Grandma… yes, mom - that's a machete Finn is working with!  With supervision, of course!  The man has been wanting a machete for quite some time and now that we are gardening on the edge of a bamboo forest, this seemed like the right time to make the purchase.  He is wasting no time in making me everything from fences and gates to trellises and stakes, and even teaching Finn - but just to cut twine.


Finn planted my turnips and rutabagas.



Some of the bamboo the man and Thing 2 hauled out.  What a great resource, and free too!


Fingerling Potatoes were planted, along with garlic and onions surrounding them, in hopes of deterring wildlife.  (yeah, right!)  There are groundhog holes in everyone's garden plots here and there was a gopher watching us from the far corner, plotting no doubt.


Just a few tomatoes and peppers went in, the rest will go in about a week since I'm not totally believing that our cold temps are gone for good.  A much bigger staking system will go in later, these little poles are just so anyone that tries to step on my seedlings will be impaled warned!


I scored 72 marigolds for $5 at the local big box store.  I do this every year, nothing wrong with them of course other than they need to be deadheaded and planted asap.  I take all the ugly for cheap… most people just don't realize how plants work and I will gladly reap the benefits!  Of course, I will need all 72 plants, you know, to "repel" that gopher that watched me plant them.  Ha!


When Thing 2 isn't in his garden clothes, he often looks like this.  He has turned into quite the Style King.  He claims he is "Punk Rock".  I'm an 80's girl so I won't complain as long as the straight A's keep coming!  


In contrast to the brown of the garden, the trees in my neighborhood are beautiful.  Cherry trees just finished, but the Redbuds, Dogwoods and Crabapple trees are peaking right now. 




Any type of fun projects at home are taking a back burner right now to the garden work that needs to be done.  I had forgotten how much work it can be getting a garden started from nothing!  So many challenges to this particular garden.  We can't use "sharp" objects so things like metal fencing and stakes are supposed to be out, and I'm following the rules, but everyone around me is putting up chicken wire like crazy.  Funny thing is that they are putting up 3-4 ft fences and for the cost I don't see the point - anything less than 8 feet isn't keeping deer out and we have tons of groundhogs here and they are just going under!  I cheaped out with deer netting and just am trying to put enough poles and structure inside the fence that it will be difficult for deer to judge if there is room for them to land.  The netting was $15 for 200 ft so I don't' feel bad if it doesn't work.  We also have to be out of the garden every year by Nov 1st, so that precludes me having a nice working, aging compost pile.  The base lets pasture grow over it all every year so I can't get in there to keep things cultivated or mulched, etc.  That also precludes me growing my cold weather peas, spinach, kale, etc.  I'm still very grateful however for even having a plot, it's virtually unheard of on a military base!

The biggest challenge, by far… is the WIND!  It howls at about 35-45 mph all day, every day.  I will leave you for this windy video to laugh at - you can't hear a thing I'm saying in it but I'm basically telling you about the challenges I outlined above.  

Grab your popcorn and prepare to laugh at my predicament!


I should take bets on the sidebar on whether the groundhogs, gophers, deer or wind will let me harvest anything this year, and what it might be!





10 comments:

  1. I'm bummed my crappy internet won't let me play your video---but I have saved it to play at 3 am when no one else is hogging bandwidth!

    Just love how quickly you have moved on your garden. Too bad about compost piles--where on earth are you supposed to put "stuff" like clippings/cuttings/etc.????

    Have fun!

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    1. Sue, I would love to be able to compost there year round! I'm saving my grass clippings at the house but our yard is only about 12' x 30' so it's comical how little that produces in the way of clippings!

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  2. With that much wind, maybe you'll luck out and the deer will jump waaaay over (tail wind) or not be able to jump at all (head wind)! That's a great big plot you have - too bad you can't start a compost pile. I know you'll be able to grow a bumper crop of everything...

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    1. Susan, haha maybe they will! I'm envisioning when Santa's reindeer take off :)

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  3. I hope the wildlife and wind don't bother your garden too much and you get a bumper harvest this year. That wind sounds pretty strong. I bet the plants will just grow stronger to combat the constant wind. Can you bring your compost home to compost? Might be more work than it's worth though.

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    1. I'm hoping that will be the case and the plants will be strong! I could try to compost at home but my yard is really tiny and we aren't supposed to so I'm sure I'd be spotted pretty quickly on the next inspection LOL

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  4. Glad you are blogging again Erin. I was worried about you and your family. Several times I started to contact Mama Pea to see if if she knew what was going on with you. Between Mother Nature and the animals I would say that you are definitely going to have a very challenging time with your garden. Good luck!

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    1. Thanks Spiderjohn! Just had so much going on the past year with the move and the kids and I moved several months ahead of the hubby so I had a lot on my plate. It's good to be blogging again!

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  5. Have there been gardens there before this year? If so, I wonder how previous gardeners felt their plants did in all that wind and with all the critters that seem to be around. Hmmm, bamboo windbreaks? Venison and ground hog in the freezer? Seriously, I know you'll do well if anyone can. You've got some pretty good helpers this year and I have a feeling the next time we see pictures of the garden, there won't be much bare soil showing. You're sooooo far ahead of us here in Minnie-soda. Keep the blog posts coming!

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    1. The gardens have been there for at least the past 2 years I know of, our plot neighbor said he is the only "returnee" that could hack it for another year haha! He said that the wildlife took a lot but he did manage to get a decent harvest. I wish we could hunt there but being on the flight line makes that a bit hard :) I was thinking how cool it would be to have a little dog house style coop and have some "stealthy" chickens in there, no one would know…. except I looked up and there are hawks circling the plots all day long, they wouldn't last too long in there!

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