Spring
has finally come to southwestern CT. It's wet, cold and snowing one
minute and sunny and warm the next! We've been working in our garden as
well as going to clients' gardens these last couple of weeks - not
letting the temperatures deter us too much. The telephone has been
ringing with potential customers, internet inquiries have been coming in
and our installation calendar is starting to get filled up. The
gardening season is officially underway since the other day, we shoveled
our first load of compost off the back of the truck. My arms hurt so
much that I am actually dictating this to Siri - thank you Siri, I will
be sure not too mumble too much. My red-neck work-outs have begun. Just
to give you a small hint of how hard we have been working, we managed to
tire out our three month old puppy, Marley Sage. Who know I had more
energy than a puppy?
April is the time of year, if you haven't
done it already, to make a planning chart of your garden. The planning
chart is basically a map of where you plan to put things in the garden.
It's helpful to have a map so that you can couple things together that
benefit one another, like tomato and basil; as well as keep away
incompatibles such as beans and onions. Seeing it all on paper will
also help you to create a planting schedule telling you when you should
plant certain crops. This is particularly helpful if you plan on using
succession plantings throughout the season. Succession planting is
simply following one crop with another crop maximizing your overall
yield and elongating your season. I've been slowly making a plan in my
head about what I want to grow but now is the time to start sitting down
and writing out the plan. Once I've done ours I will be sure to post it
- it's still a work in progress at this point, which could be committed
to paper over the weekend since I have to start planning out my
clients' gardens as well. It's important to keep in mind crop rotation,
which is another good reason to write down a plan you can refer to the
next season because life gives you enough to remember.
This month
is also the time of year that you should be getting your raised beds
prepared for the new season by amending the nutrient depleted soil with a
variety of composts and fertilizer to put back the nutrients that your
vegetables will need to grow. Vegetables get their nutrients from the
soil - think feed the soil - that's how you feed the plant. Not by
spraying chemical fertilizers on it. Organic gardening revolves around
the concept of soil life and soil biology. Organic practices such as
crop rotation, use of cover crops, and companion planting are employed
to enhance soil life and biology. By using a plan, you ensure that you
are not at risk of building up soil-borne diseases or mismanage the soil
nutrients.
Despite the earlier snows this week, there is exciting
news in the garden as the soil temperatures have finally reached into
the mid 40s in the raised beds. I couldn't help but plant some peas on
the last day of March in the new 8' x 12' Maine Kitchen Garden
we put in this fall. April in New England can be unpredicable.
Temperatures can still be wintery cold - it was 42º but the dampness
from the night's rain made it feel closer to 35º. The soil temperatures
have maintained 40º and above status all week and that tells me its the
perfect time to start getting some cold crops into the ground. Cold
crops can tolerate colder temperatures and late frost. Germination can
happen for lettuce, arugula and peas
in
40º soil temperatures. If you are as excited about spring as I am, you
will want to start some peas. They prefer the cool weather anyway since
it tends to make them sweeter. I always look to around or after St.
Patrick's day as the time of year to start directly sowing them into the
ground. Try planting rows on two side of a trellis in a sunny location
that has fertile soil for double the yield in very little place. Peas
are a great addition to the garden - they put nitrogen back into the
soil and they are vertical growers not taking up a lot of garden space.
They are an early season vegetable, but you can seed again in the late
summer for an early fall harvest. Fall harvests fall short of the spring
harvest when the soil temperatures start off cooler. Peas get along
great in the garden with just about everybody but chives, late potatoes,
onions, gladiolus and grapes. Peas do particularly well with corn,
cucumbers, celery, eggplants, bush/pole beans, early potatoes, radishes,
spinach, strawberries, tomatoes and turnips. I always plant a wide
variety, this year so far it I put in some Half Pints, Sugar Pod2, Oregon Sugar Pod II, Sugar Snap.I will keep sowing seeds every few weeks to try to get a long harvest before the warm weather sets in.
When
you see daffodils and dandelions start to bloom, you should plant your
potatoes -soil temperatures are hovering around 45º at that point - a
good time to start potatoes. We prefer to grow our potatoes in smart
pots. It's easy to do, takes very little space and fun to harvest by
just dumping out the sacks. You can couple potatoes with marigolds in a
pot or if you choose to put them in the garden be sure to hill them and
couple with bush beans, celery, carrots, corn, cabbage,
horseradish,peas, petunias, onions, marigolds and french marigolds.
Just keep them away from asparagus, kohlrabi, rutabaga, fennel, turnips,
pumpkin, squash, tomatoes, sunflowers and cucumbers.
At 50º,
germination starts to happen for spinach, Swiss chard and carrots. A
whole bunch of delicious crops you can begin to grow in the the early
season that are easy to grow, delicious and beautiful in the garden!
Carrots are one of my favorite seeds to sow - be sure to keep the soil
moist until you see the first leaves appear. Before sowing be sure you
have cultivated the bed deeply and thoroughly to promote good root
growth. I found last year I did very well when I coupled my carrots with
french marigolds. Marigolds roots emit an enzyme that help fights
against root-eating nematodes. Bugs Bunny would have loved my carrots!
Carrots also go well with leaf lettuce, onions, peas, leeks, chives and
rosemary; be sure to keep it away from dill, parsnip and Queen Ann's
Lace.
Daikon radishes, radishes and beets are others also don't
mind the chilly temperatures spring has to offer. They are all easy to
grow and do so quite rapidly in cool weather. Beet seeds can be
directly sown once the soil is workable and for successive crops, simply
plant in two-week intervals and you will get a continuous harvest.
Remember all the parts of the radish are edible - so enjoy! Radishes
prefer the company of beets, bush/pole beans, carrots, cucumbers,
lettuce, parsnips, peas, spinach, nasturtiums and members of the squash
family. They should not be grown near hyssop, cabbage, cauliflower,
brussels sprouts or turnips however. Beets do well with lettuce,
cabbage, onions, kohlrabi, garlic and mint but not pole beans.
Lettuce
is another one that quickly thrives in the chilly spring air. There are
so many different varieties to choose from - look for ones that are
slow to bolt. Lettuce doesn't do well with cabbage or parsley - so be
sure to separate those in the garden. But pair it up with some beets,
broccoli, bush/pole beans, carrots, onions, strawberries, sunflowers,
radishes, cucumbers and dill and it should do very well. I also planted
two types of lettuce the other day, one called Frizzy-Headed Drunken Woman Lettuce,
the name alone is why I purchased the seeds. It's a butter-head variety
which forms a single savoyed 8 inch head with mint green leaves tinged
in mahogany red. Very slow to bolt. I also planted a red iceberg since I
love me an iceberg wedge salad with blue cheese. Mache also known as
lam's lettuce or corn salad is a mild tasting green that's an easy
spring-time grower to consider which can be harvested through early
winter or longer in milder climates. Arugula can also be sown in early
April. Sow ever 2 weeks and you'll enjoy a succession of harvests of
delicious greens through the fall.
Kale and onions are two more
that you can start in April. You can plant onion sets, not seeds which
should be started indoors. Shallot seeds and starts can be planted in
early spring. Onions work well with beets, carrots, leeks, kohlrabi,
brassicas, tomatoes, lettuce, strawberries, dill, chamomile and summer
savory. Just keep it away from your peas and asparagus.
Softneck
garlic can be planted in the spring and fall whereas hardneck garlic
should be planted in the fall for overwintering. Garlic will work with
most herbs in the garden and helps keep deer and aphids away from roses,
raspberries, apple and pear trees. In the garden it also does well with
celery, cucumbers, peas and lettuce. It's a great companion plant since
it helps in repelling codling moths, Japanese beetles, root maggots,
snails and carrot root-fly. I love garlic and we use it a lot when we
cook - so having a supply of fresh garlic around is important to us and
the flavors can't be beat when you row your own!
So with the cold, rainy days of April ahead - take solace knowing that the blooms of May are not far away. Happy gardening!