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small space gardens

Rooftop Gardening

Wednesday, June 13th, 2007

Good morning!

An environmental group called New York Sunworks has a barge moored on the Hudson River. On it they are growing lettuce,tomatoes, and cucumbers using energy from solar panels and wind turbines and collecting rain in barrels for watering. What’s more, they say if similar gardens were installed on the city’s 5,665 hectares of rooftops, it could feed as many as 20 million people! You can read the full article here

Gardening Pic of the Day:

624962_greengrocers_show.jpg

rooftop gardening,rainwater,gardening,gardens,urban gardening

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City Gardeners

Monday, May 14th, 2007

Good Morning!

I bet a lot of you are like me-a person with a passion for gardening who lives in the concrete jungle known as the city. Well, don’t despair! Even apartment dwellers can take part in the joys of gardening. It doesn’t take much space-all you need is a balcony or a sunny window. These days, the selection of plants suitable for containers and small spaces keeps growing. You can grow houseplants, flowers, herbs, and yes even vegetables! Is that balcony or windowsill just not enough? Want more? Get involved with your local community garden! There are thousands throughout the country, and they provide not only your very own garden plot, but a chance to meet and make friends with other urban gardeners and even the opportunity to give back to your community. Many community gardens donate a portion of their crops to local food pantries and soup kitchens. So don’t let living in the city discourage you from enjoying your green thumb!

Have any questions about gardening? Send them to me at susan.macneil@451press.net and I’ll answer them in a future post!

Gardening Pic of the Day:
tomato.jpg

gardening, urban gardening, city gardeners,community gardens,apartment gardens

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Urban Gardening

Thursday, May 10th, 2007

Good Morning!
I ran across a really interesting article in Scientific American about Urban Gardening. It seems that in Singapore, where the majority of the population live in government built high rises, “apartment gardens” are all the rage. Since owning a house is not something that is an option for most people there, apartment gardens are their way of having a little slice of paradise. Apartment gardens have become so popular and have so many benefits that the government has begun encouraging them! You can read more about Singapore’s apartment gardens here.

Gardening Pic of the Day:
12_04_9_web1ba.jpg

gardening, gardens, apartment gardens, singapore

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Need help with your garden?

Tuesday, April 10th, 2007

Mornin’ earthly gardeners,

Scanning the news items online, I ran across this cool story about a company in Seattle, WA that helps people put in small urban gardens. There are many such companies around the country that will come to your house, talk to you about what you want and help you get a small garden started.

Here’s a link to the story in the Seattle Post-Intelligencer.

I love the fact that they are putting some of these gardens in the FRONT yard! It’s time to reclaim all those boring, water-guzzling lawns and turn them into flowers and veggies! Nobody really needs a lawn; we don’t have a lawn, and we do just fine!

Spring is just around the corner!

dig it!

bobbi c.

Copyright ©2007 bobbi a. chukran. all rights to photos and text reserved.

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Raised bed gardens–easy, fast and inexpensive

Wednesday, April 4th, 2007

Mornin’ Earthly Gardeners!

As promised, today I wanted to give you a few ideas for some small raised bed gardens you can make in your own backyard, front yard or small piece of land. One uses common cement blocks you can find at stores like Lowe’s or Home Depot or a masonry supplier. They usually cost less than $1.25 each, last time I checked. The blocks are around 12″ each, so it’s easy to decide how many to buy.

Here’s a photo of my largest cement block garden.

cementblockgardenbed1.jpg

And here’s another view, at the corner.

cementblockgardenbed2.jpg

To make the bed, all I did was find a relatively flat spot in our front yard, stacked the cement blocks end to end until the bed was as long as I wanted it, filled it with a mixture of homemade compost, store bought compost, topsoil and bagged dirt and sand. I mixed it with a hoe, and raked the top smooth. Then I planted! It really was as easy as that. We didn’t have a lawn there, so it was a bit easier. But if you do have lawn, cut it as low as possible, try to dig out the grass, cover the grass with a thick layer of newspapers, then put down the cement blocks and fill with soil.

I told you it was easy! I eventually painted my bed to match the garage that you can see in the background of the corner photo. I used a very watered-down latex paint, leftover from painting the house. It’s been painted for years now, and still looks as good as in the beginning.

One thing I learned is that most smaller plants and vegetables don’t have to be planted in two feet of soil. Over the years, the organic matter has changed the consistency of the soil in these beds, and it’s deeper. But the height of the blocks is sufficient for most things you’d want to grow. I actually have a small fig tree at the end of the bed, and it’s doing fine.

Also, we have a series of cedar board beds, at the other end of the front garden. Here’s a photo of those:

cedargardenbed1.jpg

These were a bit more difficult to make, but basically I used 2″ x 12″ untreated cedar boards and screwed them together using butt joints at the corners. It wasn’t hard, but was unwieldy since I didn’t have a workshop set up at the time. I basically assembled them in the garden. Each of those are about 4-feet square and I grow all sorts of things in them: rosemary (seen at the left), lavender and native salvias (at the right in the front), garlic, potatoes, and even a few small crepe myrtle trees for shade in the middle of several of them. Since potatoes require deeper soil, I made a little division in the middle bed at the right side for them using two scraps of pine boards. As the plants grow, I’ll put in more soil in that area.

Neither of these beds take up much room. The cedar beds are in an area that’s smaller than a normal sized backyard. They could also be painted or “colorwashed” to match a fence, or whatever. I just wouldn’t paint on the inside of the boards.

And speaking of small container gardens, here’s a photo of my tomatoes I planted some time back in my new EarthBox. I spied a baby tomato on one of them yesterday! How exciting!

earthbox.jpg

The weather guys are calling for colder temps this weekend. It wouldn’t be the first time we’ve had a “late” freeze this time of year. It’s already down in the 60’s (it was 86 yesterday!) so I’m keeping a close eye on the plants! That’s the beauty of the EarthBox, you can wheel it inside the garage, or to a sheltered location, if the weather threatens.

dig it!

bobbi c.
copyright©2007 bobbi a. chukran. All rights to text and photos reserved.

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A 7-acre, small space garden?

Thursday, March 15th, 2007

Mornin’ earthly gardeners!

Some person yesterday commented to me that anybody could be a good gardener if they had seven acres to play on. LOL. Well, that’s not the case here. Yes, we have seven acres, but it’s almost solid rock and rubble covered by scrub and thousands of junipers. I got around that by enclosing a small area in the front of my house where the garage and house make an “L” shape and fencing it in. We have horrible deer problems out here, and lots of resident wild critters, so we had to make the fence at least 7-feet high.

garden-view.jpg

As for the garden itself, raised beds to the rescue! I built a series of small raised beds, some perimeter beds and two larger ones. The small ones are built from untreated 2×12″ cedar boards that have lasted for over ten years so far. The larger beds are simple, inexpensive concrete blocks laid on the ground in a rectangle. The perimeter beds are simply rocks that I gathered from the property and stacked around the edge of the fence. I filled all the planting areas with a mixture of top soil, compost that I either made or purchased, a few loads of good garden dirt from Gardenville in Austin, and whatever else I could scrape up to include. We have almost no topsoil here, either. Did I mention that?

I thought you might enjoy this photo of one end of the garden, the one closest to my office. To the left, you can see one of the rock beds, at the far back you can see the deer fence where I’m growing a grapevine. To the right you can see a few of the raised cedar beds.

That whole area is around the size of a small suburban backyard, and most of the veggies I grow fit in that space. So you see, you don’t need lots and lots of acreage to have a garden. I actually prefer gardening in small spaces. It gives me a sense of an enclosure, a garden wall, secluded and safe. AND it’s more manageable. So far, the fence has kept the deer out. The squirrels are another matter!

Spring IS coming, I promise!

dig it!

bobbi c.
Copyright ©2007 by Bobbi A. Chukran

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