Thursday, May 8, 2014

Spring Nature Study: Getting Ready for Gardening

Our nature study has seemed a little unfocused so far this term. My plan was to switch our focus from birds to garden plants. However, starting sometime at the beginning of April, new birds began to come to our feeder. First the song sparrows, then the red-winged blackbirds came. Robins appeared. Starlings decreased, and common grackles increased. Yesterday and today the chipping sparrows have been visiting the feeder. I think that we will always be interested in birds now that we have focused on them for a season. I wonder if every focus we choose will be like that?

Winter hung on for a very long time this year. About 6 centimeters of snow fell on Monday, though it did not accumulate on the ground. The grass is finally getting green, but I noticed there is still snow on the ground in the woods. I always find that the switch from winter to summer is very late and quick on P.E.I., and I have to make the most of the brief spring to get things done in the garden.


Here are my tomato plants. My brother-in-law started too many, and passed some on to me. I repotted them in larger pots this week because it will still be three weeks before they can be planted outdoors. I have been putting them outdoors in a sheltered area for a few hours every nice day to begin to harden them off. The temperatures (since our snowy Monday) have been around twelve degrees Celcius.


My project this week has been to make a new lasagna bed. It's called lasagna because of the layers of compost used to make it. Some people call it sheet composting. It will be ready to plant in next year. I used layers of old straw, leaves and twigs from the yard, and kitchen compost that has been accumulating in my green bin since last year. The boys really enjoyed this project, especially pushing the wheelbarrow and helping me stack bricks to frame the bed. (I'm not terribly happy with what I've done...the bricks keep falling down! I'll either have to cement them together, or think of something else.)


I have two "square foot garden" boxes from previous years. The far one in the corner is filled with "Mel's Mix," soil made up of 1/3 compost, 1/3 peat moss, 1/3 vermiculite. After doing that several years ago, I decided that mixing my own soil was a ridiculous expense when regular soil and compost are virtually free. The near box is filled with compost made with the "lasagna" method I mentioned above. (I have found that the box filled with homemade compost tends to have better produce, but since I've never planted the same crops in each, I can't be certain.) Both have been planted with kale, spinach, onions, peas, and lettuce, which are all cold-weather crops. I'm not sure I didn't start a little too early with them, with snow falling this week. If they don't work out, I can always replant. The boys love helping me plant. They also run around finding worms, ants, sowbugs, and other interesting creatures. 

The cardboard between the beds is there to discourage weeds. I would like to put something --wood chips? stones? --on top of the cardboard so the walkways look nicer, but we'll see if I can get something like that for free. On the positive side, the cardboard is great to kneel on as I'm working.

What about you? What stage is your garden at in your part of the world? How do you share gardening with your children?




Comments (14)

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Here in Calgary we also had snow earlier in the week. Yesterday was 16 degrees and sunny, so I took the opportunity to plant raspberry canes, onion sets, sweet peas (seeds) and carrot, spinach and beet seeds. I also planted some annuals in containers, but am going to keep them inside at night until June 1st or so. I am a novice gardener, so I did lots of research and planning this spring (particularly on gardening in Calgary) and am hopeful that it pays off! As for getting kids involved, my 13 month old sat on a blanket and played with dirty containers and plant labels while I worked. :)
2 replies · active 568 weeks ago
I'm just a tiny bit jealous of your 16 degrees. PEI, being an Island, always stays a few degrees cooler, even than neighbouring NB, in the spring. I need to get myself some beet seeds. I planted a candy-striped variety last year, and they were amazing. There's a difference in taste as well as looks. They're sweeter, and less earthy.
Your baby will be turning over rocks for bugs soon enough...
Don't be jealous! Our average last frost is May 23 with the first fall frost September 15, so it's a pretty short growing season. :) Those beets sound good. I planted some old seeds I was given, so if they don't germinate I'll try something else.
We're getting a load of compost this weekend and starting some new beds next week. We were planting in the ground, but we were having terrible rodent problems and the plants weren't thriving. It was extremely discouraging for everyone! But we all are excited about starting some raised beds, and we're hoping this year will be a better experience. I have the Square Foot Gardening book, and I can't bring myself to spend that much getting beds started. That vermiculite is amazingly expensive! I'm going to mix compost and coconut coir, and hope for the best. From what I see online, it looks like it should work just fine. My kids are all very excited about it.

I hope your garden thrives!
1 reply · active 567 weeks ago
I love Square Foot Gardening, but I agree, the soil mix is much too expensive! Have you read "Lasagna Gardening"? I've been trying to do a new "Lasagna bed" each year for the next year's planting, and it has worked out well. It works fine with the square foot gardening method as well (just add a grid before planting!).
I have a square foot garden too. My hubby made me an awesome 3 tiered garden box. :D I tried mel's mix the first year, but just use reg. compost and dirt now. I haven't started my garden this year yet. I'll probably just buy seedlings from the garden store.
1 reply · active 567 weeks ago
I didn't start any of my own seeds this year either...the tomatoes were given to me. I did get the boys to plant a bean or two in a pot, though, for the fun of it. I'd love to see your 3-tiered garden box! You should do a post about it when you plant it. :)
Here, you can get free wood chip mulch at the dump/recycling depot. You might try them?
1 reply · active 567 weeks ago
Hmmm...I suspect that here it would all go into the composting facility and be turned into compost with everything else.
Wow, you're ambitious with your gardening projects and I can't believe it about the snow! We have summer-like humidity here in Ottawa today. Seems like we have very few spring days. On the positive side, it means a spring coat will last for a long time due to lack of use. :-)
1 reply · active 567 weeks ago
Ambitious...well...
The truth is, I'd do anything to avoid a lot of digging in the spring, and both square foot gardening and lasagna gardening don't require much of that at all! :)
I am officially jealous. We can't plant anything as yet because it is too cold. By the time it gets warm I am pretty sure it's going to snow again. Never heard if square foot gardening so I am going to check that out.
1 reply · active 567 weeks ago
Where are you, Alecia? It did snow here a couple times after I planted the peas and spinach, but they're coming up anyway. Some things don't mind a little bit of cold (though they do need some warmth to germinate!).
awesome garden ! we need to start ours as well ... we are currently studying robins as we have a nest right by our window and the mommy just had her eggs in the last 24 hours :) so exciting .. there is a sense of excitement that comes with spring :)

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