The gardens are a slow work in progress for us here at the new house. We have now put in 2 flat beds for our squash, zucchini, watermelon and cantaloupe.
The existing 2 raised beds have both been weeded and planting has been done in both, although neither bed is full. We are trying out the square foot gardening method for the raised beds. We are also trying to follow some companion planting. I put up a small trellis for the eggplants and we have the large trellis for the tomatoes (trellis netting yet to be installed for tomatoes). So far our carrots are up and I have thinned them out to 16 per square foot. Our onions (4/spft) are also starting to come up but not ready to be thinned out yet. I also have some more lettuce shooting up (4/sqft) and the 2 large plants are ready for us to begin the continual harvest.
Our raised beds are old and the wood edging in riddled with ants and we will likely have to reinforce the beds or simply build a new outer edge and allow the current wood to rot. Because of all the ants I decided to whip up some ant be gone! Our companion book says to mix up some water with garlic and white pepper; ants hate garlic and white pepper kills them. I didn't measure out the ratios but simply added 3 crushed garlic cloves to 3 cups water and sprinkled in some white pepper. I left it to brew on the counter for a few days and then strained it into a spray bottle and began spraying! It has definitely helped with the ants. It has not eliminated them but has definitely helped us control their population. This garlic pepper brew is also good to spray right on your plants (not flowers-bees won't come to pollinate) to keep flies, butterflies and moths away. I spray it every few days and after rainfall on the plants and around the beds.
I have also used Diatomaceous Earth around the beds and on the leafy plants. this kills the bugs by dehydration... but this will also kill helpful bugs so avoid flowers and use with caution. I only use it where I see significant leaf damage. I certainly don't want to kill the spiders and bees that are in and around the gardens.
We have put all but one of our berry bushes in the ground and Aaron even built me a strawberry planter from an idea I found from this pin on pinterest using some pallet wood. We have bird netting for the berries but have yet to install it.
After planting our raspberry bushes we also discovered this on the side of our backyard fence:
I guess we could have simply taken some clippings from this old bush and transplanted them!
It has been so very much work but in the end we will receive a great payoff. Soon enough we will be eating fresh, home grown, pesticide free fruits and vegetables. Sounds like a bargain to me!
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