Monday, May 9, 2022

Garden club meeting warning

we will assemble in camden grange and community center (7 camden road, elk) at 7 p.m. this coming tuesday, the 10th of may.  i received many requests during the last two meetings, for a class on companion planting, but i have yet to discover someone who knows a lot about the topic.  i may have to arrange another speaker/topic for the evening, so please arrive with an open mind, LOL.
we'll have plenty of time to socialize, snack on delicious food (courtesy of our friendly co-members, hint, hint), answer garden-related questions, and Barbara Midtbo is bringing her prized tomatoe plants for delivery to the lucky ones who pre-ordered, and will have lots of other tomatoe plants for sale as well.
if you have some garden stuff (seeds, plants, catalogs, tools, etc.) you wish to place on the "freebie" table, please bring them along.

see you there, jim.
509-292-0326

Sunday, May 1, 2022

Weeding between the lines

By Jim McGinty

 

By golly, it’s time to plant some of those cool-weather compliant vegetable friends outside in the garden, finally!

Here at Rancho McGinty, the cabbage starts (Stonehead, Late Flat Dutch, and Emerald Cross varieties) just went into their raised beds, planted through weed fabric (‘cuz I don’t want to weed more than I gotta!), and covered with floating row cover (Ree-may brand, available from Northwest Seed and Pet, in Spokane) to protect the little guys from those spoiling late frosts.  We have pushed our luck here with plants protected by Ree-May and it’s competitor, Agribon, down to plus 26 degrees Fahrenheit – the plants seemed happy the day after.

The garlic, planted last September through (again) weed fabric, is up and about ten inches tall – dark green stalks, and they already have that appetizing fragrance.

Potatoes, onions, and leeks are the next to be transplanted – they can all stand a “little” bit of frost, though I will cover them all with floating row cover.

Based on our recent shopping experiences, long-time wife Pat and I agree that this will be a great year to start or continue/expand a food garden – prices on even the mundane veggies seem to increase every week.  Remember that having the ability to grow your own food is a lot like having the ability to print your own money, though without having the whole Secret Service organization tramp through your garden, LOL.

In the fruit tree orchard, now is a great time to prune out all those unnecessary “suckers”, or water sprouts, or (officially) epicormic sprouts – you will know them by their long, lanky, sky-high growth habit – they can be pruned out at any time.

Here at Rancho McGinty, we are still seeing overnight below freezing temperatures, so we (and I hope, YOU) are holding off on planting those heat-loving, whiney-baby plant starts like tomatoes, peppers, Styrofoam ® brand eggplants, cucumbers, and others.  The “old-timer” gardeners in the area recommend waiting until all the snow has melted off the North side of Mount Spokane, before planting anything remotely frost-intolerant – that said, if you want some ripe corn, green beans, or even ornamental (though still poisonous) squash, you will have to push your luck:  black plastic mulch, drip irrigation, floating row cover, and maybe a comfy overnight electric blanket on the raised bed.

GARDEN CALENDAR:

On the 10th of May, our local garden club will meet in Camden Grange and Community Center (7 Camden Road, Elk, WA 99009) for our last (we hope!) indoor meeting from 7-9 P.M.

We gardeners will be in high gear, garden season-wise, as it’s past time for planning – it’s time to plant, and weed, and water, and fun things like that. Cubicle workers know that a bad day in the garden is better than the best day in the office.

We plan our indoor meetings built around lots of socializing, trading of tips and tricks, learning (a class on companion planting is scheduled), and eating delicious snacks provided by our club members.

Our 14 June meeting is scheduled as an outdoor evening tour of a local garden, weather permitting, of course.

You can keep up on our garden club doings by checking out our webpage (www.elk-camdengardenkeepers.blogspot.com), or by looking for our Facebook page, “Elk-Camden Garden Keepers”.

On the 21st of May, I will be teaching a class on garden drip irrigation systems, from 1-3 P.M. in the aforementioned Camden Grange and Community Center.  We will talk about how to make your garden more productive, reduce your dependence on expensive water, and maybe help with that bad back after a day of moving garden hoses and sprinklers. 

That’s it for this month – please remember to plant a couple of pumpkin seeds out there for the October Elk Park Committee’s Halloween party – free pumpkins for all the local kidlings.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

April garden club meeting notes


We had a great (!) meeting on 12 April 2022, with more than 42 folks (I tried counting heads twice, and, each time some more folks came in the door, so I gave up that thought!) in attendance.

Club member Carol Wood presented an excellent two-fer class on both improving garden soil AND on using drip irrigation tape.  

We also ate a LOT of really delicious snacks (and BROWNIES!), and we all spent time just talking, and a bunch of us took home garlic bulbs, seed potatoes, seed packets, tomatoe starts, and gardening magazines from the freebie table.  I tell everyone to bring their trucks to the garden club meetin’s, ‘cuz we have stuff to take home!

 

GARDEN CALENDAR:

On 23 April, I will teach a class on home garden composting at Camden Grange and Community Center (7 Camden Road, Elk, WAfrom 1-3 P.M.  We will talk about the why, when, and how of easy (?) composting.  The class costs $5 per person, and you can register for the class at the grange website:  camdengrange.org

On 28 April, local garden guru Dawn Trammell will present a class on gardening in our short season region of the world.  If you have dreams of ripe, fresh food in our seventy day growing season, Dawn’s class is a must:  5 P.M.at the Priest River Library (118 Main St., Priest River), and it’s free.

On 22 May, the aforementioned Dawn also will take us on a wild edibles (I call them “weeds”) walk in Scotia Valley, 2-4 P.M.  If you want to know how to safely identify and harvest our local wild edibles and medicinals, Dawn is the go-to person for more education and fun.

I’ll post more information on this free class when Dawn firms up the details.


Be sure to check out our blogsite, www.elk-camdengardenkeepers.blogspot.com, and/or our Facebook page for pictures (courtesy of club videographer Geoff Carson) of the meeting  - and all that excellent food.

 

That’s it for now – hope to see you at the next garden club meeting on 10 May 2022.

 

Jim.