Monday, June 12, 2023
Garden club June tour!
Friday, June 9, 2023
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Wednesday, May 31, 2023
Weeding between the lines
Our 2023 Spring gardening season is a little, ummm, confused; let’s use that word. This morning, we here at Rancho McGinty watched in wonder: thunder and lightning, hail, heavy rain, and thirty mile per hour winds, followed by afternoon sunshine, blue skies, fluffy white clouds, and 83 degrees Fahrenheit. Followed by a nighttime thunder and lightning display. Awesome, no doubt, but disconcerting when it comes to deciding whether (no pun intended) it’s safe to plant the tomatoe and pepper starts (for what it’s worth, we did).
If we want ripe, ready to harvest veggies this year, we’ll need to take a few chances, hence my gardening motto: “Plant early, plant often”. Meaning take a chance on a late frost and plant now, but be prepared to re-place that row of just-emerging baby greens. If all things work out, you will have a bumper crop of green beans, and if things go sour, you will at least have some/enough green beans.
Out in the garden, it’s safe to plant seeds or starts for these cold-hardy veggies: beets, carrots, chard, kohlrabi, cabbage, lettuce, mustard, collards, turnips, radish, spinach, onion sets, and peas.
Hopefully, you have already planted your seed potatoes, and if you use the hill and furrow method, keep hilling up those plants, to harvest even more spuds.
Remember that floating row cover (brand names include “Ree-May”, and “Agribon”) is your friend: heavy weight row cover will protect even frost-sensitive plants like tomatoes down to +26 degrees F., and during the Spring/Summer, row cover will help keep the beetles and borers from ruining your harvest. Just remember to lift the row cover in the early morning so those precious pollinators can have their way with your flowers – you can re-cover the plants mid-day before the heat arrives.
Out in the orchard, it’s time to look at all those tree branches with baby apples, pears, plums, and cherry clusters on them, and decide to thin the fruit to six inches apart or so – I know it’s hard to pick off the little darlings you have waited for since January, but you will have better, sweeter, larger fruit as a result.
GARDEN CALENDAR:
On the 8th of June, those healthy herbaceous plant husbanders, the Master Gardeners of Pend Oreille County will present a class on their favorite regional fruit trees: learn how to select, care for, and maximize production in your own personal orchard. Class costs $5, and runs from 1 – 2:30 P.M., at the Extension Office located at 227 South Garden Avenue, Newport. You can register for the class by calling the office at 509-447-2401.
On the 13th of June, our local garden club will start the 2023 garden touring season with a visit to an excellent local garden: new and old planting techniques, alternative seed starting methods, companion planting hints, and much more to be learned. We will promptly leave Camden Grange and Community Center (located at 7 Camden Road, Elk, WA) at 7 P.M., so please appropriately dress for a variety of weather conditions, LOL. Oh, and mosquitos.
You can obtain additional information on what is happening with our club by checking out our blog: www.elk-camdengardenkeepers.blogspot.com, or by looking at our Facebook page: “Elk-Camden Garden Keepers”.
That’s it for this month – don’t let those knee high weeds trip you, and pull you down – they’re hungry!
Friday, May 12, 2023
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Friday, April 28, 2023
Weeding between the lines
Here at Rancho McGinty, the Winter snow and ice berms are finally gone – leaving a LOT of mud, and some reminders of my forgotten/abandoned 2022 home and garden projects, sticking out of that mud, LOL.
In the actual garden, the garlic, rhubarb, asparagus, comfrey, strawberries, blackberries, and day lilies are growing like they know Summer is on the way – in fact, all of those plants will survive one of our “hey, wait a minute – it’s June!” last frost episodes. In our weather-challenging neighborhood, it’s good to grow perennial things that can handle the unexpected (and unexplained) frosts.
I see leaf buds on our choke cherry trees, and on the lilac bushes, but the fruit trees in the orchard are hanging tough, and not spending a lot of precious energy on fragile, easily-damaged growth. Usually, the lime-green “feathers” on the local tamarack trees signal that it’s time for the apple and pear trees to get busy.
Out in the berry garden, now (!) is the time to fertilize your grapes, raspberries, and blueberries before the leaves bud out, and if you intend to plant new berry varieties, now is the time for that as well. If you forgot or did not prune out last year’s fruiting raspberry canes, now is the best time to take care of that chore. Be sure to burn or dispose of the spent/brown canes, as cane borers love to overwinter in them, only to return in the Spring, and eat their way down to your precious plant crowns.
In the garden, is it safe to plant those expensive tomatoe and pepper starts? No. Is it safe to plant those expensive cool weather starts (onions, broccoli, cauliflower, cabbage, etc.)? Probably, toward the end of May, or maybe in early June.
In the garden, now is the time to spread and dig in the manure, leaves (you did remember to collect and bag fallen leaves last Autumn, right?), and any soil amendments (compost, wood stove ashes, etc.).
In the orchard, it will be time soon to apply dormant oil to smother all those nasty critters and their eggs that overwintered in/on your trees – apply the spray after the last overnight frost, and before the buds break out into the warm Spring air.
GARDENING CALENDAR:
09 May – our local gardening club will meet in Camden Grange and Community Center (located at 7 Camden Road, Elk, WA) at 7 P.M. for our monthly soiree: lots of socializing, gardening advice (good and bad!), a short class on growing perennial veggies in our part of the world, and snacks. We are regionally-known for being a fun and informative group of both experienced and beginning gardeners, so please join us!
10 May – I’ll be teaching a class on growing food (veggies in particular) in our area of the world, from 7-9 P.M., in the aforementioned Camden Grange and Community Center. If you experienced the shock of an “early” killer frost, and want to know how to keep those plants alive all the way to harvest, you will want to attend this class. Cost is $5 per person, and there is a cool handout. You can register for this class at the Grange website (Camdengrange.org).
11 May – the Pend Oreille County Master Gardeners (the folks who actually know what they are doing in the garden, LOL!) will teach a class on No-till Gardening in their demonstration garden in Newport. If you want to garden without the aid of engine-powered machines, then this class is for you. Class runs from 6:30 P.M. to 8:00 P.M., and you can obtain more information, and also register for the class by calling the W.S.U. Extension office at 509-447-2401.
21 May – local gardening expert Dawn Trammell and her friends will conduct an all-day (10 A.M. to 5 P.M.) workshop on an amazing series of topics: edible wild plant identification, hoophouse construction, preparing and using medicinal plants, and more. The workshop is free to the public, and will be located at 6561 Spring Valley Road, Newport, WA. You can call for more information at 509-860-4792.
24 May – local gardener Jane Bolz will present a class on garden raised beds, from 7-9 P.M., in that same Camden Grange and Community Center. You will learn how to plan, build, use, and improve raised beds for your garden – save some money, save your back, and grow great food. Cost is $10 per person, and there is an extensive series of informative handouts. You can register for this class at the Grange website (Camdengrange.org).
You can follow the happenings at our local gardening club here on our blog, or by looking at our Facebook page: Elk-Camden Garden Keepers. Great stuff, and lots of information on growing food in our neighborhood.
That’s it for this month – be careful out there – the weeds are lurking, and hungry.
Special gardening presentation at Camden Grange
GROWING FOOD IN VERY COLD COUNTRY
Camden Grange and Community Center President Marylee Rozelle invites you to a special presentation on Monday evening, 01 May 2023, at 6:00 P.M. Local farmer James Cummins will share information about a company that he is involved with, that outfits shipping containers for vertical harvest hydroponics production. The company ships them to Alaska for growing fresh greens all year round in remote areas! There will also be a Zoom connection with a partner in Anchorage, and time for questions and answers. Should be a very informative and eye-opening evening, especially for our local gardeners.
You are welcome to arrive early for soup and neighborly conversation, and if you like, please stay for the following grange meeting – no pressure, but the meetings are always fun.
All this occurs at Camden Grange and Community Center, located at 7 Camden Road, Elk, WA - hope to see you there!
jim.