Thursday, March 27, 2008

2008 vegetable garden line-up!

Now that the regular season for Major League Baseball has officially begun, I guess it is time to introduce The 2008 GardenDesk Growers Baseball team!

Okay, I know a garden is not a baseball team, but just like in spring training, I have spent a lot of time figuring out which vegetable varieties will make the cut this year. In addition to which particular varieties I will plant, I had to decide which vegetables needed to be cut (I just don't have enough room on the field!). Last year my total area for the veg garden was 25'x40', all in raised beds. This year I am expanding it to 40'x48'but the outside 15' will be planted in old fashioned rows. I have painstakenly tried to fit everything in using graph paper but I still don't have enough space.

Sorry, I know you can't read the names listed on the graph paper. Just like last year, I have divided up the list into the following categories: Tomatoes, Cool Season, Main Season, Herbs, Decorations and Fruit. First I need to mention the veggies that I would like to grow but didn't make the cut.

This year's honorable mentions are: sweet potatoes, okra, leeks, beets and field pumpkins.

Now, the 2008 starting lineup

Introducing the GardenDesk Heirloom Tomatoes:

  • Aunt Ruby's German Green
  • Black Cherry
  • Black Krim
  • Brandywine
  • Brandywine (Glick's strain)
  • Caspian Pink
  • Delicious
  • Dixie Golden Giant
  • Egg Yolk
  • Furry Yellow Hog
  • Great White
  • Green Moldovan
  • Green Zebra
  • Kellogg's Breakfast
  • Kentucky Beefsteak
  • Pink Flamingo Ukranian
  • Principe Borghese
  • Prudens Purple
  • White Tomesol
  • The GardenDesk Hybrid Tomatoes:

  • 4th of July
  • Burpee's Supersteak
  • Celebrity
  • Early Girl
  • Golden Girl
  • La Rossa
  • Lemon Boy
  • New Girl
  • Orange Blossom
  • Park's Whopper
  • Roma
  • Siletz
  • Sub Artic
  • Introducing the GardenDesk Cool Season Players (many are already on the field!):

  • Potato Onions
  • Garlic
  • Peas
  • Broccoli-Green Goliath
  • Purple Cauliflower-Violet Queen
  • Radish-Cherry Belle, Easter Egg
  • Carrot-Short-n-Sweet, , Easter Egg
  • Swiss Chard-Five Color Silverbeet
  • Spinich-Space Hybrid, Melody Hybrid, Bloomsdale Long Standing
  • Head Lettuce-Summertime, Tom Thumb
  • Leaf Lettuce- Simpson Elite, Buttercrunch, Prizeleaf, Royal Oak Leaf, Lollo Rossa, Salad Bowl, Red Salad Bowl, Black Seeded Simpson, Mesclun Sweet Salad Mix, Pinetree Lettuce Mix
  • Oriental Greens-Komatsuma Tendergreen
  • Cabbage
  • And now for your Main Season GardenDeskers:

  • Corn-Mirai 301BC
  • Bush Green Beans-Tender Pick, Blue Lake Bush 274
  • Pole Beans-Kentucky Wonder
  • Cucumber-Park's Whopper, Straight 8, Burpee Bush
  • Squash-Vegetable Spaghetti
  • Zucchini-Ambassador, Longo Bianco
  • Onion-Red, White, Yellow Spanish
  • Potato-Kennebec, Russet Burbank
  • Bell Pepper-Park's Colossal Hybrid
  • Give it up for the GardenDesk Herbs:

  • Basil
  • Purple Basil
  • Oregeno
  • Chives
  • Thyme
  • Mint
  • Nasturtium
  • Horseradish
  • Next up, the GardenDesk Decoration Dudes:

  • Pumpkin-Jack Be Little
  • Gourds-Bird House Mix, Penguin, Assorted Gourd Mix
  • Sunflowers
  • And last but not least, the fruit selections:

  • Watermelon-Sugar Baby
  • Cantalope-Ambrosia
  • Strawberries-Cavendish and others
  • Blueberries-Jersey and others
  • Grapes (new)
  • Apples-Red Delicious, Golden Delicioius
  • Peaches

  • There will also be many annual flowers planted in the vegetable garden. This is my daughter's area and she has not given me her line-up card yet. I know there will be plenty of marigolds, cosmos, zinnias and morning glories.

    And there you have it ... The comprehensive list of players for GardenDesk 2008! Several players are already on the field. Many players have begun warming up inside under grow lights. More will soon join them. Stay tuned for more updates on the pending season and players! Will they all actually get in the game? Will they hit a homerun, or will some strike out? Many questions will soon be answered.

    What does your 2008 "player list" consist of? What vegetables will you be growing that I have left off my list? Are you as anxious to get started as I am?

    Dum dum da dum da dum .... CHARGE!

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    Monday, February 18, 2008

    Heirloom Tomatoes for 2008

    For years I grew only hybrid tomatoes. Then, a few years ago, I added the Amish Heirloom Tomato Brandywine. Wow, what exceptional flavor! I was hooked. Last year I expanded my heirloom tomato trials and now I have two new heirloom tomato favorites, Black Krim and Aunt Ruby's German Green (pictured below).

    Not only had I discovered two new great tasting tomato varieties, I also found out that there can be great tomatoes in colors other than red!

    I also tried other new heirlooms of different colors last year; Dixie Golden Giant (yellow), Prudens Purple, Kellogg's Breakfast (orange), Caspian Pink and Kentucky Beefsteak (orange). These varieties didn't do as well and I really only got to sample them. They at least earned a second chance for this year's season. Only the Brandywine, Black Krim and Aunt Ruby's German Green were successful. We did have a terrible drought last summer and as I documented in my post "Pros and Cons of Heirloom Tomatoes", heirlooms can be tricky to succeed with.

    Below are the seed company pictures of these heirloom varieties.

    The only heirloom that I tried last year that will not be invited back is Homely Homer. It was a fun novelty marketing tomato, but lacked in performance and flavor. I have to cut somewhere, don’t I?


    So now for this year, 2008!

    I absolutely loved last year's alternative colors with the ripe green and black tomatoes. This year I want to expand the tomato color pallet. Something new and cool that I discovered from Baker Creek Heirloom Seeds is white tomatoes! I don't know about you, but I have never eaten or even seen a white tomato. I have to grow some in 2008. I selected the cultivars Great White and White Tomesol. Look how white the White Tomesol is!

    I really enjoyed Aunt Ruby's German Green last year so I also wanted to add more varieties that stay green when ripe. New for me this year will be Green Zebra and Green Moldovan. Green Moldovan looks neon even!


    Another area that I want to expand is the heirloom Cherry Tomatoes. Last year I grew hybrids Sun Sugar and Gardener's Delight but no heirlooms. This year I will turn to Aunt Ruby again for Aunt Ruby's German Cherry. And since Black Krim was a hit, I will add a black cherry variety simply called Black Cherry.

    Another odd variety that caught my eye was Egg Yolk. I don't know if it can be called a cherry tomato but it is a tomato the exact size and color of an egg yolk?! The other heirloom pictured above is Principe Borghese which I have grown before. Principe Borghese is considered the leading variety to use for sun drying.

    So to recap, my complete 2008 Tomato Heirloom Team is:

    Red:

    • Brandywine
    • Principe Borghese
    • Pink:

      • Caspian Pink
      • Purple/Black:

        • Prudens Purple
        • Black Krim
        • Black Cherry
        • Yellow:

          • Dixie Golden Giant
          • Egg Yolk
          • Green:

            • Green Zebra
            • Green Moldovan
            • Aunt Ruby's German Green
            • Aunt Ruby's German Cherry
            • Orange:

              • Kellogg's Breakfast
              • Kentucky Beefsteak
              • White:

                • Great White
                • White Tomesol

    Wow! That is quite a list isn't it? A rainbow of delicious and interesting heirloom tomato excellence!

    I'll keep you posted on how they all do throughout the 2008 season. I am really excited!

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    Thursday, February 14, 2008

    Valentine's Day reminds me of.... Tomatoes!

    What's red that you think of on Valentines Day? - Hearts? Roses? Not Me! Valentine's Day makes me think of Tomatoes!

    Early Tomatoes to be exact.

    Around here, folks use holidays as reminders of when to do things in the yard and garden. They say to set out peas and potatoes on St. Patrick's Day, set out tomatoes and peppers on Mother's Day, open your pool on Memorial Day and close that pool on Labor Day. Call me strange, but I add "start tomato seeds on Valentine's Day" to that list.

    Last year, I started extra-early tomatoes with the goal of getting ripe ones by my birthday on June 24th. I actually picked the first ripe red tomato on June 15th!

    This year I'm putting more work into it and setting the goal at May 31st. If I'm really lucky, I could have a ripe tomato by Memorial Day!

    How do I plan to achieve this here in Northern Zone 5 where most ripe tomatoes are harvested in Late July and early August? Much like I did last year by planting early under grow lights and potting up multiple times until I transplant the monster-huge tomato plants outdoors in April. What I will add to the strategy this year involves the outdoor planting site. I will put down black plastic to warm the soil, and I will wrap the new plants with plastic cages and possibly construct a temporary hoop house over the early plants.
    I will let you know all the details in these pages as we go along.

    Last year, my extra-early tomato plats were the Early Girl variety. They did well but this year I will be planting 4 other extra early varieties to give Early Girl a run for the money!

    The GardenDesk newcomers are: Hybrids New Girl and Orange Blossom from Johnny's Selected Seeds and Heirlooms Siletz and Sub-Artic "World's Earliest" from Baker Creek. Both of these companies are amongst my favorites. More details to come!

    Getting back to Valentine's Day - before I get any angry email accusing me of not being a romantic, I want to state that I DID give my wife and daughters the real red of Valentine's Day - Roses.

    Now they will lovingly let me start tomatoes tonight! Yum!

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    Sunday, February 3, 2008

    Green Thumb Super Bowl Sunday!

    Okay, I haven't actually been using my green thumb much lately but the NFL Super Bowl marks the beginning of the gardening season for me. I know that sounds strange but I usually spend much of Super Bowl Sunday planning the upcoming growing season. After church I will likely get out my seeds, my seed catalogs and my graph paper and get to work. By the time kickoff happens, I will have most of my 2008 garden planned out.

    You may think I'm crazy, but organizing a garden is a lot like an NFL football team. To get into the spirit, here's my garden/football team's helmet:

    I'll call my team the "GardenDesk Growers"!

    Tomorrow marks the beginning of the off-season for the NFL. The off-season for a team is spent figuring out which players and coaches are good enough to remain and which ones need to be cut. They look to add new players to better next year's team. They also look back at the season that has just ended to figure out what worked well and what didn't. All teams but one did not achieve their goal of winning the Super Bowl. They try to learn from last season's disappointments so they can do better this season!

    These are the things I have been doing in the past couple of months because my garden's off-season actually took place in December and January . I have been pouring over seed catalogs looking for new star players to draft and have decided to cut some of my under-achieving vegetable varieties. I am redesigning part of my game plan and am even planning to increase this year's playing field! I have carefully looked over the 2007 "touchdowns" as well as the "fumbles". I will be reporting more about that in the near future.

    So the Super Bowl marks the beginning of The "GardenDesk Growers" 2008 pre-season! Many players will soon report to my basement to begin their season under the grow lights! Today I will be mapping out the 2008 garden and figuring out what plants will occupy what spot on the field. Of course I will also be dreaming of winning the Super Bowl of gardening in which every vegetable grows to perfection and every flower is beautiful!

    If you are a gardener, chances are that you are also dreaming of a winning 2008 garden. So I know it is only February, but I must ask you that famous question:

    Are you ready for some Football Gardening?!! I sure am!

    Since this is the official beginning of my 2008 gardening season, this will also be the kick-off for my 2008 Green Thumb Sunday posts. This post is actually not a very good GTS post, but be sure to visit other Green Thumb Sunday participants!

    Join Green Thumb Sunday
    Join

    My next GTS post will be much better I hope.

    For today I say, GO GIANTS! I mean GO PATRIOTS! No, I mean GO GARDENDESK GROWERS!

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    Thursday, July 12, 2007

    A Big Change in Garden Plans

    I re-built my entire raised bed vegetable garden this year.

    It was a lot more work than I expected and it has put me behind schedule on much of my planting. At the end of June I had one major construction left; building the corn bed and the fence to go around it. It was one of the things on my 2007 garden to do list, and was to provide protection for the corn and trellis space for cucumbers, melons, pole beans, miniature pumpkins and flowers. It was an idea that began when snow was on the ground and I was excited to do it. Even though I was way behind schedule, I set out to build my 6 foot tall fence.

    It was hard work driving the fence posts in with a sledge hammer. The posts were so long that I had to get up on a step ladder to drive them!

    Finally the fence posts were in and it was time to attach the fence.

    I had never done this before and had no idea how to do it. I tried attaching the fence with the little hooks built in to the post but that didn't work. It was also near impossible to stretch the fence taught by myself. I kept getting scratched by the end of the fence. Also the posts were level and straight but the ground sloped. Bottom line, I was in over my head.

    By now it was almost the 4th of July and time for our family vacation. So what did I do? A pessimist would say I admitted defeat and threw in the towel. An optimist like me would say I improvised and switched to plan B for the garden design.

    I took down the fence (getting scratched even more) and dug out the fence posts.

    I rounded up my scrap wood and built two more garden beds.

    I decided we would have to wait another year to find out if Mirai 301BC corn is really the corn that everyone talks about. I planted my root-bound cucumbers in one of the beds along with another sowing of bush green beans. I used the other bed to solve another problem. I had planned to till an entirely new area for a pumpkin patch but hadn't done it yet. So instead of engaging in all of that extra work, I planted my pumpkin plants in the other bed where the corn was to go. It is at the far end of the garden so the pumpkin vines will grow out into the yard. I will try to stay ahead of the vines and put down tarps and old carpet to kill the grass and allow the vines to lay on top. Next year, I will then make more garden beds in that spot.

    So here is the finished product:

    You can't see the plants very well but they're there. In another month they will take over the entire area!

    These changes are indeed a compromise from what I had hoped to have, but isn't that how gardening goes? Does it ever go exactly as planned? I am just happy that finally - in July - I'm finished with my spring plantings. I hope its not too late to get a Fall harvest before frost.

    It is just about time to begin the Fall planting for the Winter harvest!

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    Thursday, June 7, 2007

    Tilling in the Rain!

    This spring has been crazy for me and my garden! First we had crazy weather and then my time was taken up largely by building my deck. On top of that, I made a great big garden to do list which included a complete redesign of the vegetable garden raised beds!

    To get all of this accomplished I have had to resort to creative scheduling of my time like taking days off from my day job and building raised beds in the middle of the night by moonlight. Well now to add to that list, I roto-tilled the rest of the garden in the rain!

    I included that last picture so you can see the raindrops in the trees. Even though it was raining pretty hard the ground was still pretty dry a few inches below. Since I am expanding the beds past where they were last year, I had to till some areas that were sod last year. The spot that was next to the end of last year's beds were particularly dry and compacted. You can see what I mean in this picture. Look just ahead of the rototiller tines.

    These new areas do not have very fertile soil yet. I am going to have to use a lot of organic fertilizer on the beds in those areas.

    I don't like using a tiller in the garden. I am against using it every year like many row gardeners do. Over-tilling destroys the soil structure and causes a hard-pan which that hinders root growth to form where the tines have pounded the soil. After this year, I will never use the tiller here in the vegetable garden. Unfortunately in my Kentucky clay soil, it is necessary to till where I haven't gardened before.

    So till is what I did! I tilled in the rain for over an hour. Right about the time I finished, the clouds broke and the sun came back out.

    This vegetable garden still doesn't look like much, but it will in a month or so. The most interesting thing to watch so far is still my extra early tomatoes. Notice them there at the bottom of that last picture?

    Now that it is tilled, I will add a couple more raised beds and a fence to plant my corn in. Hopefully I will have prettier pictures to show soon!

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    Wednesday, May 23, 2007

    Official Garden Desk Weight Loss Tools!



    Part of Wordless Wednesday

    Okay, I can't really leave this completely wordless. For the past month or so, I have been redesigning the vegetable garden and building a deck. Because of all of the hard work, I have lost almost 10 pounds! I could stand to lose 5 or 10 more, so I guess I'll just have to garden MORE, which is not a problem for me.

    The re-design of the garden was a lot of physical work because I wanted raised beds but didn't have much extra soil. My solution was to till the entire area, build the garden beds from untreated lumber, place the new beds where I wanted them and shovel all of the surrounding dirt into the beds. In essence I obtained "raised beds" by lowering the areas around the beds by about a foot. That is quite a bit of digging and shoveling. I am not all the way finished, but here are a couple of pictures that I took before I planted anything (except the extra-early tomatoes):

    As for building the deck, I've posted several times before about it's progress. I now have the entire floor on but I still need to build some railings and the overhead shade trellis. Here is a picture taken when the floor was about 3/4 done:

    It has been nice losing weight because of these two projects, but they have delayed my garden plantings and I haven't been able to write as much as I would like in my blogs. Soon both projects will be done and I can hopefully get back to daily updates here.

    Thanks for allowing me to be so wordy on Wordless Wednesday! If you want to see other peoples posts that probably are less wordy,Click Here.

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    Thursday, April 26, 2007

    Why Grow So Many Different Tomatoes?

    As I was sharing with a friend my list of vegetables to be grown this year, he exclaimed "My goodness, why so many different kinds of tomatoes? They're all the same aren't they? Can't you just grow one variety of tomato?"

    How insulting. To me that's like asking "why do you enjoy eating so many different kinds of dessert? Apple Pie, Hot Fudge Sundae, Pineapple Upside Cake, Cherry Pie, Chocolate Cake, Turtle Cheesecake, Peach Cobbler - They're all the same aren't they? Can't you just eat one kind of dessert and never eat any of the others? Variety is the spice of life and there are more tomato varieties available than dessert possibilities, especially for the home gardener. We are not limited to growing only the cultivars that travel well or are long keeping. We can look for flavor and interesting qualities. There are literally hundreds of different types of tomatoes. So how do I decide which ones to grow? When thinking of desserts there are different categories. For instance there are the pies, the cakes, cobblers, ice creams, etc. I think of tomatoes in the same way.

    To me there are 2 main categories of tomatoes:

  • Heirloom Tomatoes (open pollinated)
  • Hybrid Tomatoes
  • Each category has 5 main sub-categories:

  • Early type tomatoes
  • Main Season tomatoes
  • Beefsteak Tomatoes
  • Cherry Tomatoes
  • Paste Tomatoes
  • Each Sub Category can come in several different colors:

  • The obvious red tomatoes
  • The less acid yellow tomatoes
  • Pink, Orange, Green, Purple, and "Black" tomatoes
  • Then there are what I call specialty categories:

  • Clusters or Vine Ripened types
  • Grape tomatoes
  • Varieties suited best to be sun-dried tomatoes
  • Etc.
  • Even within the same category, there are many different tomato flavors. With so many different choices available the question should not be "Can't you grow just one type of tomato?"! The question should be "How do you keep from growing 50 different types of tomatoes?"! That is why I have to cap my tomato team to 20 players (I have to have room for other veggies too).

    I listed the varieties of tomatoes (and everything else) in a previous post, but the list has changed a bit. The main reason for the changes is because after growing Heirloom Brandywines last year, I want to try many other heirlooms. I didn't realize before that Heirloom tomatoes should be considered a whole main category. I will write a whole post about the benefits of heirloom tomatoes soon. As for now, I want to share my updated list. My original strategy was to have two different varieties for most sub-categories. That way if, God forsake, I lose a variety to pest or disease I have a backup. Here is what I will be growing this year:

  • Early Girl (Early type)
  • Celebrity (Main type)
  • Burpee Big Boy (Main type)
  • Park's Whopper (Beefsteak type)
  • Burpee Supersteak(Beefsteak type)
  • Lemon Boy (Main type, yellow)
  • Golden Girl (Hybrid - Main type, yellow)
  • Gardener's Delight (Cherry type - red)
  • Sun Sugar (Cherry type - yellow/orange)
  • Cluster Grande (Cluster - Vine Ripening type)
  • Roma (Paste type - Salsa!)
  • Principe Borghese (Sun-Dried type)
  • As for the heirloom types that I will be trying this year, Park Seeds gave me the idea to grow a "rainbow tomato garden". I bought an heirloom rainbow blend seed pack from them with six different types of tomatoes, all of different colors. The only problem was that the seeds were all mixed together in the pack. I would have to grow all 20 or so seeds to be sure I would get all the varieties. Good idea Park, bad execution. Instead of growing their mix, I went to Pinetree Seeds, Johnny's Selected Seeds, and Totally Tomatoes and found my "heirloom rainbow" varieties. Here is what I settled upon:

  • Brandywine (red - last year's champion)
  • Dixie Golden Giant (yellow)
  • Kellogg's Breakfast (orange)
  • Caspian Pink (pink)
  • Aunt Ruby's German Green (green)
  • Pruden's Purple (purple)
  • Black Krim (black)
  • Last but not least I found a variety called Kentucky Beefsteak. It is an old fashioned giant orange heirloom originating from the hills of Eastern Kentucky. I just had to have it since I live and garden in Kentucky, and my brother lives in Eastern Kentucky. This one's for you Bro!

    There you have it - this year's top twenty tomato types. They have all recently been repotted into peat pots and are still living happily under the grow lights. Soon they will make their way to the outside garden and then... to my plate. I can hardly wait. I will eat so many tomatoes that I will get fever blisters and be too full for dessert.

    I'll trade a garden fresh organic heirloom tomato for a hot fudge sundae any day!

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    Monday, April 9, 2007

    Ripe Tomatoes in June!

    On the first day of Spring, Anthony at Compost Bin posted an excellent article about making "New Year's Resolutions" for your garden on that day instead of New Years Day. He challenged us garden bloggers to write a post about our 2007 gardening goals. He revealed one of his 2007 goals of making garden fresh pickles for the first time ever. Well Anthony, if 2007 is the year of the pickle for you, it is the year of the early tomato for me! Sometime in the month of June, I what to see this in my garden:

    This may not seem like a big deal to you southern gardeners, but I am in northern Kentucky - just 20 miles from Ohio. Around here we don't get to eat garden fresh tomatoes until the middle of August.

    On my earlier 2007 to do list post, I stated that I was hoping for ripe tomatoes by July 1st. I am now revising that to Before July 1st. Actually I'm hoping for June 24th because that is my birthday and I can't think of a better birthday present than a BLT sandwich made with an organic garden fresh tomato!

    Enough with dates and dreams already! How am I going to accomplish harvesting extra early ripe tomatoes? It isn't easy. It is actually pretty labor intensive. I started with the tomato variety Early Girl which has a faster maturation than most. Jet Star or July 4th would also be good choices for extra early tomatoes. I sowed the seeds in a cell pack on Valentine's Day, two or three seeds per spot and put them under a shop light in the laundry room where it the dryer and the furnace make the room warm even in winter. After the seeds germinated, I thinned each pack to the strongest looking seedling. As soon as they had true leaves, I transplanted them to individual peat pots and put them under my main grow lights. After a couple of weeks, I transplanted the best four plants again to an even larger container. Then, just yesterday I planted the best two to yet an even larger container.

    Each time I transplant them, I place them deeper in the new pot because new roots grow from the buried stem. Yesterday, I even trimmed off the lower leaves to be able to bury the plants even deeper. This intensive transplanting is designed to keep the plants growing as if they were outside. Plants will fill up the pots they are in and stop growing. That doesn't damage the plant for main season growing, but this operation is for extra-early tomatoes.

    During the whole process, I try to keep as much light on the plants as possible. After transplanting up from the peat pots, it takes two shop lights just for these four early tomato plants. It becomes a bit of a challenge finding bigger containers each time. My intermediate containers were the plastic covers from a spindle of 100 CDs. The neat thing about that is that you could actually see all of the roots as they reached the outside of the container. One of my current pots is an old child's sand bucket. When I use items like these, I drill holes in the bottom of the container for drainage and for bottom watering. I never spray water on any of my seedlings. I always bottom water by pouring water in the trays and letting the roots or peat pots soak up the water. The steps that I've just described are all of them that I've done so far. There is more to do to prepare the outside locations for the tomato plants, but first I'll show you a montage of the steps I've just outlined:

    Hopefully, this will be the last indoor transplant. It took nearly an entire bag of soil-less mix per plant. I will let them grow some more in their new containers for about tow weeks and then I will have to pay close attention to the weather. If we get some warm days, I will move the tomato plants outside for increasing amounts each day to harden them off and get the plants used to the real sun and wind. After a few days of hardening them off, I will plant these two tomato pioneers out in their permanent location under makeshift individual greenhouses. I am building wood frames with thick clear plastic wrapped around them. One will be used at night, and a different one with venting capabilities will be used for the days. This is when I will have to rely on my wife to tend their needs during the day based on the weather conditions. In addition to the "greenhouses", If I'm able to work up the bed the tomatoes will be growing in ahead of time, I will place black plastic over the area to warm the soil.

    I will post again about how they are doing when we reach the outdoor stage. If the weather cooperates, it is entirely possible that I can beat my goal by a number of weeks, but when does the weather ever cooperate in Spring? This whole scheme for extra-early tomatoes is not my original creation. I got it from a book that I bought back in 1988, called The New Victory Garden by Bob Thompson.

    Bob Thompson is much better than me at describing the process of growing early tomato. If you are interested in this book, you may be able to find it at your library, or it is available from Amazon starting at only $2.00.

    Well Anthony, there you have my main 2007 garden goal. I will keep you and anyone interested posted on my progress so we can all see if I reach my goal. Hopefully we can celebrate together with June BLTs for me and fresh pickles for you!

    If anyone else wants to post their goals for 2007, do so and let Anthony at Compost Bin know about it. I would be interested as well, but Anthony is the one who challenged us to do so.
    You can email him at: Compostman@gmail.com

    And/Or drop me a line at: Marc@GardenDesk.com

    I hope you all reach your 2007 garden goals!

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    Thursday, March 22, 2007

    Grow Light Stand... on Steroids!

    Since my last post showing my attempt at extra early ripe tomatoes, I re-potted those young tomato pioneers once more.

    When I put them back under the grow lights, I remembered that I haven't showed you the light stand that I built new for 2007! Finishing this was one of the things on my 2007 Garden to do list post. I have always hung a few shop lights from the ceiling and had enough space for about four flats of seedlings. This year however, I've quadrupled my capacity!

    It's big and heavy and a bit ugly, but oh how many plants we can grow now!

    It is really just an old kitchen table extended with plywood and built up with scrap wood to sport a second level. With two levels, I can hang 4 shop lights under the top level and 4 shop lights from the ceiling. Under those lights I have room for 12 flats. Using cell packs that fit 72 seedlings per flat, that's a possible 864 plants at a time! That's not a real number because of transplanting to bigger pots. Regardless of the number, I think I finally have enough indoor grow space. I like to start almost everything on my garden list from seed. Last year it was pretty crowded under the lights. I found myself kicking plants out into the garden earlier than I wanted to just to make room for other plants. This is what my light table looked like last year:

    Here is what each level of the new and improved light table looks like:


    Bottom Level


    Top Level (not being used much yet)

    I didn't spend anything on the wood and I just use regular 40 watt florescent bulbs in the light fixtures instead of spending lots of money on "growlight" bulbs. To me the key is having a lot of light. Remember, with florescent lights we are trying to mimick the Sun. The Sun is so powerful and puts off so much light that even though we are 93 million miles away, we can't even directly look at it! With that in mind, I have added an extra light fixture per level. I have four fixtures over three rows of flats instead of the normal one fixture per row of flats. It is also important to keep the lights only a few inches above the tops of the plants. By suspending the lights with chains, I can easily adjust the distance as the plants grow, or as I use bigger pots.

    I keep the lights on about 16 hour per day. I don't believe in using an automatic timer either. If I have to turn the lights on and off manually, that is a guaranteed two times daily that I will look at the plants. That way I will always notice when they need watering or any other attention.

    This post was really only supposed to be about the new light stand. I will write more about the art of growing from seed later. After all, I still have about 1000 seeds left to start!

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    Friday, March 16, 2007

    My Garden and Major League Baseball

    Spring is officially only five days away! Professional Baseball's Spring Training is already in full swing, and it's opening day is only 16 days away!

    I am a bigger football fan than baseball fan, but what says spring and summer better than Baseball, Hot Dogs, Apple Pie and Gardening?!

    During the NFL playoffs, I compared my gardening to the NFL, so I thought I should switch sports now to officially welcome Spring.

    Introducing The GardenDesk Growers Baseball team!

    I took a break from blogging this week to celebrate my daughters' birthdays and to plan my garden on paper. So now I have plans for a new field, a list of teams and rosters for the Gardendesk Growers.

    I organized what is going into the vegetable garden under these categories (teams): Tomatoes, Cool Season, Main Season, Fruit, Decorations, and Annual Flowers.

    The rosters of each team can get quite lengthy and some need a bit of explanation. For today's post, I will simply list them all. Tomorrow and in subsequent posts, I will explain each "team" in more detail. Are you ready? Its a long lineup. Here goes:

    Introducing the GardenDesk Tomatoes:

  • Early Girl
  • Kelloggs Breakfast
  • Prudens Purple
  • Brandywine
  • Aunt Ruby's German Green
  • Dixie Golden Giant
  • Black from Tula
  • Cherokee Purple
  • Big Rainbow
  • Park's Whopper
  • Burpee SuperSteak
  • Burpee Big Boy
  • Gardener's Delight
  • Cluster Grande
  • Golden Girl
  • Sun Sugar
  • Sweet Million
  • La Rossa
  • Roma
  • Principle Borghese
  • Introducing the GardenDesk Cool Season Players:

  • Broccoli-Green Goliath
  • Head Lettuce-Sumertime, Tom Thumb
  • Leaf Lettuce-Buttercrunch, Simpson Elite, Pinetree Lettuce Mix
  • Spinich-Space, Melody, Bloomsdale Long Standing
  • Peas-Mr. Big, and a player to be named later
  • Snap Peas-Super Sugar Snap
  • Onions-Super Star, Alisa Craig, Yellow Spanish
  • Carrots-Short 'n Sweet, Nantes Half Long, Little Finger
  • Radish-Cherry Belle, Easter Egg
  • Beet-Detroit Dark Red
  • And now for your Main Season GardenDeskers:

  • Corn-Mirai 301BC
  • Bush Green Beans-Tender Pick, Blue Lake Bush 274
  • Pole Beans-Kentucky Wonder
  • Cucumber-Park's Whopper, Straight 8, Burpee Bush
  • Sweet Pepper-Pepper Marbles
  • Bell Pepper-Colossal Hybrid
  • Squash-Vegetable Spaghetti
  • Zucchini-Ambassador
  • Okra-Annie Oakley II
  • Potato-Kennebec, Russet Burbank
  • Horseradish-Common Strain
  • Give it up for the new GardenDesk Fruit Varieties:

  • Watermelon-Sugar Baby, Glory Sugar
  • Cantalope-Ambrosia
  • Strawberries-Cavendish
  • Blueberries-Jersey
  • Maybe a Cherry Tree?

  • These newcomers will join our existing Apple, Peach and Pear trees.

    Next up, the GardenDesk Decoration Dudes:

  • Pumpkin-Howden, Jack Be Little, Lumina, Dills Atlantic Giant
  • Gourds-Bird House Mix, Penguin, Assorted Gourd Mix
  • And last but not least, introducing our Annual Flowers:

    These will be managed mainly by my daughters, so this roster is subject to change without notice.

  • Nasturtium
  • Sweet Pea
  • Morning Glory-Milky Way
  • Cosmos-Seashells
  • Zinnia-Cut & Come Again
  • Four O'clocks-Kaleidoscope
  • Convolvulus-Blue Enchantment
  • Impatiens-Dwarf Pink Baby
  • Marigold-Sugar & Spice, Happy Days, Double Dwarf, Dwarf Bolero
  • Sunflower-Mammoth
  • And there you have it ... The comprehensive list of players for GardenDesk 2007! Their playing fields have been drawn up on paper and construction will soon begin. Several players have begun warming up inside under grow lights. Many more will soon join them. Stay tuned for more updates on the pending season and players! Will all players actually get in the game? Will they all hit a homerun, or will some strike out? Many questions will soon be answered.

    What does your "player list" consist of? What vegetables will you be growing that I have left off my list? Are you as anxious to get started as I am?

    Dum dum da dum da dum .... CHARGE!

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    Tuesday, February 27, 2007

    How to get rid of Blister Beetles Organically

    I do not believe in using chemical pesticides to rid garden pests. So how do we as organic gardeners get rid of pest insects? There are many ways, but that is not the topic of this post. This post is about my garden's arch enemy: The Blister Beetle!

    The blister beetle is usually a problem in alfalfa hay fields, but for some reason, they were especially attracted to my heirloom tomatoes last year!

    Perhaps one of the drawbacks to growing heirloom tomatoes is that they are less resistant to disease and to pest insects.

    Blister Beetles get their name from the fact that they contain a toxin called cantharidin that will make your skin break out in blisters if you come in contact with it. Usually you would need to touch a crushed beetle to break out, but some people can have an allergic reaction just from touching one of the beetles. The blister beetles in my garden ate a lot of tomato foliage, but the most disgusting part about them was that they left huge droppings behind as well!

    Enough already! They disgust me so!

    That was way too long of an introduction! This post is supposed to be about what I'm going to do about blister beetles in the garden this year. They bothered me so much last year that I put controlling them high on my 2007 garden to do list. If you look at the list you will see that I plan to grow horseradish next to my heirloom tomatoes to keep away the blister beetles. Where did I get the idea that horseradish would keep them away? From a great book about companion planting:

    Carrots Love Tomatoes, by Louise Riotte is the foremost authority on companion planting ideas. Riotte writes in the book that horseradish will keep blister beetles away. Using horseradish root in water as a spray will deter many insects. She goes in to what deters animal pests as well. I am following her advice and growing morning glories on my fence to keep deer away and cucumbers to keep raccoons away. Radishes next to those cucumbers will keep the striped cucumber beetle at bay.

    This is a great book because in addition to advice on what to grow to keep pests away, it lists what vegetables and herbs will enhance the growth of others if grown at close proximity. The title tells of one; carrots love tomatoes.

    I am planning where to place each vegetable in my garden this year based on these companion planting recommendations, which is number one on my to do list.

    So there you have it, number one and two on my list. I hope to be able to write about most of the items on that list.

    Thank you for reading this whole post. I apologize for the disgusting beginning. Now you know why I'm determined to be ready for the blister beetles this year!

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    Friday, February 23, 2007

    Garden 2007 To Do List

    In my earlier post about what I should be blogging about in February, I came up with a list of "new" things that I plan to do this year in the vegetable garden to hopefully make the harvest better. I wanted to post the list again since I will be referring back to it in the coming weeks.

    The original list:

    Now for a few more items that need to be addressed BEFORE the outdoor season:

    I realize that my list is pretty big. I will try to write posts addressing each thing on the list to either report that I accomplished an item, or explain my ideas. Later in the season I will report back on each item to see how I did. As I write a new post, I will update this post by making each item on the list a link to the corresponding post.

    This post will become "home base" for monitoring and reporting my "to do list" progress.

    Doing all of this may be more for me than for you the reader. Possibly we will learn some things together.

    Happy Gardening 2007!

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    Tuesday, February 20, 2007

    What should a garden blogger write in February?

    What should a garden blogger be writing about in February? This is the question I've been asking of myself all month. Of course it depends on a lot of different things, and to me it raises a second question: Why do you even write a garden blog? I'm not exactly sure about my answers to these questions, but I know why I garden and why I started a garden blog. For me, the main reason for gardening is to harvest bountiful produce!

    A good way to ensure that I get the maximum harvest possible, is by recording which varieties of vegetables have performed well and which have not. It also helps to record what I as the gardener did to help or hurt the success of the harvest.

    I started raising an intense vegetable garden back in the early 1990's when there was no such thing as blogging or the World Wide Web. There WAS such a thing as logging - keeping track of things in written form. Blogging is simply short for Web Logging - keeping track of things in written form via the Web. I "logged" my garden season on paper, sitting at my physical "Garden Desk" in the middle of my vegetable garden. I started this blog entitled Garden Desk to do the same thing as back then, only this time with pictures!

    The other difference between a web log and a paper log is that others can read it and even comment on it! Of course you know that already, but isn't that the most interesting thing about blogging? You can actually communicate with and get feedback from other gardeners. Think about it. That is the true power of blogging.

    Unfortunately that can also be the thing that distracts you as the author. Can that cause you to get away from your original reason for blogging in the first place? That brings us back to my original questions. Why do I write a garden blog? The real reason for me is what is written under my title; to document the happenings in my organic garden. If I'm able to get some readers interested and they are kind enough to comment on what I'm doing, then all the better. But even if I can't keep readers interested, I STILL should blog to aid in the success of MY garden.

    With that in mind, what should I be blogging about in February? I think I should be writing out my strategies for making the upcoming season a success! I should be forming my battle plan, my game plan if you will.

    I have come up with a list of "new" things that I plan to do this year to hopefully make the harvest better.

    • I will use companion planting strategies.
    • I will grow Horse Radish to keep Blister Beetles Away.
    • I will build a tall fence around my corn to keep critters out.
    • I will use vertical gardening techniques to grow crops on the fence.
    • I will use raised beds and square foot garden beds.
    • I will use the Florida Stake and Weave for most of my tomatoes.
    • I will try to have early tomatoes ripe by July 1st!
    • I will grow many new heirloom tomatoes!
    • I will use more composting techniques including "worm composting".
    • I will try for giant pumpkins.
    • I will try some new vegetables and fruits that I haven't grown before.
    I'm sure if I thought a little longer, I could come up with more. Wow, I think I just wrote an outline for what I should blog about for the rest of February! I answered my title question.

    What about you? Why do you write a garden blog and what do you think we should be blogging about in February? Many people will not read this entire post, so if you actually have, please comment and let us know YOUR thoughts.

    Thanks!

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