New Veggie Garden

ZONE4GARDENS's picture

With the high cost of food these days, I've decided to change part of the flower garden to a veggie garden.  It's a warm November here in the Adirondacks and I'm thinking of digging some of the plants up and moving them.  I wish I thought of this earlier!  The area along the stone wall is a southeast location and the snow always melts here first.  Also, I  have some 5' windows I can lean up agains the wall for some frost protection.  I'd appreciate ideas, suggestions, etc. 

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"Why don't you show yourself around the garden while I make tea" - Tasha Tudor

 

KimmI's picture

New veggie garden (post #19410, reply #1 of 1)

What is the soil like in that area? These simple soil tests can help determine that,

1) Structure. From that soil sample put enough of the rest to make a 4 inch level in a clear 1 quart jar, with a tight fitting lid. Fill that jar with water and replace the lid, tightly. Shake the jar vigorously and then let it stand for 24 hours. Your soil will settle out according to soil particle size and weight. A good loam will have about 1-3/4 inch (about 45%) of sand on the bottom. about 1 inch (about 25%) of silt next, about 1 inch (25%) of clay above that, and about 1/4 inch (about 5%) of organic matter on the top.

2) Drainage. Dig a hole 1 foot square and 1 foot deep and fill that with water. After that water drains away refill the hole with more water and time how long it takes that to drain away. Anything less than 2 hours and your soil drains’ too quickly and needs more organic matter to slow that drainage down. Anything over 6 hours and the soil drains too slowly and needs lots of organic matter to speed it up.

3) Tilth. Take a handful of your slightly damp soil and squeeze it tightly. When the pressure is released the soil should hold together in that clump, but when poked with a finger that clump should fall apart.

4) Smell. What does your soil smell like? A pleasant, rich earthy odor? Putrid, offensive, repugnant odor? The more organic matter in your soil the more active the soil bacteria will be and the nicer your soil will smell.

5) Life. How many earthworms per shovel full were there? 5 or more indicates a pretty healthy soil. Fewer than 5, according to the Natural Resources Conservation Service, indicates a soil that is not healthy.

Those, along with a good, reliable soil test for soil pH and major nutrients can help you get better growth wiht fewer problems.

The sign of a good gardener is brown knees, not a green thumb.