Saturday, June 25, 2011

Garden Status

The garden is looking quite green with the warming weather.  The tomato plants have accelerated growth and are no longer showing signs of new fungus damage.  The string beans and cucumbers have taken off, and carrots are looking stronger.  We added marigolds in a few spots as a companion-planting measure.  Marigolds are supposed deter tomato hornworms and other bad bugs.  The tomatoes, cucumbers, and peppers are showing evidence that we might eventually get a harvest from the garden.





Worms in our Bed

We put worms in our garden bed to help fertilize the soil through vermicomposting.  I ordered Uncle Jim's 1,000-Count Red Wiggler Live Composting Worms from Amazon.com.  While tracking my future buddies through the UPS system, I got a message that they were diverted to Florida due to a UPS sorting error and would spend an extra weekend there.  I called UPS, explained that there were live passengers aboard the box, and requested that the package be routed overnight to me.  It got here with most passengers safely intact, except for a few that escaped the cloth bag into the cardboard box.  It looks likely to me that a few wigglers made it onto the UPS conveyor belts and possibly took a ride with other packages to other destinations.



I loosened a small area of soil and dumped the bag of worms (in peat moss) on the garden.  Some of the worms quickly left the pile and squirmed across the top of the garden.  A few tried to make a break from the garden, but once they got half-way across the lumber border, they turned back to the soil.





The worms dispersed themselves from the peat pile within a couple days.  To feed the worms, I found the idea for a worm tower on the web.  A worm tower is a place to put mulch material from the kitchen into the garden and a place for worms to feed.  My worm tower is a 4-inch PVC pipe that is buried about halfway into the soil.  I drilled 1/2-inch holes into the portion of the pipe that gets buried into the soil.  As the theory goes, the worms enter the holes, eat some tasty mulch from our kitchen, exit through the holes, and leave castings and nutrients for our vegetables to absorb.  It's a cycle from our kitchen, to our garden, and back to our kitchen, whereby worms help turn banana peels into tomatoes for our salad.




The worm tower has a drain cap loosely inserted into the top of the PVC pipe.  I've been grinding up vegetable scraps from the kitchen in the food processor and dropping the resulting mulch slurry into the tower.  I grind the mulch so that it decomposes more quickly.  My recent Googling tells me that worms eat the bacteria that grows on the food waste.  Worms apparently love melon and cantaloupe rinds; like fruits, vegetables, crushed egg shells, and banana peels; and only tolerate citrus, onions, and garlic.  Yum, can't wait for tomatoes.


Organic Fertilizer

We first figured that the compost in the soil mixture would be enough to fertilize the plants, but then decided to supplement the soil with organic fertilizers.  We added the following components; we scratched powdered fertilizer into the top one inch of soil, and we diluted concentrated solutions in a watering can and watered-in.

  • Fish emulsion (whole garden)
  • Blood meal (whole garden)
  • Bone meal (whole garden)
  • Tomato fertilizer ("Mater Magic") (around the tomatoes)
  • Epsom salt (around the tomatoes and peppers)
  • Kelp solution (whole garden)


The tomato fertilizer is a little redundant; it contains meat meal, hydrolyzed feather meal, bone meal, blood meal, and sulfate of potash 5-5-9 plus 4.5 calcium.  The plants have perked up in the warmer days, but I like to think the fertilizer and associated effort helped.


Saturday, June 11, 2011

Water System Installation

This week I installed the underground water system for the community garden to provide one hose bib for each plot.  Five pipes/posts each have a pair of hose bibs.  The water source is a hose bib on the side of the pool utility building; a hose connects the source bib to underground PVC pipe.  A few volunteers helped clear out the shallow ditch, and the installation attracted some spectators.


It took three evenings to assemble the vertical faucet posts and install the underground pipes.  After testing, I corrected two leaks (only!) at one of the hose bibs and at the input hose.


The T posts with the hose bibs are held up by posts (EMT) driven into the ground.  Hose clamps hold the PVC to the EMT.  One gardener remarked how we are creating a deluxe community garden.  I must agree.


I added a Y-adapter and programmable water timer to the hose bib at my plot.  The water timer controls watering via drip lines throughout the plot.


The drip lines have emitters spaced every 12 inches.  I spaced the drip lines by 6 inches and staggered the emitter positions to have evenly distributed watering near the plants.


Here is the current state of the garden.


Tomato Problems Already!

I noticed brown spots forming on the leaves of my tomato plants.  A quick Google search leads me to believe that this is fungus, possibly early blight.  This is what I see:


My organic solution is a mixture of:
  • 1 part milk
  • 4 parts water
  • 1 tablespoon of baking soda for every quart of water
  • A few drops of dishwashing soap
I find close variants of this mixture cited all over the web.  This link is an example.  I used a spray bottle to apply to tops and bottoms of tomato plant leaves.  Time will tell how effective this is.