Naturegirl (who truly takes amazing photos) recently posted about the trials and tribulations of gardening in small spaces (i.e. a small shady backyard) and I realized that I've not shown any photos of our garden space here in the far north. With 24 hours of sunlight each day for almost two months straight, plants grow wonderfully, so long as they are watered and warm -conditions which an attentive gardener and the shelter of a greenhouse can provide.
I'll save the photos of our sad, sad looking balcony plants for our home archives and take you all on a tour of our community greenhouse where ManNorth and I were fortunate enough to have rented a small plot for our own garden this spring and summer. These plots are a hot commodity in NorthernTown and we missed getting a plot last summer by only a week after our arrival last year. Although we were on a waiting list, no spaces opened up for us until this spring.
We began working our plot at the end of May and had planted our seeds and seedlings that we had started indoors (in small flats and empty buttermilk cartons, of all things) by the beginning of June. Working the plot initially meant breaking up the somewhat frozen soil, mixing in lots of compost and watering, watering and watering again.
Here's what our plot looked like then:
The tall bushy plant on the left is actually a tomato plant we had started indoors almost a year ago. Since it started producing flowers and fruit in the winter, we figured it had earned the right to join the garden, irregardless of its tall, leggy twisted shape. The plants in the foreground to its right are some of the pepper plants that we had also planted the summer before. These had begun flowering and fruiting under our grow lights in the winter and were still producing new flowers. About halfway back and in this order from the front to the rear of the plot are the tomato, bean and cucumber plants we had started in milk cartons full of soil. The twigs poking up all over the place to stake and support all the plants are willow switches that we gathered up from piles cut and discarded by road crews, clearing the snow from roadsides all winter. (Unfortunately, the twigs were all still alive and not only put down roots, but flowered and grew leaves. To avoid a garden full solely of willow bushes next year, we've pulled out most of the twigs and have stripped the leaves from the few that remain.)As you can see from the photo of the greenhouse below, we'd gotten a bit of a jump on all the other gardens.
This is what the greenhouse looks like now, only six or seven weeks later:
The blue barrels, which act as water reservoirs, are filled in the spring when the pipes are still frozen by a greenhouse member who is also a volunteer firefighter (as all the town firefighters are). He'd arrive with the fire truck and hose and pump water from the truck to fill all the water barrels for us. Since the pipes have thawed, garden hoses are used to fill the barrels and gardeners use small green watering cans to then move the water from the reservoirs to their gardens. This is an organic greenhouse, so all members agree to leave the Miracle Grow (TM) at home and fertilize only with organic compost or organic fertilizers. The same goes for pesticides, although I've yet to see more than the occasional spider or fly in the greenhouse so pesticides aren't at all necessary.
This scarecrow above, planted in a communal garden and next to a disfunctional fountain hidden in some rocks, is not only pointing directly at our plot (now sporting a dark brown wooden frame), it is wearing a face I sewed for it, an old purple shirt I no longer needed and my old field hat (Hey now, no comments are needed from the peanut gallery: it was hot, sunny and for my field work I was literally bending over plants in cow pastures for 14 hours a day. The hat was wonderful). The pants were already a part of the scarecrow which had been created by someone else and then sadly neglected since last year. I'd grown tired of stepping over it as it lay on a walkway in the spring, sans head, and decided that I'd spruce it up a bit.Here's our plot as it looks now, complete with a frame that ManNorth and I built and stained.
And from another angle:The lettuce and swiss chard are in the front (I've had to cut back the swiss chard after they began bolting and so they are slightly hidden by the lettuce) and our enthusiastically growing zucchini plants are hiding the peppers that are still flowering and fruiting behind and under them. The tomato plants have grown almost as tall as the frame.
Here are our greens close up:
(On the left is a row of parsley, basil, thyme and onions)
And from the back, here are our cucumber plants (which have yet to produce more than one 2cm long cucumber):
I planted sweet peas at the edges of the frame near the middle of the plot simply for the visual pleasure of them and for their gorgeous smell!
Above are our volunteer peas which must have grown from seed dropped from the garden in our plot the year previous. We didn't weed them out and they now tower above our beans and cucumbers. I don't think that they are snow peas but if one catches them before they get too big, the husks are also edible and somewhat sweet.
I've many garden photos and will post a few more soon, especially of some unique decorations that now populate our garden...
5 comments:
That is amazing! It must be fun to garden with your community. My garden is very sad....
Thanks Lauri!
Yes, it is fun -especially when other gardeners have extra vegetables of a kind one hasn't grown and they are willing to share!
MMMMmmm.
What's growing in your garden?
Hi! I stumbled across your blog while searching for photos of sweet peas. I'm intrigued by your dwelling in the far north; I haven't browsed the rest of your blog to see if you explain why you're up there, but I hope to. Wow! And your garden is amazing. Anyway, greetings from Oregon. :)
Hi Becky,
I've fallen off the blogging bandwagon, I'm afraid as I've not updated for some time. I'm glad you found me and am curious as to how an Oregonian (?!) came to visit my blog.
I don't think I say what brought me here elsewhere: work, which seems to be the reason for most human migrations! My husband found work here and then I did.
Thanks for enjoying the sweet pea photos. Feel free to use mine. If you want to give credit via a link to the blog, that would be appreciated.
Cheers and happy gardening!
Thanks for being an inspiration.
By the way, I came across your blog while searching for sweet pea/"chÃcharos" pictures. Regards from Cuernavaca, Mexico
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