Well, I finally got something done in the garden today. Between last year when it just stayed cold and dry and nothing thrived (I mean 2 TREES died) and this year when I fell off the extension ladder and couldn't get started until late in the season, it has been a bad 2 years.
I have seedlings of various veggies and flowers large enough to plant. But the framed beds were weedy and the paths between were invaded by Horrible Vines. It was a mess. So the first thing I did was attack the vines. They are a "gift" from a neighbor 15 years ago. Some invasive type almost impossible to kill due to the depth of the roots.
The neighbors killed their's because they could just keep mowing it. Here it is mingled with flowers and the veggie garden. It has a flower like this.
I SWEAR whatever a dumb neighbor does never causes them long-term problems but I suffer. I have poison ivy and english ivy all around because of careless neighbors. I don't hate my careless neighbors, but I sure "resent" them sometimes.
So, I have an electric string-trimmer. I have a gas-powered one, but I'm afraid of the damn thging and I HATE the noise. So I went after the vines in the paths with the electric. You have to work at the vines from the top down, because otherwise they wrap around the shaft and stop it from turning. I actually got pretty good at it.
Which is sad I have to do that. I bought an electric mower when I built the framed veggie beds. Just enough room to move the mower between them. Sadly, I didn't realize I could turn the corners. I have to lift about 40 pounds to change direction. I did that. But it left vines on the sides.
So, the string trimmer. It took 2 hours fighting to chop the vines (1/2 the time unwinding vines from the trimmer-head). There are some corners I couldn't get at, but I will use the hedge-trimmer to take care of those.
And the outside of the enclosure will take more work. Vines grow up the sides of the enclosure and "shade is bad". I'll have to use a pruner and cut them off at ground level and slowly to the ends. Every photon matters to a veggie.
SO, after I whacked the vines I needed to prepare to plant tomatoes. For several years, I used a red plastic groundcover. It was supposed to reflect sunlight back up and cajuse insects to leave. It was also solid plactic sheet, so I couldn't water through it. I was watering individual tomatoes through the cut part around and that took a lot of time .
This year, I have 100 yards of permeable black plastic mesh 4' wide.
I can just water all the plants at once. And it will suppress weeds. So I rolled it out on one bed and anchored the ends with bricks, cut it to size for that bed (my beds vary) and dragged my tomato cages out of the weeds (Everything grows here). There are maybe some disadvantages to being organic; every weed loves the yard too.
I set them on the landscaping fabric-covered beds for spacing. But it was 6:30 and I needed dinner, so I put everything away for the day.
Tomorrow, I cut slices in the fabric in the center of the spaced cages, remove the cages, and plant tomatoes (and bell peppers around them) and cukes and melons and squash. If it is too late, well, I'll still try. And there is still time for a Fall crop of minor veggies like spinach and radishes.
I am PRETTY much recovered from the ladder fall. I no longer have the even think about walking normally, getting into the car is like it used to be, and I only notice it in bed when a part of my shoulder sticks up. But at least it isn't stopping me from gardening.
And, next to the cats, gardening is important to me.
3 comments:
Just be aware that the fabric doesn't totally remove weeds. Yes those that are under it won't push through. But if you mulch as that breaks down weed seeds will sprout and grow. I actually had more weeds after I put that stuff down than before. I pulled it out over the past few summers and just went back to mulch only.
I use that kind of fabric in my bigger planter boxes. It seems to keep the soil moister for a longer time, and it also retains the heat. My tomatoes seem to thrive in there, until the tomato worms find them...LOL!
I think those vines are periwinkle?
I do have those here, they make a good ground cover for places nothing much else will grow.
What drives me crazy are the trumpet creeper vines. I like how they attract humming birds, but not how they try to reproduce themselves all over the lawn.
All very interesting. I can tell you about my gardening in just a few words: "wallabies eat almost everything"!
Megan
Sydney, Australia
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