Over the past few weeks, I have posted information about my garden. I decided that instead of posting heights and counts, I would write about what I have learned about gardening in my first attempt.
I was a little nervous starting this venture, as I had never so much as grown a single food-producing plant in my life. Sure, I’ve kept the Christmas cactus and a few other household plants alive, but they were bought at a store and all the hard work was already done. All I had to do was water them. No big deal, right? Here’s what I learned…
-Zucchini plants take over a garden. We got this tiny plant from Hewitts and it couldn’t have been more than 6 inches long with one leaf. Now, it is a massive, 3 foot round, 3 foot tall monster covering a strawberry plant and a banana pepper plant. Next time, I will give it a very large area to grow in and make sure none of the smaller plants get shaded out.
-Tomato plants get HUGE! I gave them about a foot and a half in between, but they still have grown so big that I can barely walk between them. They are also almost up to my chest in height. Next year, I will plant them about three feet apart so I can walk between them to pick the tomatoes when they are ripe.
-I also need to put some type of weed control down. Not a chemical, but maybe weed cloth. I have kept up with the weeds for the most part, but some have grown a little more than I would like.
-I need to work on a compost pile. I was told that the pile will help to enrich the soil and make it much more fertile.
-Putting something down (grass clippings, leaves) around the base of the plants will help keep the moisture in the ground for the plants.
So far, the garden has been a success. I have harvested two large zucchini, a grape tomato and a cherry tomato. There are two small sweet peppers starting to grow as well. A lot of the other tomatoes have started to grow, but aren’t quite ripe yet. One thing is for sure – I am going to have tomatoes out the wazoo pretty soon! Guess I better learn a little bit about canning!





Can I call you Farmer Bob?
Your blog looks wonderful. It was nice going through your blog. Keep on posting.
Thank you!
This is only my second year gardening and it still seems like magic to me. I don’t like weeds, or snakes or bugs, etc, so I do all my gardening in containers. I like the benefits but the best is not having to bind up the tomatoes. I just put them on a table or bench and they hang down and do just fine. Thanks for sharing and good luck.
You know I also had that problem before. Well, it is not really a problem but I consider it a problem because I thought zucchini plants just go medium size – but no! LOL. Every pepper plant I had was bullied! Anyway, my zucchini is really useful and now I gave it its own place to grow without any plant around it that it can “bully”.
Rose – That sounds great. I will definitely give it it’s own space next year.
Zucchini is also my problem because it doesn’t have control on producing fruits. My friend suggested to preserve zucchinis and i tried them. I sell it to my friends and they say that it taste good when cooking. It is an effective way to make your zucchini worth it.