The good thing about gardening is that it is a seasonal exercise in hope. Every season I look through my catalog from Bountiful Gardens. Every season I pick what I think will be something new and exciting to plant. Every season I plant - and most seasons I get blown out.
It is not ever a total wash. I somehow manage to have some notable successes - at least one - every year. Part of the issue is where we live - when I really started back in 2004 I had our house in Old Home with the moved in top soil and the 12 hour sun exposure. Since moving in 2009 I have had to fight a bad location (it was what was available in the rental) and a complete change in climates. Relearning how to plant and when and what has been a learning experience.
Currently this is my gardening space:
The area on the top is approximately 10' x 4', the area on the bottom is 16' x 4' . We are looking North..
The part the runs along the side of the house has sort of evolved into the herb garden/place we plant pets and flowers. I have planted thyme and rosemary; the green you see on the right is a volunteer oregano plant which has been there since we move in and has done fantastic (even though I have never watered it. The area to the left of a path is a bricked in area which could become another garden area if I pull the grass out.
My thought is that I have enough room now for whatever garden I might to have, although I really think I will have to use it all to do what I would like to do in terms of food production - which will require some amount of expenditure.
Water is the other issue, of course. Right now it is all manual. There is a way (I think) that I could pipe it along the fence line and hit the whole garden area (which would be great and money saving - water is a bit of a problem where I live).
I think my goal for this year is to dig out the bricked in area and move to the edge of the tree line (I visions of needed some grass area for the quail, who love to run in the garden and hay:
As always, that is the plan - but there is always next season...
Hmmm I don't have any experience gardening in your area. I might suggest a raised rain barrel maybe 2 foot off the ground and a hose. You don't need much feed height with that type of arrangement to get a decent flow. I used it for my main garden actually.
ReplyDeleteI have thought about that Preppy. I actually have a Trash can I use for water collection for my lavender. It is an ad hoc thing, but it does work pretty well. My biggest problem is that it is probably good for about two weeks worth of water a fairly small area and then I am done. The rain is not really regular enough to refill every two weeks. I suppose I could do rain barrels by the garden sections.
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