Let the Gardening Season Begin

, written by Barbara Pleasant us flag

Bean seeds

The unspoiled freshness of a new year feels a little like spring, so it’s a great time to start thinking about your garden. Taking time to envision the season ahead is an important first step, which can be quite enjoyable and help lead you into a truly inspired season.

Thinking too much about your past successes and failures will probably come automatically, and it’s not very useful during the envisioning phase anyway. Instead, try imagining your way through these guidelines. They work for me.

Try New Things

What can you grow that you’ve never grown before? I am still discovering great edible crops from around the world, and many are easy to grow. Trying new vegetables and herbs keeps gardening fun, and certainly prevents boredom at the table. Celeriac, fennel, endive, escarole, rat’s tail radishes, shall I go on? Commit to trying at least one new vegetable per year, or more if your garden is large or your season is long.

Try new varieties of a vegetable you grow every year. Some you will like and some you won’t, but this is the only way to learn about the incredibly diverse world of veggies. Yes, plump yellow beets really are special, and freshly dug fingerling potatoes fit into the category of food that is so seductively wonderful that its sensual side cannot be denied.

Packets of saved seed from the garden

Save Some Seed

It can be incredibly rewarding to grow and save seed from crops that do especially well in your garden. Fresh seed often shows very high germination rates, and of course home grown seed is free. Look for open-pollinated varieties of vegetables that are customarily harvested when the seeds are fully ripe: red peppers, tomatoes, winter squash, cantaloupe, and most dried beans and peas are excellent candidates for novice seed savers.

Keep in mind that with many crops, you don’t need to save seeds but every three years or so, and you can build up a stash of bulging envelopes of seeds in no time. These are great for sharing at springtime seed swaps, which are becoming more popular all over the world.

Planning how to enrich your soil should be part of plans for a new gardening season

Steward Your Soil

Hospitable soil can make or break a crop, so designing your season’s soil-improvement program should be as important as choosing your crop list. You will probably need a custom-designed plan based on your soil’s condition and the quality of locally available manure, compost or mulches. All gardens benefit from regular additions of bioactive compost, but beyond this measure your soil may require more organic matter, or deep digging, or pH adjustments, or nitrogen supplementation, or any of a number of other major and minor tweaks. As you learn more about how your soil "behaves" when asked to support certain plants, you can tailor your soil care practices to meet you and your plants’ needs.

I get as excited about locating good quality organic soil amendments as I do about discovering a new type of lettuce I want to try, which is part of what I like about this part of the gardening year. When it comes to the earliest plans for your 2010 garden, constructive daydreaming is time very well spent.

Care to share your dreams for the new season?

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Garden Planning Apps

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Comments

 
"Words are special to me; rather like the veg I grow for myself, if that's not too weird an anomaly! For me, 'Dreams' mean pushing myself that little bit further out of my comfort zone. That might mean growing a veg I find particularly difficult or reducing my chances of crop pestilence. To help with this I have been actively using the extensive Grow Guides and Garden Planning Tool here and having fun learning! This year I plan to grow my 'expensive' (to buy) veg under a polytunnel/greenhouse and let cheaper veg take its chances under my vigilant eye in my main garden. You see, I grow veg for five families and so what I do has an important economic benefit for a few people I care about. The tools and guides here have helped me understand why my previous efforts did not yield the best I could have done. Now I will be inter-cropping to increase yield and reduce pests and that's new ground (geddit?) to me. So as I go to sleep I dream about the crop/grow changes I think I want to make - and they're the dreams worth having! I'd also love to hear what others are dreaming of about this year!"
Kevin Hannan on Saturday 2 January 2010
"Like Jeremy and Kevin,I too have my dreams of what "new" to grow.This year we are going to try raspberries and as "Legume Lovers" some new varieties of peas and beans along with the "usual veggies".People ask me if we save money ,of course but the BEST part is the knowledge that we grew it ourselves and we use NO chemicals so the taste is out of this world as any veg gardener will agree!Bring on the warmer weather and lets get growing again.....I can't wait !! Good Luck to all with your new growing year and ENJOY the "fruits "of your labours!! "
Mel Smith on Sunday 3 January 2010
"This is exactly how I feel right now. I am so anxious to get started and have so much anxiety about how everything is going to go. I had bad luck with tomatos last year and I have orderd some really good ones for this year. I know now to plant them further apart this time. Any way, I can't hardly stand myself. I only have one more simi-freeze for the year and it's on..."
Kimbery Mitchell on Sunday 21 February 2010
"Thanks for letting me know about the soil I'm going to fine out about my soil and what I have to do Thanks"
Sharon Henager on Tuesday 20 November 2012

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