| Author | Content |
lvyao Katy, TX
July 22, 2009 04:02 PM Post #6851901
| Just wondering, how many sqft of vege garden would be "enough". |
dddal Eaton, IN
July 22, 2009 04:06 PM Post #6851912
| It's according to what you want to grow, use or can. Once you start gardening (veggie or flowers) there's never enough space. |
lvyao Katy, TX
July 22, 2009 04:14 PM Post #6851936
| DDDAL, I am thinking if I don't need to buy veges from grocery store, that would be enough for me. |
Gymgirl SE Houston (Hobby), TX (Zone 9a)
July 22, 2009 04:17 PM Post #6851949
| Hi!
Welcome to the Garden (if you're new here!)
How many square feet of veggie garden is really a relative question. There are folks here with ACRES planted. Some have a few raised beds. And, there are folks like me who plant in a lot of containers. It depends on how much and what you wanna grow and how much space you have to play with.
Look at this newest offering some of us have been looking at.
http://davesgarden.com/community/forums/fp.php?pid=6793329
Here's the link to the discussion above: http://davesgarden.com/community/forums/t/1012246/
Or how about these: http://davesgarden.com/community/forums/fp.php?pid=6823333
http://davesgarden.com/community/forums/fp.php?pid=6835599
Discussion above is here: http://davesgarden.com/community/forums/t/1012669/
Scout around some of the threads. Are you interested in raised gardens? containers?
Here's a pic of my harvest last fall:  Click the image for an enlarged view.
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Gymgirl SE Houston (Hobby), TX (Zone 9a)
July 22, 2009 04:18 PM Post #6851952
| And this is what I grew most of those in
 Click the image for an enlarged view.
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Gymgirl SE Houston (Hobby), TX (Zone 9a)
July 22, 2009 04:18 PM Post #6851955
| And these 5-gallon, self-watering buckets!  Click the image for an enlarged view.
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Gymgirl SE Houston (Hobby), TX (Zone 9a)
July 22, 2009 04:20 PM Post #6851962
| One more that I'm babying right now.  Click the image for an enlarged view.
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lvyao Katy, TX
July 22, 2009 04:28 PM Post #6851990
| Thanks Gymgirl, your harvest looks gorgeous, I didn't know that you can grow vegetable from container, amazing.
I am interested in raised bed, since I have toddlers around, I can't spend too much time in the backyard, so i want to know how many sqft can meet our needs. |
Gymgirl SE Houston (Hobby), TX (Zone 9a)
July 22, 2009 04:28 PM Post #6851991
| Since I've been a part of Dave's Garden as a veggie grower (since Spring '07), I've learned that your veggie garden is using what you have, to get what you want. If you've got the whole back 40, go for it! If you have an 18" washtub, go for it!
Just be sure to post pics so we can see what you came up with, hear?
Linda
Last one. Really. I grew turnips, beets, lettuce and carrots in that little trellis bed! Click the image for an enlarged view.
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Gymgirl SE Houston (Hobby), TX (Zone 9a)
July 22, 2009 04:31 PM Post #6852007
| Ivy,
Click on the links I posted above to see some wonderful raised beds. Then Go to the threads.
Carminator1 listed a planting chart for the 12' x 24' raised bed in the pic. She also listed an additional link to closeups of what's growing. Her raised bed garden is phenomenal! |
lvyao Katy, TX
July 22, 2009 04:34 PM Post #6852025
| Thanks again Gymgirl. Actually I already got one vege garden, which I just strip off the grass, dig a hole in the ground and then bury my plant. LOL. Right now I have to fight with all the weeds, that is why I want to switch to raised bed. I will read those threads first. |
Gymgirl SE Houston (Hobby), TX (Zone 9a)
July 22, 2009 04:40 PM Post #6852055
| Sorry, Ivy.
Go to this thread for the planting chart. It was Kbumgar's bed.
http://davesgarden.com/community/forums/t/1012246/
P.S. It really is very easy to get your raised bed started without having to dig up or pull the weeds. Just layer some sheets of cardboard boxes in the spot you want your bed. Get your boards and stand them up to make the sides. Get some short pieces of steel rebar and pound them into the ground to hold your sides up (this is what Kbumgar did -- quick and portable if you want to take it down quickly).
Then, fill 'er up with your Composted Kow Manure ($1.40/40 lb bag at Lowe's/HD), homemade compost (your veggie peels, grass and leaf clippings, coffee grinds, that break down over time in a little pile over in the corner somewhere). KBumgar listed what she filled her bed with. It's all good stuff.
BTW, are you a first time veggie grower, or one of those people who can look at a seed and make it grow? |
lvyao Katy, TX
July 22, 2009 04:51 PM Post #6852092
| Gymgirl, I am not a first time grower, last winter I have very good harvest with lettuce and bok choy. But when it came to summer, I have to fight with weeds, birds, rabbits, squash borers, stink bugs etc, together with the hot dry weather, make me very frustrating. |
kbumgar Bend, OR (Zone 5a)
July 23, 2009 09:58 AM Post #6854735
| Hi Gymgirl,
Awesome pictures! When does most of your harvest come in? Your bounty last year was fabulous. I hope you have friends and family to share everything with. Delicious!
I am curious about your 5-gallon self watering buckets. I assume that you simply use the lower bucket as the water reservoir? If so, here are my questions:
1. Are there particular vegetables that prefer this setup?
2. How often do you have to fill the bottom bucket?
3. Does the soil ever get too moist? Not moist enough?
Thanks again for your advice... |
Gymgirl SE Houston (Hobby), TX (Zone 9a)
July 23, 2009 02:42 PM Post #6855962
| Kbumgar, Glad to return the favor!
Funny you should ask right now, 'cause I'm in the process of converting my two-bucket system to a ONE-bucket system, to expand my growing space! Check out the discussion here.
http://davesgarden.com/community/forums/p.php?pid=6790298
But to answer your question above:
1. Since my ground space is extremely limited, I'm growing most of the brassicas in eBuckets: cabbage, cauliflower, mustard and collard greens, and broccoli in particular. They did really well, as you can see from the pics. Each bucket holds a single plant (I'm only growing for 2 people).
2. Filling the bottom bucket. I water from the top down until the plants are completely established and the roots grow down enough to drink up water from the reservoir. I can tell when the plant has started sucking up from the bottom with a counting system I use (just a quirk of mine, but some may actually find it helpful). I start counting from the time I start watering in the fill tube, to when the water runs out the overflow hole, "one-thousand-one, one-thousand-two...etc. I count every time I fill up. I can tell when they're drinking on their own, cause I'll get to somewhere around "one-thousand-fifteen" and I'm still filling. I can also tell when I've neglected my watering OR when the plant is REALLY drinking, cause one time my real EBs went up to one-thousand-forty, just a day later!
3. Since the system is SELF-watering, there's no over- OR under-watering! The plants take what they need from the reservoir.
4. This fall, I'll line my eBuckets up and install Bocabob's automatic watering system. There will be a line from the main faucet, on a 6-cycle timer. There will be additional, smaller lines from the main hose that fit into the fill tube of each eBucket. Once it's set up, all I have to do is check for bugs, spray as necessary and keep em cool in summer, and sunshiney in winter!
I've included the pic of my Bonnie cabbage grown in a two-bucket eBucket.
I'm going to a one-bucket design to expand my growing space. Each bucket equates to approximately one square-foot garden, so if you google their planting scheme, you see how much can be planted per bucket. Most of those brassicaes grow so big, you can only do one per bucket, but there are other veggies you can grow more per bucket.
Hope this helps, and wasn't too wordy!
Linda Click the image for an enlarged view.
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kbumgar Bend, OR (Zone 5a)
July 24, 2009 03:33 PM Post #6860328
| Awesome response, Linda! Thank you for such an informative post. I can imagine that many people who do not have much space for planting raised beds can do a quite a bit with the bucket system that you describe. It seems like it may even work for people that live in apartments or townhomes with sunny porches. Who would have thought that you could have your own vegetable garden virtually everywhere? :)
Your cabbage is lovely. I can tell that you put a lot of TLC into your plants. It is reflected in the quality! |
Gymgirl SE Houston (Hobby), TX (Zone 9a)
July 24, 2009 05:14 PM Post #6860669
| Kbumgar,
Thank your for your gracious comments!
I forgot to mention there's one other benefit to growing in the eBucket. If you look closely at that cabbage, you'll notice there are no holes. That's not a fluke in the pic. There truly was not ONE hole in that cabbage!
I think that because the plant is elevated in the bucket, and because of it's portability to be moved if attacked, controlling crawling buggies is easier. Snails have quite a ways to crawl up there, so chances of catching them in the act is much easier.
Linda |
stephanietx Fort Worth, TX (Zone 8a)
July 25, 2009 03:02 PM Post #6864002
| Ivyao~You can put several layers of newspaper down when you plant and then top with mulch. The newspapers will help serve as a weed block. The mulch will help tremendously, too.
We built raised beds this year. The deeper ones (18" tall) we put down a layer of cardboard, then topped with about 4"-6" of leaves, then we put our dirt in. Mulched it very heavily after planting. The only places we've seen grass growing is along the edges where we left a small gap in between the cardboard and the edge of the bed.
The shallower beds (8" tall), we just dug down a couple of inches after removing the grass. DH pulled out all the grass and weeds and sifted the dirt to remove any seeds. Then we mixed in a planting mixture of compost and other amendments. Topped heavily with mulch. We've had no grass or weeds in those areas.
This fall, we'll pull off the mulch, add amendments (mainly compost), top with several layers of newspaper, then cover with mulch of some kind, maybe pine bark, maybe hay. Then we'll turn it all in the spring and start planting! |
feldon30 Houston, TX (Zone 9a)
July 29, 2009 12:12 PM Post #6880209
| I would never do a single garden bed wider than 4 feet, and that is just because when I did a 5 foot bed even though I am very tall, I was unable to reach into the middle and tend to the plants without stepping into the bed, compacting the soil.
So each year, I have added a 4 x 16 bed and am up to 6 of those, and two 4 x 8 beds. So I'm up to 448 square feet. I wish I had more, but this is a manageable number.
I should add that as you are in Katy, TX, subject to nearly all the weather conditions that affect Houston, that what are you talking about, namely not buying vegetables at the grocery store, is called subsistence farming. At least to a limited scale (true subsistence farming means cows, pigs, chickens, etc. -- getting ALL your food from your own property). And I really think this will be extremely challenging in our climate. Gardening comes to a standstill from mid-July through mid-September. Our tomato season is frighteningly short.
Even if you set up a lot of space to garden, and grow as many different crops as you can, there will be months when you'll need to shop for veg at the grocery store. I would try to get the locally produced book by Dr. Bob Randall. The name of the book is unbelievably long, but it's a very good reference.
This message was edited Jul 29, 2009 11:16 AM |
Gymgirl SE Houston (Hobby), TX (Zone 9a)
July 29, 2009 01:00 PM Post #6880399
| Hey Feldon30,
You're right on point regarding the bed dimensions. I can access my small bed on only 3 sides, cause the back side is bordered by some small brush and trees. At 5 ft. wide it's too wide for me to reach across. I'm reconfiguring it this weekend to 4'x 8'or10', whichever gets me closest to the edge of the DH's precious St. Aug. grass without crossing over! |
HoneybeeNC Charlotte, NC (Zone 7b)
July 29, 2009 01:17 PM Post #6880468
| My poor old back will not even let me reach into my 4' wide bed anymore - so this winter I will be switching to double rows of about 2 1/2' each and adding drip irrigation down the center. |
kbumgar Bend, OR (Zone 5a)
July 29, 2009 01:52 PM Post #6880603
| Yeah, spacing is definitely a concern. I put in a 12' x 24' bed, though it has a 2' walkway down the middle, so I am still able to reach everything easily. In hindsight, I am wondering whether I would have been better off putting in lots of smaller beds, for example 4' x 6' beds.
It seems that the advantage of smaller beds as follows:
1) all plants can be easily accessed
2) easier to group symbiotic plants (e.g. tomatoes & basil)
3) better control over watering plants with different needs
On the other hand, a larger bed offers:
1) more planting area for small yards (no need to space out small boxes)
2) easier to maneuver for tilling soil between seasons
For those of you that have been experimenting with raised beds for years, what is your preference? Larger or smaller beds? |
stephanietx Fort Worth, TX (Zone 8a)
July 29, 2009 02:16 PM Post #6880697
| We did 3'W x 10'L beds this year. We also allowed room on all sides so that we could walk around each side because even at only 3' wide, we still can't reach all the way across the bed without straining. |
Gymgirl SE Houston (Hobby), TX (Zone 9a)
July 29, 2009 02:51 PM Post #6880840
| Since we're having this discussion, I'll ask if you all have bolted your sides together, or just anchored them with pegs or rebar? If not, why not? Does it matter except to maintain portability in case you need to move the bed in a hurry? |
stephanietx Fort Worth, TX (Zone 8a)
July 29, 2009 06:55 PM Post #6881937
| Our boards are screwed together.
Here's a pic that shows the basic frame of the beds. This particular bed is 18" high, although we're going to go to a height of only 8"-10" next year. I think we've decided that the three 18" high beds we have currently are going to but deconstructed down to just 8" high and we'll be able to make 3 additional beds with material we currently have.
This picture also shows you the weed patch of a backyard we have and why we need to convert it to all veggie growing space! LOL Click the image for an enlarged view.
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kbumgar Bend, OR (Zone 5a)
July 29, 2009 08:50 PM Post #6882524
| Those are really nice beds, StephanieTX! 8" - 10" does seem high enough, and it's great that you can use the wood that you already have to make new beds.
Re: weed patch - don't worry, I think we're all in the same boat! That's why our pictures all only show close ups of the garden plants! :) |
Gymgirl SE Houston (Hobby), TX (Zone 9a)
July 29, 2009 10:22 PM Post #6882936
| Steph, Thanks for posting that wonderful pic! I see which direction to go in now. I was blessed 'cause a house was gutted just a few blocks down from me, and I got to pick through all the old timber. I got several nice 2x12s, 1x10s, 1x8s, and a WHOLE buncha 2x4s, and several flat concrete blocks for either edging or stepping stones.
I can't wait for the weekend!
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stephanietx Fort Worth, TX (Zone 8a)
July 29, 2009 11:31 PM Post #6883257
| Linda~DH used exterior screws which are galvanized to reduce rust. He said if he were to do it again, he'd use an angle iron (a little "L" shaped thing) on the inside of the beds to hold them together.
You can see more pics of the building of the beds in my albums here: http://public.fotki.com/stephanietx/2009-garden-adventures/g... |
lizards_keep Colmesneil, TX (Zone 8b)
July 30, 2009 06:36 AM Post #6883831
| You would be surprised at what you can get out of a small area. This is our kitchen garden. It’s more function than form.  Click the image for an enlarged view.
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kbumgar Bend, OR (Zone 5a)
July 30, 2009 10:04 AM Post #6884394
| Wow, Stephanie! Your bean trellis in pics 22 - 24 is awesome! Do you have any pics of the beans climbing it? |
HoneybeeNC Charlotte, NC (Zone 7b)
July 30, 2009 11:50 AM Post #6884840
| Gymgirl - we have bamboo growing in a shady corner of our garden, so we cut lengths of it to use as stakes to hold-up 6" pine boards for our raised beds.
I have found 6" is deep enough for everything but things like carrots. There is heavy clay under the beds, which holds lots of moisture. The beds are filled with a mixture of potting soil, Black Kow Manure, worm castings, compost and anything else I have managed to lay my hands on. To fill beds with anything more than 6" would cost too much. |
annabelle790 Tucson, AZ (Zone 8b)
July 30, 2009 12:30 PM Post #6885011
| lizards_keep, that looks beautiful. How on earth do you manage to keep the weeds away? Here in AZ most all of the backyards are small and most of mine is taken up by a pool so I only have a 16'x8' section to use and it seems like I have to be out there every day weeding the grass that keeps coming through. My fingers hate me these days. |
Gymgirl SE Houston (Hobby), TX (Zone 9a)
July 30, 2009 12:46 PM Post #6885073
| Kbumgar,
Did you know that Stephanie's trellis actually PIVOTS front to back? Ask her about that! |
stephanietx Fort Worth, TX (Zone 8a)
July 30, 2009 01:42 PM Post #6885339
| LOL Linda! That's what happens when you're married to a man who has an engineering bent and loves to tinker, build, and 'tweak' things!!
Kbumgar~I do have pics of beans climbing it, but I'll have to post them later when I get home. Or, they're probably in the Spring Veggie Garden 2009 album at the link to my Fotki albums above. |
Gymgirl SE Houston (Hobby), TX (Zone 9a)
July 30, 2009 01:53 PM Post #6885392
| I wanna know how ya'll set up those web albums. I WANT ONE, too... |
stephanietx Fort Worth, TX (Zone 8a)
July 30, 2009 02:02 PM Post #6885423
| Linda, you go to the site you want to host your pics. I have 2 accounts, one at Fotki and one at Webshots. I have a Picassa album, but that's just the pics I post on my blogs. Most photo hosting sites have a free service, but you're limited to the amount of storage space. Then, you create your account and start uploading! |
Gymgirl SE Houston (Hobby), TX (Zone 9a)
July 30, 2009 02:28 PM Post #6885502
| Steph,
PICASSA just started hosting web albums. I'll set one up there. Thanks! |
lizards_keep Colmesneil, TX (Zone 8b)
July 31, 2009 02:14 AM Post #6888269
| annabelle790 … it’s called a shuffle hoe. As you shuffle it around it separates the roots from the top of the weed or grass just under the soil. It works very well. I can shuffle the area shown in about ten minutes. Do this two or three times a week and you shouldn’t have a weed problem.
Thanks for the compliment, that little plot isn’t high-tech but it will defiantly get the job done with little effort.
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annabelle790 Tucson, AZ (Zone 8b)
July 31, 2009 11:39 AM Post #6889453
| lizards_keep, I'm definately gonna have to get my hands on one of those, I just spent another 2 hours out there this morning weeding all the grass. |
lvyao Katy, TX
July 31, 2009 02:23 PM Post #6890048
| thanks for all the discussion! I am going for 2 4'x8' and 2 2'x8' raised bed, that is total 96 sqft. already got the lumber cut, will post here once it is done.
Feldon, I know the book you are talking about, it has the recommend planting calendar for houston area, my friend shared it with me, it is very useful. |
lvyao Katy, TX
July 31, 2009 02:29 PM Post #6890070
| Wow, Stephanie! Awesome pictures! Thanks for sharing. What do you use to make the trellis net? I might try it in my garden too. |
Gymgirl SE Houston (Hobby), TX (Zone 9a)
July 31, 2009 02:41 PM Post #6890108
| Steph,
You have just GOT to shoot some close-ups of that pivoting trellis, pretty please? From several angles, so we can make out the detail of how your DDDDDDH! made it.
Thanks!
Linda |
londa1022 Detroit, MI (Zone 6a)
July 31, 2009 03:35 PM Post #6890389
| This is a picture of my packman broccoli what happening to them? I did go and cut the tops off of some to see if I would get side shuts or get them to blossom. What else can I do?  Click the image for an enlarged view.
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Gymgirl SE Houston (Hobby), TX (Zone 9a)
July 31, 2009 03:42 PM Post #6890418
| Londa1022,
Your broccoli looks like it's about to flower and go to seed.
I watched all my broccoli make the same buttercup yellow blossom and then it threw out seed pods. It was my first time growing them. They made beautiful full heads of broccoli, but I didn't cut them right away.
I was so fascinated with how they were growing that I just "observed" them right past the picking stage and on into the seeding stage! |
londa1022 Detroit, MI (Zone 6a)
July 31, 2009 03:49 PM Post #6890442
| OH MY GOSH! it looks like I missed the boat huh? Is there anything else I can do? and is the same thing happening to my Lettuce also? and what in the world do I do with the seeds? can I use them next year and if so how do I prepare them for next year?  Click the image for an enlarged view.
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londa1022 Detroit, MI (Zone 6a)
July 31, 2009 03:52 PM Post #6890459
| I don't know if you are experienced or not, I'm not very experienced at all I'm going to upload a picture of my canteloupe because it's my first time with them also.  Click the image for an enlarged view.
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londa1022 Detroit, MI (Zone 6a)
July 31, 2009 03:55 PM Post #6890472
| this may be a better picture of my canteloupe as well as other things that I've planted.  Click the image for an enlarged view.
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stephanietx Fort Worth, TX (Zone 8a)
July 31, 2009 08:01 PM Post #6891531
| I have several pics of the trellis, Linda. I'll see if I can't put something together for you.
We used some kind of string we had on hand. I think DH said it was rot-proof string or something like that, so it's probably some kind of nylon based string.
Here's the pic of the beans climbing the trellis.
 Click the image for an enlarged view.
|
annabelle790 Tucson, AZ (Zone 8b)
August 01, 2009 10:30 AM Post #6893539
| Steph,
How big should the bean plants be when you start them on a trellis? |
stephanietx Fort Worth, TX (Zone 8a)
August 01, 2009 07:50 PM Post #6895366
| Well, we put the trellis just after they sprouted and were tall enough to thin. They figured out how to do the climbing themselves. I know some people put their trellises at planting time. I can tell you one thing, the sooner you do it, the better. |
feldon30 Houston, TX (Zone 9a)
August 03, 2009 12:27 PM Post #6901879
| I think 3 by 12 is an ideal garden bed size. Much less bending over. |