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First Pea has Emerged!

It rained for a good part of the day here so was not able to get much planting done. Although the "purple bean" garden is ready to be planted (two rows of bales just line the peas) and I was able to get soaker hoses over all the bales. However, I was really excited to see the first pea emerge!

The SE Garden is Ready!

This is the second year with this garden and while it produced an okay crop I wanted to take the extra time to improve the soil! This is a long and narrow garden! My plan this year is to plant grain sorghum (for making gluten free flour), chick peas (also for making gluten free flour), sun flowers, and sugar beets (I thought it would be fun to try to make my own sugar).

Above is what it looked like before I started.

The town I live in has a compost pile so I made two trips!

When are the Bales Ready to Plant In?

A challenge with planting in bales, you do not want to plant your seeds or plants until the conditioning process is done! If you plant too early and the bale heats back up then your plants will almost certainly die. Keeping them damp is key. If they dry out then the decomposition process stops and starts again once they get wet again. Using a compost thermometer is a good way to monitor their temperature and you do not want to plant until the bales are consistently below 80 degrees F. However, another way to know, without the use of a thermometer is to wait until mushrooms grows.

Peas Are Planted

The peas are finally planted in the bales! In earlier articles I covered the steps to conditioning the bales but now that they are ready planting has commenced!

Peas are one of the first crops I plant with potatoes being first. Both are cooler weather plants and both are somewhat frost tolerant.

Peas need something to crawl up and I use what I have on hand from a prior life, t-posts and cattle panels. Wanting to save myself some work I have a rows of bales right next to each other, that way I can have one panel that the plants can grow up from either side.

Three Sisters Garden is Planned Out

In three of my gardens I use a Native American technique known as the three sisters. It was a form of companion gardening and crop rotation where corn, squash, and beans are planted together. The beans add nitrogen to the soil while the corn and pumpkins use nitrogen. The idea is to use pole beans which will use the corn plant as a pole, the beans can also help anchor the corn down! The pumpkins grow and their leaves form a natural mulch that both shades out weeds and the ground from the hot sun thereby helping with soil retention.

Ready to Plant Peas

I was hoping to actually plant peas today but mother nature sent us some rain. Not going to complain as the ground was getting a bit dry. However, I was able to get the panels up for the peas to climb! That is definitely the most labor intensive part of the project!

Three Sisters Garden Is Tilled!

Today's project was to get Garden #1 cleaned up (it was a bale garden last year) and tilled. So I gathered up what was left of last years bales and put them on the pile (added some nitrogen) so they could compost for a couple of weeks and then went a head and got them tilled. I will post later what a "Three Sisters Garden" means but this will be the garden that I plant my pop corn, "big" pumpkins, and beans in!

The Microbes are Happy!

In 2017 the neighbor cut down a grove of trees to make room for a new garage, the company he hired to do the job ran all the trees through a chipping machine. Since I can never seem to get my hands on enough organic material I walked over and asked if they would mind dumping some on my land. They asked me how much I wanted and I told them as much as I could get my grubby little hands on! It was somewhat humorous (at least I thought it was) that they would ask after every five loads or so if I was still okay with them bringing more and I assured them that I was quite happy!

One Bale Garden Completely Set-Up for Planting Year 2020

Bales are laid out, soaker hoses in place, nitrogen applied, and heavy mulching between the bales done! I will be posting photos of the entire project at a later time. Next steps is to water daily, adding more fertilizer, and putting up wire panels for the beans, peas, and other vine plants to grow on!

Following Directions Game

Who is up for a following directions game! A fun game to play while you are stuck at home and you can't start your garden yet!

I promise it is fun!

Please read these instructions in their entirety before starting!

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