A “MASTER GARDENER?” – NOT SOME YEARS!

in #homesteading7 years ago (edited)

Gardening, like a lot of things in life, can be tough!


One of the most important things that you need to have a good garden is time, and this is where @papa-pepper failed this year.

During the planting season, I was gone far too often for far too long working for me to be able to invest the time in my garden that I should have.


@papa-pepper weed-whacking in the rain in Missouri three months ago rather than planting and weeding my garden.


Many pepper seeds got started, and then shriveled up and died. Most of the seeds that I had wanted to plant never made it to the soil. To make matters worse, I did not control the weeds like I should have.

BACKGROUND


Over a year and a half ago, the @papa-pepper tribe moved to Arkansas from Wisconsin. Since the move, we have been staying in a guest house. Recently, we finally bought some land and now we are in the process of clearing a house site and drawling up some plans for building. Eventually, our goal is to move down on that land, raise some animals, have some gardens, and create a permaculture food forest. But… for now, life goes on.

Obviously we enjoy providing what we can for our family and are steadily moving towards a more and more self-sufficient lifestyle, which includes gardening. While we wait to move forward on our land, life goes on and people get hungry. Late last spring, a neighbor told us that we could use his old garden if we wanted to grow some food. “Great!” I thought, and asked where it was. When he pointed to it, is was pretty much a yard.

There may have been some remnants of a few old squash hills and some mounds that seeds had nce been planted in, but was covered in solid Bermuda Grass. Still excited about the opportunity, I bought some cattle panels and T-posts, and covered the area in mulch, adding some top soil from in the woods in the places that I was going to plant.

Last year, all of my hard work paid off. The garden looked amazing, I fought the Bermuda Grass back every time it popped up and I was winning that war, and a we harvested a lot of fresh produce for the family. All was well.

Except for losing control of one area that I let a neighbor boy grow some Pumpkins for his 4H project, the garden looked great. Please note that when I mention “losing control” I do not speak of sharing the area that I was gardening in, I am more than fine with that. I mean that his standard of keeping the weeds and Bermuda Grass out were not on the same level as mine.

Although some weeds creeping in from one of the corners, the garden looked great and I did a nice looking garden progress report a year ago when my garden was producing like crazy.

Even nine months ago when I did my "State of the Garden" report the place was still doing great and I was keeping things under control... Ahh, the good old days.

SAME GARDEN – DIFFERENT YEAR


This year, I knew that it was going to be our last using that space as a garden. I still had high hopes of using it to its fullest this year, but those hopes never fully manifested themselves in reality. You can view the disaster first hand in this video.

In case you are wondering who that little-pepper is with me in the video, it is "Buddy Pepper" our newest little one. He's a cute little guy and two months old already. Sometimes, he even smiles when I talk to him.

But, back to the "garden" as some would still be inclined to call it. The wild mess of random plants formerly known as my garden is alive and well... well, it's alive anyway and some things are growing.

Deep inside that thicket, there are still some edibles fighting for survival. They fall into two general categories. The first kind is the planted ones. These are represented by the plants that somehow grew from the very few seeds and seedlings that I actually planted in the garden area this spring.

The second kind of edible plants growing in "that wild, fenced in section of yard" are the volunteers. These wonderful producers have sprung up from the seeds of plants that produced on their own in those areas last year. Whether some ripe seeds made their way to the soil on their own or some overripe fruit fell to the earth, either way they have given new life to my garden in the form of volunteer garden plants.

THE PLANTED PLANTS


Yes, back during my "high hopes for this year's garden" period earlier this year, I actually got some seeds into the earth. If you've been around for a bit, you may remember my soil drills post from a while back featuring the Daikon Radishes like the one above that I planted, but I got a few other seeds in too.


Kale

The Kale did excellent and was doing great. We ate a few dishes of it, but did not make any "Kale Chips" yet. Even before we left to Texas those little white butterflies were hard at work beating us to eating it. I think that soon I will be pulling it up as hog feed, so at least it won't go to waste. I at least have the intentions of planting a fall crop of something it its place. We will see and time will tell.


Dipper Gourds

I finally got around to planting a few of the more "useful" gourds that I have been meaning to for years now. This plant is one of the six "Dipper Gourd" plants that I got in. I think it may be the only one that survived, but, thankfully it is hard at work producing. When the gourds fully form and dry, people cut them to turn them into "dippers" or ladles. Hopefully we can do that this year.


Birdhouse Gourds

The "Birdhouse Gourds" are another interesting gourd that can be very useful when dried. Just by cutting a hole in the front of the large bottom section and emptying the dried seeds and such out of the inside you can make a birdhouse that the birds will actually use. It can be a simple and fun project to make with children, and painting them is also an option. I only planted one hill of them, but they look like they are going to do amazing and we should wind up with a great harvest of them. I think we will have one for each of the @little-peppers and hopefully some to share with the neighbor children too.


Tomatoes

We did get a few volunteer Tomato plants as well, but at least five that I planted still exist, at least last I knew. Thankfully the ripe red fruit will stick out to the eye even when it is buried in a thick forest of green. Situations like this really make me look forward to starting fresh on my own land next year.


Popcorn

We first grew our own popcorn from seed last year. We really enjoyed making our own butter and popping our popcorn last year, but we did not eat it all.


Red-Pepper making butter.

We saved some of the seeds for planting, and even gave some away to others like @matthewtiii and his family. Back up in Wisconsin there was a saying about corn where the rule of thumb was "Knee high by the 4th of July!" It is so different growing it down here, since our popcorn plants were taller than me by the 4th of July! Now, they are already drying on the stalk and we will be harvesting them any day now.


Red Chinese Noodle Beans

These are my new favorite garden plant for many reasons and I even did the first ever Steemit Garden Seed Giveaway with some of my seeds from last year. Some steemians like @robrigo, @cryptoiskey, and @jed78 took advantage of my offer and got some seeds of their own for free from me. No matter how hard I fail at gardening in the future (and I certainly hope that I don't) I will always be planting some of these. The pest resistance is amazing, they do great in the heat, and the harvests are incredible. They are producing great right now and most likely will for months to come.


Cucumbers

Who doesn't love a fresh cucumber straight from the garden? Well, even if you don't, we do! This year, we are even growing a Cucumber plant. Yes, one. Don't ask... I'm not sure. Anyway, we are happy to have our plant and it does produce.

Last year we had harvests like that. Once, I went to process the harvest and found out that I had 282 Cucumbers to deal with. I think right now we have a few to deal with, but we are happy about them anyway.

We won't be putting up massive amounts of jars for the winter this year, but we will still be eating fresh and healthy, and getting a return on my limited investment.


Peppers

Thankfully, @papa-pepper did get a few peppers planted. If he hadn't, he'd kind of just be a papa, right? The ones above are one of the largest varieties that I grow, the "Big Jim." They can grow over a foot long and have been a tasty favorite of mine for years.

I've got a few Jalapenos growing in this garden too, but, honestly, that is about it. Some more fiery ones are already planted on the land, but up in this "garden" I've just got a few plants. In Wisconsin, often my garden would be about 75% pepper plants with a few other edibles mixed in. When you wind up with as many @little-peppers as I have, you eventually switch to trying to grow more "real food."


Hops

One of my brothers up in Wisconsin runs the High Hoppage webpage and sent down some hops rhizomes with @grandpa-pepper earlier this year. This year he sent me some Sterling and Golding varieties. I already had some Cascade and Chinook varieties that he had given me the previous year, so now I have quite a few kinds. The ones from last year are really taking off and producing. Since they are useful for more than just homebrew, we will have a few interesting things that we plan on using them for.


Propagated Fig Trees

Some of my propagated plants are still doing great too. Last year I began preparing a lot of food plants for out land. I still have to find them some permanent homes on our property, but to see them alive and well is a blessing. These little figs are growing on a tiny fig tree right now. Last year it was just part of a branch that I cut off of another tree. Amazing! To learn more about the process, you can check out my Guide to Plant Propagation.

With just a little know-how, time, and skill, you can really get a lot of new plants for free. Since many food bearing plants propagate easily, and since we need to eat food, propagating plants as a hobby just makes sense to me.

THE VOLUNTEER PLANTS


To fill in all the blanks that I left in my lame attempt at planting a garden, many volunteer garden plants sprung up to help box the weeds out. Personally, I think that any plant that will volunteer to come back the next year is a great plant to have. Here are a few of the ones this year.

Passionfruit

Yeah, this vine is a perennial anyway, and as @mericanhomestead will testify to, it is probably not a good idea to plant them in your garden. Some would even call them invasive. Pretty much, once they get established (which may just mean planted) they will start popping up everywhere.

I knew that this would only be a temporary garden for me, so I was not too concerned with their invasive nature. I was mostly just seeing if I could propagate them successfully. Thankfully, it worked. The ones that grew back this year were grown from cuttings last year.

They have done very well and are producing a great crop this year, so we are happy about that. Since they came up everywhere on their own, I'm categorizing them as a volunteer.


Tomatillos

These guys have a great reputation for producing volunteers. Any fruit that is allowed to fall to the earth has a huge potential of coming back as a bunch of seedlings the next year. Up in Wisconsin, I would get a lot of volunteer Tomatillos and we are still being blessed with them down here.

Since Tomatillos are one of the main ingredients in Salsa Verde, they are a staple crop for us. I am so glad to have some growing, even though I did not plant any this year. I like to use them in my Green Ghost Salsa as pictured above, which features both the Tomatillo and the Ghost Pepper.


Green Beans

The Japanese Beetles like to eat these plants a whole lot more that the Chinese Noodle Beans, so we highly prefer the Noodle Beans as a crop, but if some Pole Green Beans want to volunteer to feed my family, then we will let them. They are currently fighting it out with the Passionfruit as they both produce right now.


Ground Cherries

Much like the Tomatillos, the Ground Cherries are also very good at coming back year after year on their own, even though they are not a perennial. They tropical-tasting little paper-husked garden treats are a real pleasure to grow and eat, and when they reseed themselves, it makes the whole seed-saving process a lot easier.

If you are unfamiliar with this plant, you can check out my Garden Plant Spotlight on it.


Amaranth

Amaranth is one of those grains that is not as well known to some people because it is not wheat. Once a certain grain becomes popular and commercialized, like wheat and corn have, many others take a back seat, and Amaranth is one of those. We have been experimenting with growing some of our own grains for years now, and we have a few beautiful Amaranth volunteers growing this year. The leaves are also very tasty, so they are a great dual-purpose plant, since you can at more thatn just one part of them.


Kiwanos

If you saw anything about my spontaneous tracking down of @jed78 to put an end to his nine month steemit absence, then you may have already heard that these can take over a greenhouse. The Kiwano is also known as the African Horned Melon, and it looks like this when ripe.

It is a peculiar food to say the least, but we really like them and grew them last year, hence the volunteers this year. In the first photo here, they are mixed in with the Hops and Birdhouse Gourds, but they have volunteered and are hard at work growing. I did a Garden Plant Spotlight on the Kiwano too if you want to learn more.

WHAT HAVE WE LEARNED?


With gardening, homesteading, parenting, or so many other things in life, often our presence is necessary to truly have something work out or reach its full potential. Sure, a little effort may be able to get you a little return on your investment, and sometimes blessings just "volunteer" to appear in your life, but still, hard work and dedication are often necessary.

Whether it is gardening, life in general, or trying to make things work out for you on steemit, a half-hearted attempt will often produce a sub-par result. I hope to never have another garden that looks like this, but even more so, I don't want a marriage or a family that looks like this. I plan on being there and investing in my wife and children, and hopefully in the garden too. How about you?

As always, I'm @papa-pepper and here's the proof:


proof-of-a-gardener-but-not-a-master



Until next time…

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Great post papa-pepper, youve teaching me slot as usaul. I have a friend who seems to be at the brink of death who needs all the help he can get. As a man to man what can i tell him? I'm gonna look for him tomorrow may even cook something for him. Your post is really great though, it teaches faith and do what you must and continue fighting for your family.

Your friend is dying?

His situation is horrible. Please i humbley ask you to view my post : https://steemit.com/help/@johnlue/help-help-usd5000-needed-to-help-my-friend-who-is-dieing-from-chronic-lupus
He doesn't have help at all so it just break me down man

Glad to see such ambitious people who shares there awesome hobbies over this amazing platform. Seeing your post and depth of knowledge, I'm sure you will achieve too much from Steemit. Awesome content man! And yeah, hope your wishes come true.

Follow me for birds! 💛

No wonder you haven't had the time to spend on the patch since you are always so busy, but I'm surprised how many different vegetables and fruits you have been growing and still keeping them up, from the video it seemed like such a small patch but still so much variety.

I'm glad he responds to you with more than just the expression in the picture of you two together.

Sometimes, he even smiles when I talk to him.

Yes, he likes to hear my voice.

@papa-pepper you are doing great and can make a great farmer. Your garden looks awesome and the plants look great too. Great families need good and healthy food, @papa-pepper tribe doing good things-keep it up and greetings to the family.

We all need good healthy food! Thanks @charles1!

I agree my health conscious buddy-keep it up and make the @papa-pepper tribe always healthy.

That looks like paradise. Once my back heals and I finish my first album, I want to get into growing vegetables and invite all my friends who like he idea of self sustainability to start actually doing it. Totally awesome pepper papa

Thanks. Best wishes on the back and the album.

Nice post @papa-pepper. It makes me to maintain my garden neatly.For a good healthy food we should first take care of our garden. Thanks for sharing.

Awesome garden, such as inspiration.

You Did it great...

Looks like how all the great veggies might grow and how much effort you had on it. Great to see such a benefits of gardening

Nice to see how much they grow even without a lot of effort. We will see what the full harvest brings.

Good job

Dang! That's awesome! Thats a good crop you have!

We currently have Tomatoes, Cucumber (that we just made 15 jars of pickles with), Squash, Okra, Jalapenos, and Zucchini. Next year we want to broaden that to more peppers, Radishes, Beets, Corn, and whatever else catches our eye!

Sounds like you're doing it great!

wow.. you have done an amazing job.. yes need to spend some quality time in the garden but the final result is pleasing.
thanks

It still worked out, even with the mess.

Great job putting this together! Glad to see the update. Steem On brother!

I have behind on mine. I might have something to harvest when I return home.

Hopefully so, I sure did when I got back.

Looks better than my garden.

The bushy tailed rodents and the long eared rodents have really done a number. They must be starving.

Had corn, 5 feet tall just starting to put on ears, and the rodents ate through the stocks to get at the tiny fruits.

Got lots of tomatoe and tomatillo plants, but the creatures eat every fruit, while they are green and small.

Out here in the dessert, whatever I grow must be like a 5 course meal compared to the peas porridge they usually eat.

Maybe I will find some bird wire to build a cage, sorta like a green house, but without the glass.

Maybe switch to eating the rodents this year and then garden again next year.

Actually lol-ed at the thought of this. Hah! Fresh rodents for breakfast lunch and dinner!

I basically have a squirrel city in my yard that would devour all things edible or not. I built 2 raised beds that are covered up with chicken wire- one is like a coffin and the other is like a cage (sounds grim I know) but I have not had a single loss since switching to these beds.

Yep, that's the plan, just need more wire.

Interesting post @papa-pepper. iInteresting post, i will see continue about you..help me about this..thank you will see continue about you..help me about this..thank you

Not only a green thumb, but a green hand!
Them fresh produce, can i have some? Maybe kale chips? :)

nice post.. thank you for sharing

Holy Crap man! That's a crazy assortment of crops!

Too bad about not having the time to tend to it this year... Gardens are a full time job, you really have to commit to them and the rewards will be plenty. If you neglect...well.. the result is apparent haha.

Since I moved, I've mainly grown tomatoes in pots bc I have zero garden space. Just a driveway. Next year, I'm purchasing a few giant rubbermaid bins so that I have a sort of mobile garden i can switch around each year depending on what I want to try out.

Next year, I'm thinking

  • Lettuce (bc I make a lot of salads!)
  • Onions
  • Garlic
  • Chives
  • of course cherry Tomatoes
  • and then I might try cucumbers
  • the last time I tried to grow bell peppers it worked out terribly. (may try again if i get garden crazy!)

My problem these past 2 years has been that plants just don't seem to do that well unless they are actually in the ground, which is not really an option for me :(

At least you are still trying, without that, you would not stand a chance. I usually try to go with slightly less sun and more mulch for container plants, so they don't dry up as easily.

Ya, i like to have a few plants around. I'm also one of those ppl who talks to mine lol...

Interesting idea, i never though of less sun as being a good thing, it does make some sense tho. One of my plants this year even after a super rain seems to be wilting a bit if I ease up on the watering. It also gets the most sunlight... dots are connecting.

I suppose this might also help the soil stay a bit more damp/moist.

Man, This is the great life the city people are missing <3 Simply Amazing! And that kid is going to be a wonderful human being in the future!!!

Your garden is still way better than mine will ever be.

And I'm sure when you plant on your own land, your garden will be spectacular.

Great post if you like chilli check out my chilli update a few days ago, thanks mike

I agree that I need to do something to grow something in the garden!
I grow zucchini, cucumber, potatoes and tomatoes...
Not in large numbers, but for the sake of pleasure...

The garden is looking healthy and vibrant! I especially like the Kale - awesome stuff. I grow it in the garden here - its a nice hardy plant with load of nutrients. Great for adding to a green smoothy. Keep steemin ;)
kale on white bg   Google Search.png

Gotta love the kale!

Great post papa-pepper

Damn those are some nice size veggies there man! You have the green thumb and the pictures to prove it! Thanks for sharing

My dad said I can use some of his land to farm, I should do that next summer. You got some cute kids

You REALLY REALLY should!

I'll even mail you free seeds!

Great stuff here. I'll apply your comments here and see how it geos. :)

You are really great @papa-pepper !
You have done the best things.
👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍
I found you are energetic and initiative guy.
I love farming and gardening .
Every vegetables your pictured looks organic and hygienic.
I think they (plant and seeds) missed your care this year.
M too interested on farming on garden !
👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍
Really inspiring post !
Really inspiring post .
Really Inspiring post !

They did miss me, and I missed them too! Thanks @akkha!

Yes ! They really missed you !!
Thank you !

I just posted one post ! You may have suggestion for me. I have mentioned you @papa-pepper .

well the neighbour boy is also learning. at leasthe can look to you for guidance.

When you love nature well, she is generous in her love back, and you are obviously a great Mother Nature lover! Beautiful.
I know I've said it before but I am a big fan of yours!

Just seeing these photos of different plants and harvests made me feel happy-happy. But LOL, growing and caring them in reality would be so-so difficult for most of us computer workers!

@papa-pepper - I used to have a garden with a weed patch of clover in the middle of it. I figured out that when the rabbits would come to eat, they would just eat the clover because they preferred the weeds over my veggies! Though, because of lack of upkeep, the potato bugs destroyed the potatoes. Hand picking a lot of potato plants is too hard, better to just grow a few potato plants if you grow them, that's what I think. A lot of other crops do just fine if you weed it.

@papa-pepper, I have seen blogs by you on animal kingdom and now the vegetable kingdom beckons 😊👌.
I am amazed by your zest for life and everything around, the crawlers, the slitherers, the veggies. We don't have many of those veggies in India, like Kiwano or tomatillos or hops or red Chinese noodle beans. May be our climate is not suitable for growing those vegetables here. So with your garden being set up this year, I am sure we can look forward to many more plants blogs coming up soon in steemit 😊
Red Amaranth is extremely tasty and nutritious too. I love that very much. And bitter gourd is my favorite too.
Thanks for your post. I enjoyed it thoroughly.

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You are the only one person I have seen in my life who has grown so many things in his garden. It requires a lot of hard work and care. Mother nature will be proud of you and so it blesses you with the best fruits and vegetables. I really loved your garden.

Hey @papa-pepper, looking thru some old photos, I did pretty well with those Noodle beans, I only planted around six or seven plants, and got a pretty good harvest. Ill post some follow up pics soon! great post as usual!

Cool. I only have 6 or 7 this year, and they are producing an impressive amount.

Great families need good and healthy food.@ridoykhan

Great post @ papa-pepper. You are 100% correct, everything in our life requires full attention to get utmost results.

@papa-pepper can i contact you on private?thanks

Thanks for this post. It help me understand why my husband spend many hrs. In the garden. The importance of tending to the garden. Very well explain. Enjoy hearing and seeing the picture of the kids. Enjoy the harvest .

Glad you understand now. He's hard at work.

Wow @papa-pepper quite a lot of different varieties out there! But big time to clean that area up mate!
I would suggest that you build up a green house just like you saw on my post last time, you will no longer get this problem even if you are away for some time!
Cheers
@progressivechef

I enjoyed this posting for the content as well as the life lessons you are learning and sharing, nice pics too.

I'd say you're close to a master. Anyone who puts in the effort on the path to self-sustainability and is able to provide food (any amount) for his/her family from that is on the right path. Your harvest over time is great. I grow in smaller hydroponic garden systems since I don't have land yet, but I am always proud knowing a big part of what we eat is home-grown. Great work!

Thank you for the encouragement.

You are your pepper family are inspiring. We too are working on preparing land for a house to be built. We are all ready to go, now we are just waiting for Winter to hit, then we will hire the builder because we know it will save us $10K-$15K in building costs if we hire the company that will build the house in the winter, we will get a huge discount and be one of the first houses built once winter breaks. Roofers are the best to hire in the winter too, if you need a new roof (Anyone out there looking to save money on a roof, hire in the winter months) I also want to point out that only applies if you are in places where construction pretty much stops because of snow, ice and cold.

And now I understand your user name Papa!

Wow - you are truly a man of many talents - me on the other hand has no green fingers - I tend to kill plants, so that is why I stick to succulents

This is so great! You have so many vegs and fruits, this is a vegan paradise! A few years ago we cultivated a community garden, but we had to travel a lot, occasionally 50 km back and forth. We had tomatoes, cucumber, squash, zucchini, etc. There are many good experiences, for example once we pulled out a big carrot together, as in the Russian folk tale. That was sooo funny, when the carrot came out, and we all fell on each other or our butts :))))

_9157840-001.JPG

And then Garfield, the cat was appointed to be a guardian of the harvested vegs:

_9157825.JPG

And we had sooo big squashes:

_9087703-001.JPG

Now I have the opportunity again for gardening, not 25 but 300 km away on the other side of the country, which is Miskolc! :)))I spend most of my time there. I have some recent posts: "Daily report from our garden"
One of them: https://steemit.com/gardening/@kalemandra/daily-report-from-our-garden-7-hazelnut-the-first-sour-cherries-zucchini-waterdrops-flowers-invasive-weed-bee

I'll check it out.

That's a month- old post, because I haven't posted about gardening since that :)))
But the tomatoes are growing and ripening. Some of them are as big as a smaller grapefruit.

These pictures have pointed me to your blog. Have to check it out as you seem to be having a lot of fun!

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