It rained last week and the weather is still very cold, as it's still winter, and daily temperatures range from 3-18 degrees Celcius in my area.
However, since mid-July the peach trees have been blooming really nicely. Last year my harvest from the trees was tiny and I hope that this year we'll get enough fruit to eat, make jam and some preserves.
The rest of the vegetable crops are also doing well. We have spinach, Chinese cabbage, kale, different types of onions, leeks, peas, beetroot, carrots, lettuce and herbs growing well.
The soil is also prepared to plant more seeds and to transplant seedlings. So unless something drastic happens, we are going to have a bumper crop this Spring. I'm happy, because it puts me on the path to provide a greater percentage of our food - something that was heavily disrupted by the drought last year.
This year I'm also planning to grow tomatoes and cabbages; crops that I have previous struggled with in the past. During the years/seasons when I've gotten the crop right, we have enjoyed huge harvests that lasted us for months on end. Unfortunately there have been years where the tomatoes were damaged by blight or the environment was too dry to allow cabbage to do well. I'm optimistic this will not be the case this year.
A writer's gardening adventures in Johannesburg, a city in South Africa, and Phokeng, a rural village in the North West Province of South Africa
Showing posts with label growing fruit. Show all posts
Showing posts with label growing fruit. Show all posts
Monday, August 1, 2016
Sunday, April 20, 2014
Q Is For Questions
In the end, I decided to use this opportunity to consolidate some of the questions that I've been asked since I started growing our food in Phokeng.
Q: You seem to know quite a lot about growing vegetables. How did you become so knowledgeable?
A: Let's annihilate that myth immediately: I'm learning as I go along and spend hours reading up on vegetables and fruit I want to grow. I've also made big mistakes that cost me a whole season's harvest of the affected vegetable (e.g. a whole season of lettuce, broccoli and cauliflower that bolted in 2012 because I'd just moved back here after more than 25 years away and hadn't realised how hot it could get. And yes, the seed pack said I could plant them during that period!).
However, I've found that if you take care of your soil and keep your plants well-hydrated, they are much kinder to you. So yeah, some of them thrive despite my attempts to kill them out of ignorance. Except for sage, poor thing.
Q: How do you decide which vegetables and herbs to grow?
A: I started out growing vegetables that were familiar with me and whose seeds I could find in the supermarkets: cabbage, onion, spinach, beetroot, tomatoes, pumpkin etc. Some were harder to grow than others (e.g cabbage), others started out well and then I killed them with care (e.g. sage), others delivered bumper crops at the beginning and but now plants seem prone to disease (e.g tomato) while others are reliable producers (spinach and beetroot).
The problems I encountered encouraged me to learn more about growing vegetables and herbs in my region, and the information I learnt made me reconsider my planting strategy. Now I grow my vegetables based on these considerations:
1. Plant what we eat, eat what we grow - Introducing new-to-us vegetables is a good thing, but I also need to provide a solid supply of vegetables and herbs that we like. This ensures that we have a reliable food supply that is guaranteed to be consumed.
2. Focus on perennial and self-seeders - I'm increasing my ratio of these types of plants because it means that we will have consistent produce with less work and expense buying seeds.
3. Grow drought and disease tolerant plants- This is a semi-arid region with baking hot summers and I need plants that can survive that. I also need plants that can provide shade for the more sensitive crops.
Then there are the plants that we eat often and in large quantities, but the problem is that they are prone to disease (e.g. cabbage and tomatoes). Right now they remain my indulgence crops, just in case we succeed in getting a good harvest. But they have been relegated to foods I prefer to get in large quantities from local suppliers. I then process and freeze them, with fresh tomatoes from the garden just being served as salads.
Q: What proportion of your food is from the garden at this stage?
A: I don't know. I get all my herbs from the garden. On Saturday I harvested enough sweet potatoes to last our family 3-4 months and most of our meals have at least three vegetables from the garden. But I still buy more vegetables than I like.
I hope that this post answers some of your questions, but if you have more, please feel free to ask either in the comments section or by emailing me.
Sunday, February 23, 2014
Another Weekend Of Planting Fruit Trees And Beans
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This batch of bean plantings is doing well |
No need to water the garden because nature is doing it for me, and the quiet gives me a chance to write and schedule blog posts for the A-Z Challenge,which is taking place in April. Twenty posts down, six more to go:-)
I also did a bit of planting.
1. A guy (I didn't know) from the village brought me three saplings for banana, pawpaw and avocado. Apparently a look at my garden told him the saplings belong there. He then helped me plant them. So I have more fruit trees adding to my small orchard.
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