Showing posts with label Bed preparation. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bed preparation. Show all posts

Friday, March 1, 2013

Crop rotation and companion planting for Potager Y 2013 season...

Weather is becoming more pleasant these days...
In the mornings, the thermometer dips to about 1 to 2 degrees...
The mercury then shoots up to about 10 degrees on a nice, fine day...


Yes, it is time to start some seeds...
Corn, peanuts, soy beans, bitter gourd, pumpkin, okra, long beans, winged beans, loofa, and cucumber comes to mind...

I have been fooling around with the garden for about 6 or 7 years now...
Each year, I have tried my hand in crop rotation and companion planting...
Lots of failures, some successes, but always lots of fun...

Through fooling around with the plants, I have sort of, arrived at a nice combination of plants to rotate... 

First, a little explanation on the physical attributes of the potager...
The size of the whole plot is about 260 square meters...
The left side is sloping, and is filled with fruit trees... 
The right side is flat, and this forms the main part of the vegetable garden...

If you'd click on the image above (not to scale, of course, considering the amateur in me), you can see that our potager is divided into 4 sections...
The orientation is that, the far end is the south...

For practical purposes, we label the sections South-West (purple), South-East (red), North-East (green), and North-West (orange)...
Between the East (left side) sections and the West (right side) sections, we have a wide walk path whereby a wheelbarrow can easily pass through...

Each section has 6 vegetable beds (or its equivalent, size-wise)...
Between the vegetable beds, we have a path to walk on while working on the plants...
Each vegetable bed is about one meter by two meters...
And, all of them manually dug up by yours truly...

The two western sections are very nicely sliced up, with 6 beds each...
The NE section has 5 beds, and the size is approximately equivalent to that of the 6 beds...
The SE section has 3 beds, each about one meter by four meters...

In the center of the potager lies the permanent bed...
We plant asparagus, Chinese chives, myoga ginger, saffron, and wild strawberries....
These plants are not rotated... 

The arrangement above provides the foundation to 'double' rotate the crops on a 3 or 5-year cycle, depending on the type of crops...
Specifically, asters and mustard greens run on a 3-year rotation while the rest, 5 years.
And 'double' rotation in the sense that, crops rotate along the 4 sections, and within each section, we rotate the crops amongst the vegetable beds...
Quite a bit like the earth rotating around the sun, and at the same time, the moon rotating around the earth?

I have grouped and combined the crops as follows, roughly based on their 'families'...

SW section: Beans (Peanut, soy bean, snap pea, fava bean) and Asters (Spinach, swiss chard, 'makchoy', lettuce, chrysanthemum)

SE section:  Nightshades (Tomato, eggplant, potato, chilli) and Greens (Komatsu-na, shangtung-sai, mamba, broccoli, cauliflower, cabbage, chingen-sai)

NW section: Grass (Corn), Gourds (Cucumber, loofa, pumpkin, zucchini), and Greens (Kale, rocket, vitamin-na, aku-sai, ta-sai, radish)

NE section: Roots (Onion, carrot, garlic), and 'mixed', for crops that belong to different families (Amaranth, basil, kangkong, moroeya, malabar spinach, okra)

Along with these plants, we have cosmos, marigold, zinnia, borage, Korean perrilla, red and green shiso everywhere, coming in as companions and magnets for beneficial insects.
All of these plants self-seed, except the cosmos, which I hope will do likewise soon...

Each year, the plants are rotated anti-clockwise...
And within each section, I rotate the plants as I see fit (potatoes and beans are good examples)...

Up until now, I have planned the crops on the basis of two planting seasons (spring and autumn)...
After a few tries, I realize that the autumn crops have too little time to gain sufficient size to withstand the cold...
So, this year, I am going to plant as if we have only one planting season (spring, that is)...

In another part of the property, which is not in the picture, we plant long beans, winged beans, watermelon, Japanese yam, sweet potatoes, and more of tomatoes, eggplants, pumpkins, bitter gourd, and loofa.... 
 
And the fruits... perhaps on another post?

Wednesday, March 17, 2010

Vegetable bed preparation

Did some weeding and tilling in the vegetable garden to prepare for spring planting...
The soils is still cold but the weeds are having a head-start already.
So, need to remove them before they get too big.
Am putting up a boundary for all the beds with materials such as planks.
The idea of the boundary, slightly raised higher than the soil levels, is to provide some space to do mulching with dry leaves.
The raised boundary-planks is also intended to give the leaves some protection from the winds, which can be quite strong in the spring.
But oops! While working on the soil, I inadvertently woke up a couple of frogs that were probably hibernating in the soil.
They seemed a bit agitated as they hopped away from the intruder.
Sorrrreeeee...
Managed to snap some shots after they settled down...
This one found its space under one of the planks.
We thought it was a 'tono sama gaeru' (literally, the 'king of frogs') due to its color and patterns.
Apparently, they take on the color of the surroundings, camouflaging...
But from the same vicinity came this equally cute little one...
It was hopping away from me, profusely... until it settled upon some dry twigs near a bush.
My missus is particularly fond of this 'ama gaeru' (rain frog).
But, how come this cutie is green while the other, light brown... beats me...
Harvested some red and white radishes...
They mature in about three weeks and are easy to grow.
Real crunchy and sweet they are...
And a purple cauliflower as well...
They lose their color when we boil them.
Looks quite nice but I think they taste just about the same as the white ones.

Wednesday, October 12, 2005

BROKEN PIPE, COW DUNG, & SMELLY BODY

Had quite a handful to do in the garden over the weekend...

Counted the trees that need pruning...

Big trees of up to three meters... about 40...

Smaller trees of about one meter... about 30...

But that can wait a while...

In front of the terrace is a sizeable tract of azaleas...

My better half wants to make a Herb Garden out of it...

So the honor fell on the shoulders of yours truly to dig out all the azaleas, about fifty of them...

One by one... manually...

Thought of just 'killing' them off...

But, decided to transfer them to the slopes on the eastern side of the garden.

The rains came...

Working indoors, I cleared up the stuff in the storeroom...

Even got time to repair the puncture of my sweetheart's bicycle...

When the rains stopped, I resume the work at the garden...

Was trying to remove one rather huge azalea stump...

Had to use all my might to plunge the hoe into its base...

When suddenly, I hit something...

Next thing we saw was gushing water...

Oh oh... the water pipe...

Had to quit immediately and head for the hardware shop...

Got the pipe fixed before the sun set on me...

First experience to DIY a pipe leak...

But we could not open the main pipe for 12 hours...

Hence, no shower for the day...

Imagine, I was sweating like a doggo the whole day...

And of course, no water for cooking too...

We bought sushi from the supermarket...

After dinner, asked for two pails of water from a neighbor for brushing teeth, washing face, and wiping the body...

The following day, I managed to dig out all the azaleas...

Cleared the bamboo grass, lalang roots and other debris...

Thought I would not see the persistent lalang anymore after I left my kampong decades ago...

Could not find any use for it although I heard from my brother that its hardy roots are sold as 'Chinese traditional medicine'...

But bamboo grass... I translated them into a broom for outdoor usage...

Then, mixed some natural fertilizer (fermented cow dung, that is) into the plot...

Got it ready for herb-planting...

Scored quite a few points as my better half was pretty impressed by my efforts over the weekend...

Meanwhile, over at the vegetable plot, the seedlings are growing well...

Heheheheeee...