Thursday, April 25, 2013

Why I Finally Got Around To It


Monday, April 15th, 2013: This weekend I regularly used the term “coarse vermiculite”.  Don’t I sound capable and smart?  Aren’t you jealous of my fancy word use?  Do you even care what coarse vermiculate is? (The answer to all these, I’m thinking, is “no”).  Well, in case you maybe care a little bit, here’s what’s happening: we are planting a vegetable garden.   For years, this has seemed like something I should so totally be doing.  Me and the Growing of Food in One’s Own Yard are a match made in heaven.  Healthy eating is a way of life for my family (with our fair share of chocolate and beer sprinkled in), I’m on a tight budget so the farmer’s market- while wonderful- is sometimes too much for my wallet to handle, and I’m known by friends and acquaintances as something of a hippie who makes her own cleaning supplies, cloth diapered her kid, and goes through phases where she makes all her bread from scratch.  So why have I waited this long?  The short answer is: I’m lazy.  The longer one has to do with being very intimidated by trying to grow anything, worrying about the initial costs, being a working mother who barely has time for the living things she’s already responsible for, and…um, laziness.  But this year, a few stars aligned to make it seem like it’s really a good time.  We moved into a new house last fall, and it has a perfect flat, sunny area in the backyard.  My mother, who has grown many a vegetable garden but can’t do it currently because the deer eat everything in her yard, offered to back the project financially in exchange for a share of the bounty.  And, finally, my daughter is 5 and ½, which seems like the perfect age for truly reaping the benefits of being involved in a gardening project.  Thus, the coarse vermiculite. 

We're going to do Square-Foot Gardening, which is all the rage, and seems like a good place to start for a novice.  I won't get into a lot of detail on the exact theory and all that, but you can check it out at squarefootgardening.org

For our first step we:
  • Put together the wooden border
  • Laid down a weed barrier material 
  • Mixed and spread the soil
Next, planning out the plot and getting those seeds and seedlings in the ground.

Fiona nailed the decorative tops on by herself

Fiona and her Nana set weed barrier material

Lee, my mom, and Fiona: mix, mix, mix