Saturday, May 16, 2020

Perhaps the Pandemic Will Prompt More Gardening

It's funny and also a little sad to look at my last post here, from May 2017. We worked our tails off and got those beds in, then spent a small fortune on what was supposed to be really high quality garden mix with a high percentage of compost to fill them. Then we had two main problems:

  • It was just too wet down there. We never were able to fill in around the beds, and it basically became a mud pit. The beds wanted to start rotting almost immediately.
  • Something was wrong with the garden mix, and it stunted almost everything planted in it. My guess is the compost in the mix was still "hot."
I did have a great upper garden that year, though. I covered the entire 800 square feet in black landscape fabric, and created holes in it to plant. I had bumper crops in both 2017 and 2018, although controlling the weeds up there is an ongoing challenge (that's why I went with garden fabric).
large space of ground covered in black landscape fabric, with holes created for plants. In the foreground, tomatoes grow on stakes.
The garden in 2017 (June) making good use of plastic lawn fabric
wheelbarrow filled to overflying with squash, peppers, cabbage, and other fall vegetables
Harvest from one September day in 2018

2017 was the beginning of a few years that threw us a lot of curveballs. In June 2017, my dad had serious surgery for an aneurysm. He's fine, but he was in ICU for awhile. My father-in-law passed away in November 2017, very unexpectedly. A few months later we found out my mother-in-law had cancer, and she died in August 2018. This was of course a lot of personal stress, but things were also busy on the work front. In fall 2017 I started a business! It's kept me very busy, and now there are 11 people on my team.

Because of that, I was traveling a lot—close to 100 days a year in 2018 and 2019, with a lot of that travel during the growing season. After seeing how the garden was getting away from me in 2018, we made the conscious decision to take 2019 off from gardening. So we did. We also hired landscapers to rip out our back patio and build us a gorgeous new patio and fire pit, and at the last minute decided to have them rip out that nasty mud pit and the retaining well near it, instead sloping our lawn directly to the pond. While digging the base of the patio, they found a huge drainage problem and had to install a new drainage system... it's no wonder we had a mud pit down there.
picnic table on brick pavers, then lawn extending to a pond. Farm in the background.
Part of the new patio, with a slope right into the pond

I thought 2020 might be another no-garden year; travel didn't seem to be letting up and the business continues to grow. Then, in mid-March, travel stopped and I (along with my entire team) started working from home full-time. We'll be working like this until at least July 1, and likely some sort of hybrid home/office situation after that. All of my work-related travel has been cancelled until at least late September.

So why not garden? I didn't start any seeds, and most of my preferred suppliers were sold out when I checked their websites in March/April, so I gladly supported a local greenhouse to get tomato and pepper seedlings, along with a few others. I've started the process of "waking up" the upper garden, where I plan to plant some veggies I don't get a lot of in my CSA, as well as the food we love to preserve. I should have the time.

But once again, it's back-breaking work. It took me two weekends of intermittent work just to make sure I had the asparagus patch ready for it to appear this spring (it just started).
straw-covered bed in front of a fence with a sign that says "asparagus"
Asparagus bed, just before spears started popping up

I spent this afternoon and early evening in the garden as well. I pulled up all the landscape fabric, and I've been digging out some perennial weeds. I'll till within the next couple of days (when I get a dry day), and then I want to try creating some planting areas that rely more on mulch (newspaper + straw for large plants, shredded paper/straw for small), rather than messing around with the fabric over the entire garden. That gives me the flexibility to plant things like rutabaga and bush beans, which wouldn't have worked in my last setup. I still have some of the landscape fabric, so I'll probably use it for rows (and it will be easier to re-use that way).

Because I've been working so much and our summer vacation (and probably fall) is cancelled, I also have a lot of time off piled up. So I'll have 3 and 4 day weekends the next few weeks to get the garden going, and entire weeks off (or days available for impromptu time) when the harvest and food preservation needs are greatest. Even if I'm sore for days, being in the garden makes me happy and allows me to forget everything else that's going on in the world. I'm glad I can focus on it this year.