Category Archives: Spring gardening

Mass planting your square foot garden box

This year I did a little experiment. I took one of those Costco rotisserie chicken containers, cleaned it out, and poked two holes in the top of the plastic dome. This was done by heating up a screwdriver over a gas flame of the stove and then I simply pushed it through the plastic.  I then sprinkled quit a few lettuce seeds in some potting soil that I placed in the bottom container, watered in, and then put the top on. It was then placed under covers of a square foot garden box. I literally did nothing. I didn’t add water, I didn’t vent, nothing. After a few weeks it all germinated. This is what it now looks like after I have been separating into individual little plugs and placing them in a square. So far, i think I’ve added 20 heads of lettuce, with at least that many more still to plant. 

For those interested in learning how to compost, I now have a recored 75 minute class available on my blog. You can learn more about it here: https://thewealthyearth.store/products/3

 

 

The importance of compost in the square foot garden

I learned how to make great compost over 20 years ago while interning with Mel Bartholomew. He was the inventor of the square foot garden. Since compost is 1/3 of the magic soil formula, it’s pretty important for it to be high quality. What I learned while with him was invaluable. I’ve never had to buy a fertilizer or commercial chemicals for my gardens for over two decades. It’s easy to do once you learn a few basics. The most important thing? You can never buy it as good as you can make it. The benefits are enormous.

I’ll be having a virtual composting class this upcoming Saturday, January 30th at 10:00 AM MST. The class is 90 minutes long and you’ll see how I’ve been able to feed neighbors, restaurants, and family with the greatest of ease. Contact me if you’re interested in attending. More information is on my blog right over there. <—- Winter is a fabulous time to start collecting things. Make it so they can’t sell you anything 🙂

Seed starting class coming up

I know it seems soon but it’s not. If you’re interested in having a really early gardening season, this seed starting class is for you. I’ve opened 2 emails in the past 5 weeks announcing a new recall of food/crops. I get tired of reading this but I don’t worry because I grow all my salad greens and most of my root and summer crops. 

This will be a virtual class beginning at 10:00 AM MST on January 9th. Class will go for 75-90 minuted and the cost is $50. Contact me if you’d like to RSVP or if you’ve got any other questions. 

Right now I’m still enjoying my summer harvest of angel hair spaghetti squash. With my frozen cherry tomatoes I’ve had a few pasta dishes making a quick sauce thats done in about 15-20 minutes. There’s nothing better knowing you can feed yourself and family with things that you grew, watered, and took care of. You also don’t spend a second worrying about chemicals or anything like that. 

Square Foot Gardening-the only way to go

No wasted space, no wasted seed, hardly any work, no thinning, and no weeds! Here’s an example of growing what you actually eat. There’s really no sense in planting your entire gardens at once. Why do that? All that means is it will come up at once. At some point these 12 squares will be all lettuces. You can see its a shaded area so I use this bed a lot in the summer to especially grow salad greens. By not planting it all at once, you can see how I’ll have a steady supply of salad greens for a while. Each square is at a slightly different stage, a few haven’t even been planted yet. You can also see the very last of my carrots that over-wintered in this box. I had over 200 of them in there.

Speaking of lettuces, my favorite thing to grow, warm weather is just around the corner. Once outside temperatures go beyond 75-80, it becomes next to impossible to even have lettuce germinate in the garden. We have temperatures in the high 90’s and even a few days of triple digits, yet I’m able to easily grow lettuces right through the summer. I wrote an ebook about how to successfully do this. Check it out.

Potatoes in the square foot garden

I don’t think I’ve ever posted about potatoes. If I have, it has been a while. The basic spacing of 1, 4, 9, and 16 in the SFG system is excellent, but with potatoes, I learned to change that up. Potatoes are planted 5 per square, and I always make sure each seed has at least two eyes in them. I do not hill. I do not let them scab over before putting them in soil. I just bury them 7-8 inches deep, cover, and start watering. In about 5 weeks they break the surface. I’ve grown potatoes in grow bags before, but I’ve never been able to match the yield than I can when planted in the square foot gardens. The soil really makes a difference. How much can you expect? I always harvest 5-7 pounds of red pontiacs every year. And the taste.