Vintage Style Garden Design Wall Calendar

Vintage Style Kitchen Garden Wall Calendar

This vintage style Kitchen Garden wall poster will not only look gorgeous on your wall but is a very practical guide to getting started in your vegetable garden. Don’t know what to plant where and when? Check the plan for the current year and follow the guidelines for the current seasons.

Shows a 4 year crop rotation cycle to encourage healthy gardens and long term sustainable gardening for us and the earth. A beautiful and useful gift for gardeners everywhere whether you are experienced or a beginner

Special online offer. Regular price is $16.10 + p&p per poster but if you buy online it is 2 for $19.90 + P&P of $6.75. Buy one for yourself and one to give away to a young gardener! You can either email me with your order on keren@professionalcountrywoman.com

Thursday 16 October 2014

October in the backyard vegetable garden.



Thank goodness for Silverbeet - it kept us going through the cool spring gap between winter and summer veges!  And this rainbow chard provided delicious colour as well. 

October is probably one of the busiest months of the year for the garden especially towards the end of the month with Labour weekend being the great traditional NZ planting weekend. If you are into sowing seeds then most things can be sown this month provided you have a warm place to start off the more tender ones such as tomatoes etc.  As you sow your first lot of seeds, kick off your succession planting cycle by purchasing some punnets of well grown plants from your local garden centre or store and get them into the ground.   

Succession planting is the practice of staggering your sowing or planting over the growing season. We do this for a number of reasons, but mainly so that you don’t have your crops all ripening at once. You want to avoid that in the family vegetable garden especially with crops you can’t store or preserve.  A good rule of thumb is to sow or plant every 4-5 weeks or so.  If you have raised plants in trays, sow the next lot of seed the same day you plant out your seedlings.

My garden is now well into it’s Year 2 on the crop rotation plan. For me this means I have broad beans sown last season in Bed 1 and broad beans sown this season in Bed 2 – so there is a little bit of a cross over going on!  Not for long though as I have planted green leafy veges in gaps in Bed 1 and will be planting as soon as the beans have finished harvesting. The silverbeet, lettuces and brassicas will all be very happy with the nitrogen fixed by all those legumes.  Keep sowing peas and you can now get in your French beans and runner beans. Look out for last year’s perennial runner beans coming up in their permanent spot. A sure sign of time to plant. Scarlett runners do best when sown in double rows 20cm apart with 15 cm between plants. They will grow very tall 2-3m.  Get dwarf and main crop beans in now too.  If you have not already limed the beds then add a bit of lime now. 

Pototoes – just keep planting if you have the room. A row of early potatoes for summer is better than none!  Seed potatoes are still available in the shops.  Sow carrots, beetroot and parsnip in friable soil.  Liquid feed garlic, onions, leeks etc. 

Labour Weekend is the traditional time for planting out tomatoes and its friends, capsicum, basil, chillies, auburgine, courgettes etc.  Very exciting. There have been plants in the shops since mid September though which seems early, particularly for the south. So if warm enough, get these plants in and keep up the water and liquid feed.

Jobs for this Month
Sow: Peas, beetroot, swedes, turnips,  lettuce, carrots, parsnips, parsley, broccoli, brussel sprouts, cabbage, cauli, leeks, silverbeet.
Sow under cover in a warm space: tomatoes, capsicum, pumpkin, courgettes, cucumber, celery, sweet corn, beans
Plant: Punnets of brassicas, celery, peas, leeks, silverbeet, lettuce, potatoes, asparagus.
Cultivate: Keep any weeds at bay with regular hoeing and mulching. Liquid feed growing plants at least fortnightly especially your garlic crop.
Harvest: Broad beans, silverbeet, asparagus, lettuce etc