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

Monday 3 August 2015

August in the Family Vegetable Garden.

In the Garden
with the Professional Countrywoman.

Spring is around the corner.

Even though it is still winter there are signs that the miracle of spring is just around the corner. One of the miracles is that despite the ongoing cold weather, the occasional warm day will get the sap rising in the gardener as much as the plants!  However you will need to resist the urge a little as it is a bit early to sow much outside except for peas and broad beans.  Instead you can transfer that energy to getting your potting shed in order and prepared for sowing indoors.

Potatoes.
Seed potatoes are appearing in the shops. Potatoes can be chitted from now on or planted in a warm spot and protected from the frosts that will be expected for the next few months.  Use old egg cartons, sit each potato on end and put on in a warm light space. 

Garlic.
You may find you will need to water the garlic you planted in June and July to get them swelling and moving.  It has been very dry here in Otago and we all need rain.  Once the young shoots are up, liquid fertilise every couple of weeks.  They will respond to plenty of feeding while growing and you will be rewarded with lovely big bulbs in summer.


Garden Beds.
Beds rested over the worst of the winter can be dug over, digging in any mulch, compost or green crops.  Never dig if the ground is too wet as you can damage the structure of the soil.  
If you practice crop rotation then prepare each bed for the family of crops you will plant.  Legume beds (peas and beans) will appreciate lots of compost, wood-ash, blood and bone, lime and carbon from spring mulches dug in.  Same for the next bed of green leafy veges.  Beds destined for root crops such as beetroot and carrots will not like too much bulk or fresh manure so are happy to rely on the leftovers of the previous season.  They appreciate deep well dug soil. The beds set aside for heat loving plants such as capsicums and tomatoes prefer more acidic soil so I don’t add lime to those beds but plenty of compost. 

Early Sowing.
It’s still too early for outdoor sowing but you can start off in seed trays in a warm spot. Lettuce, cauli, cabbage, silverbeet, brussel sprouts, peas, broad beans, Later in the month: onions, beetroot, leeks, parsnips turnips, parsley.  Sow early peas and broad beans direct.
Plant; Cabbage, Cauli, Rhubarb, Asparagus, Shallots, Garlic, Artichokes, Strawberries,

So after starting out saying it was too early to do much in the garden, turns out there is a lot to do after all!