Thread: New garden
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Old 20-04-2006, 01:20 PM posted to austin.gardening
Jonny
 
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Default New garden - doh! missing link

"jOhN" wrote in message
. net...
Jonny wrote:
"jOhN" wrote in message
et...

Jonny wrote:

"Kathleen" wrote in message
...


C'mon Kathy. Prickly pear cactus grows wild out here. Don't have to

plant


it, water it, or otherwise. Expect flowers in a couple of months from
it.
Had to knock down a mess of it so I could get to back in end of land
on

foot


last year.

Yeah, I had problems getting it to grow where I wanted it because the
deer
were pulling it up last year. Now it has little buds all over it.

DH *loves* jalapenos! I bought 2 plants yesterday, 6-pack of banana
and a
couple bell pepper plants. I need to get them planted tonight. He
would
love okra and green beans but all my 'gardening' is done in containers,
in a
very sunny space on the deck. Perhaps I should get a bit... is it too
late
for an okra plant? Do they love the sun?

With hope and heart,
Kathleen



Okra is another garden variety selection for heat tolerance.

Many people out here make a raised bed for a garden. Old well seasoned
railroad ties or landscape timbers work. As you know, the native soil
isn't too good for most common variety garden plants. Place in Dripping
Springs sells good topsoil by the truckload.

http://www.taunton.com/finegardening/pages/g00028.asp



The arsenic type pressure treated wood went away over 3 years ago. The
new type eats plain iron nails. Ask any framing carpenter. This is ACQ
lumber, and is common now. As opposed when the author wrote the webpage
you quoted.

I use one high landscape timber. Reason is for the new growth easy to
start, and spread its roots. Original soil is simply unable to hold
moisture, but is fertile enough due to my treating it with decaying food
leftovers etc. for two years. Putting sandy soil w/peat over this soil
did the trick for holding moisture.

Another tip, if your soil is high alkaline, put a chicken coop and fenced
running area over it for a year or two. The manure is high in acid, and
very fertile. The chickens scratch it into the ground. Labor free.
Rotate the chicken coop every 3 years, with a garden location.


With an possible 40-year life it seemed appropriate to throw in some info
regarding the arsenic treated stuff. I know I've reused assorted treated
wood for many things - including raised beds. Generally the urban rumor
stuff about the deadly consequences of treated wood used in gardening
seems to be an over reaction. I don't use it myself probably due to some
of that "spin" but I just don't feel comfortable with it.


See your point. However, you can't buy CCA treated wood anymore. Its
illegal to make or sell.
--
Jonny