Reply
 
LinkBack Thread Tools Search this Thread Display Modes
  #1   Report Post  
Old 06-04-2004, 09:14 PM
Katherine
 
Posts: n/a
Default Small 20' deep by 8' wide patio - suggestions?

I have a small backyard (30' x 8') in my condo. I am in zone 6b
(Vancouver, BC) and get an average 8 hours of sun/day.

The first 10' is covered in patio paver stones, for the bbq and dining
area. For the other 20', I'm planning on either purchasing floor
decking (see http://www.ikea.ca/webapp/wcs/stores...&cattype= sub)
or make the decking myself if its quite a bit cheaper. I'll leave a
few spots open in between the decking squares for planting the odd
thing, and using containers for other things.

Because my area is so tiny I've decided to grow cucumbers using a
trellis, I did this last year and it worked great. My tomatoes I'll
try in tubs this year, possibly with wheels so I can move them around
if they need a more sunnier spot. What other things can I try in such
a small space? Peas perhaps? What about squash?

I'd love to hear from urbanites that have small city gardens such as
myself and photos of what they have done would really be wonderful!

Shaynelle
  #2   Report Post  
Old 06-04-2004, 09:14 PM
Bonnie Punch
 
Posts: n/a
Default Small 20' deep by 8' wide patio - suggestions?

In article ,
says...
I have a small backyard (30' x 8') in my condo. I am in zone 6b
(Vancouver, BC) and get an average 8 hours of sun/day.

The first 10' is covered in patio paver stones, for the bbq and dining
area. For the other 20', I'm planning on either purchasing floor
decking (see
http://www.ikea.ca/webapp/wcs/stores...&cattype= sub)
or make the decking myself if its quite a bit cheaper. I'll leave a
few spots open in between the decking squares for planting the odd
thing, and using containers for other things.

Because my area is so tiny I've decided to grow cucumbers using a
trellis, I did this last year and it worked great. My tomatoes I'll
try in tubs this year, possibly with wheels so I can move them around
if they need a more sunnier spot. What other things can I try in such
a small space? Peas perhaps? What about squash?

I'd love to hear from urbanites that have small city gardens such as
myself and photos of what they have done would really be wonderful!


I grow everything in containers in my small big city back yard. The
only vegetables that I've found difficult to grow are root crops, like
carrots, radishes, and beets. Containers dry out much more quickly than
the ground, and they get a lot hotter - this constant fluctuation makes
life hard for the carrots et al. It can be done with a big container,
and very close attention to watering. For that matter all plants in
containers need a lot more water and fertilizer than they would in the
ground.

Things that I grew easily and were worth the space:

Tomatoes, eggplants, peppers, summer and winter squash, cucumbers,
tomatillos, ground cherries, leaf lettuce, onions, spinach, rat tail
radishes, strawberries, basil, oregano, rosemary, parsley, thyme, sage,
savory, tarragon and chives.

Things that I grew well, but took more effort (and/or a few tries to
get right):

Swiss chard, garlic, sweet potatoes, melons, peas, beans, bulb fennel.

Things that I had little success with, or found wasn't worth the
effort:

carrots, radishes, beets, corn, celery, broccoli, heading lettuce,
corriander, and dill.

I'm sure I've left out some things I've grown, but that's a quick list.

BP
  #3   Report Post  
Old 06-04-2004, 09:14 PM
Katra
 
Posts: n/a
Default Small 20' deep by 8' wide patio - suggestions?

In article ,
Bonnie Punch wrote:

In article ,
says...
I have a small backyard (30' x 8') in my condo. I am in zone 6b
(Vancouver, BC) and get an average 8 hours of sun/day.

The first 10' is covered in patio paver stones, for the bbq and dining
area. For the other 20', I'm planning on either purchasing floor
decking (see
http://www.ikea.ca/webapp/wcs/stores...atalogId=10101
&storeId=3&categoryId=12667&langId=-15&parentCats=12555*12667&chapterId=1270
3&cattype=sub)
or make the decking myself if its quite a bit cheaper. I'll leave a
few spots open in between the decking squares for planting the odd
thing, and using containers for other things.

Because my area is so tiny I've decided to grow cucumbers using a
trellis, I did this last year and it worked great. My tomatoes I'll
try in tubs this year, possibly with wheels so I can move them around
if they need a more sunnier spot. What other things can I try in such
a small space? Peas perhaps? What about squash?

I'd love to hear from urbanites that have small city gardens such as
myself and photos of what they have done would really be wonderful!


I grow everything in containers in my small big city back yard. The
only vegetables that I've found difficult to grow are root crops, like
carrots, radishes, and beets. Containers dry out much more quickly than
the ground, and they get a lot hotter - this constant fluctuation makes
life hard for the carrots et al. It can be done with a big container,
and very close attention to watering. For that matter all plants in
containers need a lot more water and fertilizer than they would in the
ground.

Things that I grew easily and were worth the space:

Tomatoes, eggplants, peppers, summer and winter squash, cucumbers,
tomatillos, ground cherries, leaf lettuce, onions, spinach, rat tail
radishes, strawberries, basil, oregano, rosemary, parsley, thyme, sage,
savory, tarragon and chives.

Things that I grew well, but took more effort (and/or a few tries to
get right):

Swiss chard, garlic, sweet potatoes, melons, peas, beans, bulb fennel.

Things that I had little success with, or found wasn't worth the
effort:

carrots, radishes, beets, corn, celery, broccoli, heading lettuce,
corriander, and dill.

I'm sure I've left out some things I've grown, but that's a quick list.

BP


You had trouble with Dill? Bummer. :-)

I just cheat and start out with 4" pots from the nursery! Much less
trouble than seeds. G

Dill needs good sunlight.

K.

--
Sprout the Mung Bean to reply...

"There are many intelligent species in the universe, and they are all owned by cats! -- Asimov

,,Cat's Haven Hobby Farm,,Katraatcenturyteldotnet,,


http://cgi6.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dl...user id=katra
  #4   Report Post  
Old 06-04-2004, 09:14 PM
Lorenzo L. Love
 
Posts: n/a
Default Small 20' deep by 8' wide patio - suggestions?

Katherine wrote:
I have a small backyard (30' x 8') in my condo. I am in zone 6b
(Vancouver, BC) and get an average 8 hours of sun/day.

The first 10' is covered in patio paver stones, for the bbq and dining
area. For the other 20', I'm planning on either purchasing floor
decking (see http://www.ikea.ca/webapp/wcs/stores...&cattype= sub)
or make the decking myself if its quite a bit cheaper. I'll leave a
few spots open in between the decking squares for planting the odd
thing, and using containers for other things.

Because my area is so tiny I've decided to grow cucumbers using a
trellis, I did this last year and it worked great. My tomatoes I'll
try in tubs this year, possibly with wheels so I can move them around
if they need a more sunnier spot. What other things can I try in such
a small space? Peas perhaps? What about squash?

I'd love to hear from urbanites that have small city gardens such as
myself and photos of what they have done would really be wonderful!

Shaynelle


There is a vining squash, Tromboncino, that is suitable for trellising
and can save you lots of space. There are several varieties of
miniature tomatoes that are bred specifically for small containers and
hanging baskets, Red Robin, Patio, Tumbler, Window Box Roma and others.
I grow Red Robins in 6" pots and always have more tomatoes then I can
eat. There are also miniature eggplants such as Bambino that do well in
small pots. Most peppers do well in containers. I grow cayenne and
jalapeno types four or five to a 15" pot, bells types three to a 15"
pot. There is a miniature bell pepper, Jingle Bells that will do well in
a 6" pot. Most herbs will do fine in hanging baskets, freeing up deck
space. The main thing is, don't limit yourself to standard varieties.
Look for dwarf and miniature types. You can often get more pounds of
fruit per pound of soil from a miniature variety then from a standard.

Lorenzo L. Love
http://home.thegrid.net/~lllove

“If you have a garden and a library, you have everything you need.”
Cicero


  #5   Report Post  
Old 06-04-2004, 09:14 PM
Bonnie Punch
 
Posts: n/a
Default Small 20' deep by 8' wide patio - suggestions?

In article ,
says...
I have a small backyard (30' x 8') in my condo. I am in zone 6b
(Vancouver, BC) and get an average 8 hours of sun/day.

The first 10' is covered in patio paver stones, for the bbq and dining
area. For the other 20', I'm planning on either purchasing floor
decking (see
http://www.ikea.ca/webapp/wcs/stores...&cattype= sub)
or make the decking myself if its quite a bit cheaper. I'll leave a
few spots open in between the decking squares for planting the odd
thing, and using containers for other things.

Because my area is so tiny I've decided to grow cucumbers using a
trellis, I did this last year and it worked great. My tomatoes I'll
try in tubs this year, possibly with wheels so I can move them around
if they need a more sunnier spot. What other things can I try in such
a small space? Peas perhaps? What about squash?

I'd love to hear from urbanites that have small city gardens such as
myself and photos of what they have done would really be wonderful!


I grow everything in containers in my small big city back yard. The
only vegetables that I've found difficult to grow are root crops, like
carrots, radishes, and beets. Containers dry out much more quickly than
the ground, and they get a lot hotter - this constant fluctuation makes
life hard for the carrots et al. It can be done with a big container,
and very close attention to watering. For that matter all plants in
containers need a lot more water and fertilizer than they would in the
ground.

Things that I grew easily and were worth the space:

Tomatoes, eggplants, peppers, summer and winter squash, cucumbers,
tomatillos, ground cherries, leaf lettuce, onions, spinach, rat tail
radishes, strawberries, basil, oregano, rosemary, parsley, thyme, sage,
savory, tarragon and chives.

Things that I grew well, but took more effort (and/or a few tries to
get right):

Swiss chard, garlic, sweet potatoes, melons, peas, beans, bulb fennel.

Things that I had little success with, or found wasn't worth the
effort:

carrots, radishes, beets, corn, celery, broccoli, heading lettuce,
corriander, and dill.

I'm sure I've left out some things I've grown, but that's a quick list.

BP


  #6   Report Post  
Old 06-04-2004, 09:14 PM
Bonnie Punch
 
Posts: n/a
Default Small 20' deep by 8' wide patio - suggestions?


You had trouble with Dill? Bummer. :-)


It's not that it didn't grow, it's just that it wasn't worth it. When
one has a very limited amount of space, some things take up too much of
it to be worth the time and effort. I'd get a pot full of corriander or
dill just fine, but one recipe would use up most of my crop ( I cook a
lot). They need a deep pot, to accomodate the tap root, are short lived
compared to other herbs, and generally need a lot more room than
something like basil or oregano - they'll grow in anything.

I just cheat and start out with 4" pots from the nursery! Much less
trouble than seeds. G


One 4" pot of dill when grown will do me for one fish crust or stuffing
for one chicken. When I make a batch of salsa I use a cup full of
chopped corriander. I'd need real space to bother growing it.

Part of the fun of gardening for me is the growing from seed. I'll only
buy a plant if it is propigated by cuttings or division, or can't be
easily grown from seed (if it takes a year to germinate, forget it!).
It's also more economical to grow from seed (6 tomato transplants =
$3.50, one pkg of 25+ seeds= $2-3.), and one can also get rare or
heirloom varities that aren't sold at the garden centre or nursery.

BP
  #7   Report Post  
Old 06-04-2004, 09:14 PM
Katra
 
Posts: n/a
Default Small 20' deep by 8' wide patio - suggestions?

In article ,
Bonnie Punch wrote:

In article ,
says...
I have a small backyard (30' x 8') in my condo. I am in zone 6b
(Vancouver, BC) and get an average 8 hours of sun/day.

The first 10' is covered in patio paver stones, for the bbq and dining
area. For the other 20', I'm planning on either purchasing floor
decking (see
http://www.ikea.ca/webapp/wcs/stores...atalogId=10101
&storeId=3&categoryId=12667&langId=-15&parentCats=12555*12667&chapterId=1270
3&cattype=sub)
or make the decking myself if its quite a bit cheaper. I'll leave a
few spots open in between the decking squares for planting the odd
thing, and using containers for other things.

Because my area is so tiny I've decided to grow cucumbers using a
trellis, I did this last year and it worked great. My tomatoes I'll
try in tubs this year, possibly with wheels so I can move them around
if they need a more sunnier spot. What other things can I try in such
a small space? Peas perhaps? What about squash?

I'd love to hear from urbanites that have small city gardens such as
myself and photos of what they have done would really be wonderful!


I grow everything in containers in my small big city back yard. The
only vegetables that I've found difficult to grow are root crops, like
carrots, radishes, and beets. Containers dry out much more quickly than
the ground, and they get a lot hotter - this constant fluctuation makes
life hard for the carrots et al. It can be done with a big container,
and very close attention to watering. For that matter all plants in
containers need a lot more water and fertilizer than they would in the
ground.

Things that I grew easily and were worth the space:

Tomatoes, eggplants, peppers, summer and winter squash, cucumbers,
tomatillos, ground cherries, leaf lettuce, onions, spinach, rat tail
radishes, strawberries, basil, oregano, rosemary, parsley, thyme, sage,
savory, tarragon and chives.

Things that I grew well, but took more effort (and/or a few tries to
get right):

Swiss chard, garlic, sweet potatoes, melons, peas, beans, bulb fennel.

Things that I had little success with, or found wasn't worth the
effort:

carrots, radishes, beets, corn, celery, broccoli, heading lettuce,
corriander, and dill.

I'm sure I've left out some things I've grown, but that's a quick list.

BP


You had trouble with Dill? Bummer. :-)

I just cheat and start out with 4" pots from the nursery! Much less
trouble than seeds. G

Dill needs good sunlight.

K.

--
Sprout the Mung Bean to reply...

"There are many intelligent species in the universe, and they are all owned by cats! -- Asimov

,,Cat's Haven Hobby Farm,,Katraatcenturyteldotnet,,


http://cgi6.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dl...user id=katra
  #8   Report Post  
Old 06-04-2004, 09:14 PM
Lorenzo L. Love
 
Posts: n/a
Default Small 20' deep by 8' wide patio - suggestions?

Katherine wrote:
I have a small backyard (30' x 8') in my condo. I am in zone 6b
(Vancouver, BC) and get an average 8 hours of sun/day.

The first 10' is covered in patio paver stones, for the bbq and dining
area. For the other 20', I'm planning on either purchasing floor
decking (see http://www.ikea.ca/webapp/wcs/stores...&cattype= sub)
or make the decking myself if its quite a bit cheaper. I'll leave a
few spots open in between the decking squares for planting the odd
thing, and using containers for other things.

Because my area is so tiny I've decided to grow cucumbers using a
trellis, I did this last year and it worked great. My tomatoes I'll
try in tubs this year, possibly with wheels so I can move them around
if they need a more sunnier spot. What other things can I try in such
a small space? Peas perhaps? What about squash?

I'd love to hear from urbanites that have small city gardens such as
myself and photos of what they have done would really be wonderful!

Shaynelle


There is a vining squash, Tromboncino, that is suitable for trellising
and can save you lots of space. There are several varieties of
miniature tomatoes that are bred specifically for small containers and
hanging baskets, Red Robin, Patio, Tumbler, Window Box Roma and others.
I grow Red Robins in 6" pots and always have more tomatoes then I can
eat. There are also miniature eggplants such as Bambino that do well in
small pots. Most peppers do well in containers. I grow cayenne and
jalapeno types four or five to a 15" pot, bells types three to a 15"
pot. There is a miniature bell pepper, Jingle Bells that will do well in
a 6" pot. Most herbs will do fine in hanging baskets, freeing up deck
space. The main thing is, don't limit yourself to standard varieties.
Look for dwarf and miniature types. You can often get more pounds of
fruit per pound of soil from a miniature variety then from a standard.

Lorenzo L. Love
http://home.thegrid.net/~lllove

“If you have a garden and a library, you have everything you need.”
Cicero


  #9   Report Post  
Old 06-04-2004, 09:14 PM
Bonnie Punch
 
Posts: n/a
Default Small 20' deep by 8' wide patio - suggestions?

In article .net,
says...
Katherine wrote:
I have a small backyard (30' x 8') in my condo. I am in zone 6b
(Vancouver, BC) and get an average 8 hours of sun/day.

The first 10' is covered in patio paver stones, for the bbq and dining
area. For the other 20', I'm planning on either purchasing floor
decking (see
http://www.ikea.ca/webapp/wcs/stores...&cattype= sub)
or make the decking myself if its quite a bit cheaper. I'll leave a
few spots open in between the decking squares for planting the odd
thing, and using containers for other things.

Because my area is so tiny I've decided to grow cucumbers using a
trellis, I did this last year and it worked great. My tomatoes I'll
try in tubs this year, possibly with wheels so I can move them around
if they need a more sunnier spot. What other things can I try in such
a small space? Peas perhaps? What about squash?

I'd love to hear from urbanites that have small city gardens such as
myself and photos of what they have done would really be wonderful!

Shaynelle


There is a vining squash, Tromboncino, that is suitable for trellising
and can save you lots of space. There are several varieties of
miniature tomatoes that are bred specifically for small containers and
hanging baskets, Red Robin, Patio, Tumbler, Window Box Roma and others.
I grow Red Robins in 6" pots and always have more tomatoes then I can
eat.


I grow Brandywines (big indeterminate) in containers! And Celebrity
(big determinate), and Miracle Sweet (another big indeterminate). I'm
also giving Pruden's purple (big indeterminate) a try this year. You
don't need to stick to "patio types" and a small pot. It can be a small
diameter pot, but if it's really deep you can grow any tomato. I use 20
gallon rubbermaid bins and put three or four Brandywines in. My
tomatoes are probably some of the most crowded ones in existence, but
they produce enough to feed the neighborhood!

There are also miniature eggplants such as Bambino that do well in
small pots. Most peppers do well in containers. I grow cayenne and
jalapeno types four or five to a 15" pot, bells types three to a 15"
pot. There is a miniature bell pepper, Jingle Bells that will do well in
a 6" pot. Most herbs will do fine in hanging baskets, freeing up deck
space. The main thing is, don't limit yourself to standard varieties.
Look for dwarf and miniature types. You can often get more pounds of
fruit per pound of soil from a miniature variety then from a standard.


I tried "jingle bells" for a couple of years - the taste isn't great,
compared to other sweet peppers. They are good for stuffing with
something cold, and serving as an appetizer though. I have found that
the miniature varities of veggies are bred for compact size and that
taste generally gets left behind. When I compare the taste of a
"Patio" tomato to a "Brandywine", I find that there is no comparison at
all.

I found that the best way to grow the larger varities was to crowd
multiple plants into a big pot instead of giving each plant it's own
pot. The larger pot retains water better, and gives more root room for
the plants, even with the crowding.

BP
  #10   Report Post  
Old 06-04-2004, 09:14 PM
Bonnie Punch
 
Posts: n/a
Default Small 20' deep by 8' wide patio - suggestions?


You had trouble with Dill? Bummer. :-)


It's not that it didn't grow, it's just that it wasn't worth it. When
one has a very limited amount of space, some things take up too much of
it to be worth the time and effort. I'd get a pot full of corriander or
dill just fine, but one recipe would use up most of my crop ( I cook a
lot). They need a deep pot, to accomodate the tap root, are short lived
compared to other herbs, and generally need a lot more room than
something like basil or oregano - they'll grow in anything.

I just cheat and start out with 4" pots from the nursery! Much less
trouble than seeds. G


One 4" pot of dill when grown will do me for one fish crust or stuffing
for one chicken. When I make a batch of salsa I use a cup full of
chopped corriander. I'd need real space to bother growing it.

Part of the fun of gardening for me is the growing from seed. I'll only
buy a plant if it is propigated by cuttings or division, or can't be
easily grown from seed (if it takes a year to germinate, forget it!).
It's also more economical to grow from seed (6 tomato transplants =
$3.50, one pkg of 25+ seeds= $2-3.), and one can also get rare or
heirloom varities that aren't sold at the garden centre or nursery.

BP


  #11   Report Post  
Old 06-04-2004, 09:14 PM
Bonnie Punch
 
Posts: n/a
Default Small 20' deep by 8' wide patio - suggestions?

In article .net,
says...
Katherine wrote:
I have a small backyard (30' x 8') in my condo. I am in zone 6b
(Vancouver, BC) and get an average 8 hours of sun/day.

The first 10' is covered in patio paver stones, for the bbq and dining
area. For the other 20', I'm planning on either purchasing floor
decking (see
http://www.ikea.ca/webapp/wcs/stores...&cattype= sub)
or make the decking myself if its quite a bit cheaper. I'll leave a
few spots open in between the decking squares for planting the odd
thing, and using containers for other things.

Because my area is so tiny I've decided to grow cucumbers using a
trellis, I did this last year and it worked great. My tomatoes I'll
try in tubs this year, possibly with wheels so I can move them around
if they need a more sunnier spot. What other things can I try in such
a small space? Peas perhaps? What about squash?

I'd love to hear from urbanites that have small city gardens such as
myself and photos of what they have done would really be wonderful!

Shaynelle


There is a vining squash, Tromboncino, that is suitable for trellising
and can save you lots of space. There are several varieties of
miniature tomatoes that are bred specifically for small containers and
hanging baskets, Red Robin, Patio, Tumbler, Window Box Roma and others.
I grow Red Robins in 6" pots and always have more tomatoes then I can
eat.


I grow Brandywines (big indeterminate) in containers! And Celebrity
(big determinate), and Miracle Sweet (another big indeterminate). I'm
also giving Pruden's purple (big indeterminate) a try this year. You
don't need to stick to "patio types" and a small pot. It can be a small
diameter pot, but if it's really deep you can grow any tomato. I use 20
gallon rubbermaid bins and put three or four Brandywines in. My
tomatoes are probably some of the most crowded ones in existence, but
they produce enough to feed the neighborhood!

There are also miniature eggplants such as Bambino that do well in
small pots. Most peppers do well in containers. I grow cayenne and
jalapeno types four or five to a 15" pot, bells types three to a 15"
pot. There is a miniature bell pepper, Jingle Bells that will do well in
a 6" pot. Most herbs will do fine in hanging baskets, freeing up deck
space. The main thing is, don't limit yourself to standard varieties.
Look for dwarf and miniature types. You can often get more pounds of
fruit per pound of soil from a miniature variety then from a standard.


I tried "jingle bells" for a couple of years - the taste isn't great,
compared to other sweet peppers. They are good for stuffing with
something cold, and serving as an appetizer though. I have found that
the miniature varities of veggies are bred for compact size and that
taste generally gets left behind. When I compare the taste of a
"Patio" tomato to a "Brandywine", I find that there is no comparison at
all.

I found that the best way to grow the larger varities was to crowd
multiple plants into a big pot instead of giving each plant it's own
pot. The larger pot retains water better, and gives more root room for
the plants, even with the crowding.

BP
  #12   Report Post  
Old 06-04-2004, 09:14 PM
Katra
 
Posts: n/a
Default Small 20' deep by 8' wide patio - suggestions?

In article ,
Bonnie Punch wrote:


You had trouble with Dill? Bummer. :-)


It's not that it didn't grow, it's just that it wasn't worth it. When
one has a very limited amount of space, some things take up too much of
it to be worth the time and effort. I'd get a pot full of corriander or
dill just fine, but one recipe would use up most of my crop ( I cook a
lot). They need a deep pot, to accomodate the tap root, are short lived
compared to other herbs, and generally need a lot more room than
something like basil or oregano - they'll grow in anything.


Oh I see. :-)

And I know what you mean! Sometimes when I'm going to bake a large fish
with lemon and dill, I'll go ahead and buy some from the store if mine
is not big enough.

I planted more this year. G I have a nice large herb garden on the
west side of the house.


I just cheat and start out with 4" pots from the nursery! Much less
trouble than seeds. G


One 4" pot of dill when grown will do me for one fish crust or stuffing
for one chicken. When I make a batch of salsa I use a cup full of
chopped corriander. I'd need real space to bother growing it.


How big do you let it get? Mine usually gets at least 2 ft. tall.
The 2 four inch pots I bought at the nursery this year have about 6 nice
bushy dill plants in each of them. I'll still probably put in more tho'
G

I understand what you mean tho'. I also love to cook with fresh herbs
and you can go thru a lot very quickly.

I use more Basil and thyme than anything else, and I've got plenty of
thyme! Just found a new Tarragon plant yesterday as well. That is SO
good with poultry!

Rosemary just gets big all by itself, and a little sage goes a long way.
I finally have some sage now that is wintering over. The dwarf and white
sages are going on their third year this summer. :-)


Part of the fun of gardening for me is the growing from seed. I'll only
buy a plant if it is propigated by cuttings or division, or can't be
easily grown from seed (if it takes a year to germinate, forget it!).
It's also more economical to grow from seed (6 tomato transplants =
$3.50, one pkg of 25+ seeds= $2-3.), and one can also get rare or
heirloom varities that aren't sold at the garden centre or nursery.

BP


All good points, but I don't have the patience!
The only things I grow from seed are string beans, okra, morning glories
and moonvine. ;-) I can usually get a 6 pack of tomato plants at the
garden center for $1.25.

K.

--
Sprout the Mung Bean to reply...

"There are many intelligent species in the universe, and they are all owned by cats! -- Asimov

,,Cat's Haven Hobby Farm,,Katraatcenturyteldotnet,,


http://cgi6.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dl...user id=katra
  #13   Report Post  
Old 06-04-2004, 09:14 PM
Katra
 
Posts: n/a
Default Small 20' deep by 8' wide patio - suggestions?

In article ,
Bonnie Punch wrote:


You had trouble with Dill? Bummer. :-)


It's not that it didn't grow, it's just that it wasn't worth it. When
one has a very limited amount of space, some things take up too much of
it to be worth the time and effort. I'd get a pot full of corriander or
dill just fine, but one recipe would use up most of my crop ( I cook a
lot). They need a deep pot, to accomodate the tap root, are short lived
compared to other herbs, and generally need a lot more room than
something like basil or oregano - they'll grow in anything.


Oh I see. :-)

And I know what you mean! Sometimes when I'm going to bake a large fish
with lemon and dill, I'll go ahead and buy some from the store if mine
is not big enough.

I planted more this year. G I have a nice large herb garden on the
west side of the house.


I just cheat and start out with 4" pots from the nursery! Much less
trouble than seeds. G


One 4" pot of dill when grown will do me for one fish crust or stuffing
for one chicken. When I make a batch of salsa I use a cup full of
chopped corriander. I'd need real space to bother growing it.


How big do you let it get? Mine usually gets at least 2 ft. tall.
The 2 four inch pots I bought at the nursery this year have about 6 nice
bushy dill plants in each of them. I'll still probably put in more tho'
G

I understand what you mean tho'. I also love to cook with fresh herbs
and you can go thru a lot very quickly.

I use more Basil and thyme than anything else, and I've got plenty of
thyme! Just found a new Tarragon plant yesterday as well. That is SO
good with poultry!

Rosemary just gets big all by itself, and a little sage goes a long way.
I finally have some sage now that is wintering over. The dwarf and white
sages are going on their third year this summer. :-)


Part of the fun of gardening for me is the growing from seed. I'll only
buy a plant if it is propigated by cuttings or division, or can't be
easily grown from seed (if it takes a year to germinate, forget it!).
It's also more economical to grow from seed (6 tomato transplants =
$3.50, one pkg of 25+ seeds= $2-3.), and one can also get rare or
heirloom varities that aren't sold at the garden centre or nursery.

BP


All good points, but I don't have the patience!
The only things I grow from seed are string beans, okra, morning glories
and moonvine. ;-) I can usually get a 6 pack of tomato plants at the
garden center for $1.25.

K.

--
Sprout the Mung Bean to reply...

"There are many intelligent species in the universe, and they are all owned by cats! -- Asimov

,,Cat's Haven Hobby Farm,,Katraatcenturyteldotnet,,


http://cgi6.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dl...user id=katra
  #14   Report Post  
Old 10-04-2004, 05:33 AM
DigitalVinyl
 
Posts: n/a
Default Small 20' deep by 8' wide patio - suggestions?

(Katherine) wrote:

I have a small backyard (30' x 8') in my condo. I am in zone 6b
(Vancouver, BC) and get an average 8 hours of sun/day.

The first 10' is covered in patio paver stones, for the bbq and dining
area. For the other 20', I'm planning on either purchasing floor
decking (see
http://www.ikea.ca/webapp/wcs/stores...&cattype= sub)
or make the decking myself if its quite a bit cheaper. I'll leave a
few spots open in between the decking squares for planting the odd
thing, and using containers for other things.

Because my area is so tiny I've decided to grow cucumbers using a
trellis, I did this last year and it worked great. My tomatoes I'll
try in tubs this year, possibly with wheels so I can move them around
if they need a more sunnier spot. What other things can I try in such
a small space? Peas perhaps? What about squash?

I'd love to hear from urbanites that have small city gardens such as
myself and photos of what they have done would really be wonderful!


Shaynelle, you can grow a lot of things in tubs if you give them the
right size and the right treatment. I grew about half my stuff in
containers last year. I rent the first floor of a house & have a
patio. THis year I have plenty of ground. I sucessfully grew medium
sized pumpkins (great for inidvidual kid-sized jack-o-lanterns),
peppers, tomatoes, snow peas, snap peas, jalapenos, bell peppers,
cayennes, radishes, lettuces, scallions, & a bunch of herbs. I tried
potatoes but a wilt hit them. I did get two little potatoes. :-) I
also grew six corn stalks, but I messed up the fertilizer on them and
while they were full grown the tassels came out weeks too soon. I did
get half a cob of corn, which I feed to the birds.

This page has links to some pictures--not all are still available.
http://members.aol.com/digitalvinyl66/PatioGarden.html


I've already started my lettuces, spinach, radish, broccoli &
cauliflower in this years containers.

If you want to have some reading material on it, McGee & Stuckey's
Bountiful Container is the best I've read. They focus on those veggies
that are the most successful in containers. Theoretically you could
grow any given a large enough container. However some won't produce as
well. I recal my mom planted some tomato seed in a flower windowbox.
It grew 3-4 feet high and produced cherry-sized tomatoes. The seeds
were from beefsteak-styles, so the crowded spaces stunted them, but
things will grow given the opportunity. McGee & Stuckey discuss beets,
beans, carrots, cucumbers, eggplants, greens & lettuce, onions, Leeks,
garlic, peas, peppers, potatoes, radishes, spinach, squash & tomatoes.


Controlling Moisture consistency is a big thing in containers. I used
a couple of methods. I used self-watering containers which performed
well during heatwaves. However the spring was too wet and mold was an
issue in almost all of them before I released they could keep the dirt
TOO wet. I use Terra-Sorb or Moist-Soil crystals (break down into
potassium in 3-5 years). They soak up excess water and release it when
the ground dries. It helped to keep things evenly watered. I had only
half-dozen tomatoes out of 35 lbs form cracks. Regular watering is
important and soil amendments like those help. I also tried hydro mat,
diapers for the bottom of the pots. I didn't notice them helping as
much--although I think I have only one container with it now. One of
them grew a mushroom out a drainage whole during the all-too-wet
spring.

I won't buy clay pots anymore. They dried out way too quickly. My clay
pots needed to be watered twice a day during summer when plastic ones
needed just once. The soil in the clay ones also didn't have any
terra-sorb in them.



DiGiTAL ViNYL (no email)
Zone 6b/7, Westchester Co, NY, 1 mile off L.I.Sound
2nd year gardener
Reply
Thread Tools Search this Thread
Search this Thread:

Advanced Search
Display Modes

Posting Rules

Smilies are On
[IMG] code is Off
HTML code is Off
Trackbacks are On
Pingbacks are On
Refbacks are On


Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
What can I grow in a 1" wide, 4" deep hole? lellis2k Gardening 7 13-09-2011 12:09 PM
many deep frogs inside the thin river were talking for the wide autumn Ugliest Loud Shemale United Kingdom 0 01-09-2005 03:16 PM
we improve deep trees beside the cheap wide star, whilst Susanne firmly laughs them too Ugly Fat Fool United Kingdom 0 23-07-2005 10:37 AM
How deep is too deep? Andrew Burgess Ponds 22 02-06-2004 03:13 AM
Small 20' deep by 8' wide patio - suggestions? Katherine Edible Gardening 0 06-04-2004 09:14 PM


All times are GMT +1. The time now is 04:27 AM.

Powered by vBulletin® Copyright ©2000 - 2024, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright ©2004-2024 GardenBanter.co.uk.
The comments are property of their posters.
 

About Us

"It's about Gardening"

 

Copyright © 2017