How Does Your Garden Grow?

Steve’s mom, “Mrs. B,” is a pretty avid gardener.  She has raised beds in the backyard with all kinds of different vegetables, –multiple varieties of tomatoes, cucumbers, lettuces, squash, fennel, I don’t even know what else.  She starts them all from seed, and actually ends up giving quite a few away to friends and family, as well as donating some to a local charity to sell.  I usually get a few different tomatoes and a cucumber, which I’ve grown in my parents’ garden the past few years.  This year, Steve and I have our own yard to plant them in! 

The catch: the former owner had some interesting landscaping ideas.  Both the front and back yard are filled with rose bushes (with a few other types of flowers scattered here and there), and what is not occupied by roses is covered with decorative gravel.  In other words, there is nowhere to plant anything without tearing something else out.  Which we fully intend to do . . . when we have some free time.  For now, though, one of the tomatoes, an heirloom brandywine, was in pretty serious need of repotting, so we grabbed a “Topsy-Turvey” on impulse at Fry’s and hung the brandywine upside down from the trellis in the backyard.

Our new Topsy-Turvey . . .
Our new Topsy-Turvey . . .
. . . and the brandywine we planted.
. . . and the brandywine we planted.

 I’m really curious to see how this thing works.  The last time I tried a novel gardening gimmick was a complete disaster.  It was a raised bed with a special soil mix.  Because you start with weed-free soil mix, you were supposed to have no weed problems.  Further, the mix was “friable,” so if you over watered it was supposed to flow right through and not hurt your plants.  It was supposed to be idiot-proof, but everything died within a couple of weeks.  Notably, the items I planted straight into the hard clay soil next to the raised bed flourished. 

We still have to figure out what to do with the additional plants Mrs. B gave us, a Burbank slicing tomato, and orange cherry tomato, and a burpless cucumber.  They don’t look like they are outgrowing their pots just yet, so we have a little time.  She also gave us some strawberries in a strawberry pot, which of course won’t need to be transplanted.  I hope we do well with the plants this summer; it would be fun to have some super fresh fruits and veggies straight from our garden.

Two tomato seedlings, a cucumber plant, and a strawberry pot.
Two tomato seedlings, a cucumber plant, and a strawberry pot.

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