Archive for the ‘No Dig Gardening’ Category

Pumpkins Flowering in Winter

Sunday, July 19th, 2009

It’s the depths of winter in Brisbane, getting as low as 5 degrees at night. Yet the pumpkin vine I planted last November is still alive and has only now decided to start producing female flowers and fruit, after nothing but leaves all summer. Has anyone else in Brisbane had pumpkins behaving strangely this year?

The winter no-dig garden

Monday, April 13th, 2009

Over the Easter weekend I’ve renewed my no-dig garden. I pulled out the old and not very productive rockmelon and watermelon vines and snake beans, re-did the fence so it sags less (and is less easily climbed by marauding possums), and added more lucerne and more sugar can mulch.

All the rain has made it a perfect time to plant for winter. I’ve just put in some cauliflower and Grosse Lisse tomato seedlings, and a few unusual salad greens that I learned about at a tropical vegies workshop a few weeks ago: mitsuba, Brazilian spinach, and mustard greens. The capsicums and basil are left over from summer and are stilll producing now.

Snake Beans

Thursday, February 5th, 2009

I’ve been growing snake beans over the summer this year. Brisbane is sub-tropical and has hot and sticky summers, so I’ve been trying out some more tropical vegies that won’t wilt at the first touch of Queensland summer sun.

The snake beans are pretty prolific, and live up to their name - I harvested one that was nearly 30cm in length. They seem to survive dry hot weather, but don’t bear much unless they get a decent soak. The beans themselves are a little paler than standard green beans, but taste similar.

No-Dig Garden Update

Monday, February 2nd, 2009

After a few weeks of hot dry weather, the last week has been a little kinder to the garden and it’s had a good soaking again.

I’ve been harvesting handfuls of basil and the odd tomato, capsicum, and snake bean but mostly I’m waiting for the rockmelons to ripen. There are at least five in there, ranging from tennis ball size on upwards. This is my first time growing them and they are surprisingly easy and tolerant of variable condition compared to finicky plants like tomatoes.

How to Stop Possums Eating Your Garden

Thursday, January 29th, 2009

I appear to have won the ongoing battle with the possums. The answer, which was kindly provided in the comments earlier in January, is mosquito netting.

Enclosing the whole garden in a double-bed size net has kept the possums from climbing the fence and from eating any of the vines that are growing along it. It also filters the hot Queensland summer sun a little.

The one caveat to covering your garden in netting - remember to open it up during the day, otherwise the pollinators aren’t able to get in and the harvest may suffer.

Baby Rockmelon

Friday, January 16th, 2009

I just love how fruits and curcurbits look when really young.

Rockmelons Are Go

Tuesday, January 13th, 2009

The rockmelons were slow to fruit, running all over the garden festooned with flowers, but now that they have set fruit they are doing it with a vengeance.

And the biggest one so far…

Variety of Green Capsicums

Sunday, January 11th, 2009

There are about four capsicum plants in my vegie garden, all from the same punnet of seedlings. One has only flowers, two are throwing fruit that all look like chillis (without the heat), and one is producing standard capsicums like you’d see in the shops.

The Possum’s Breakfast

Thursday, January 8th, 2009

I was keeping a close eye on the first watermelon on the vines, which was growing nicely, from this…

To this…

Then the day I hoped would never come arrived. The possums have figured out how to collapse the top of the fence and get to the fruit growing on the wire.

Sigh. I guess more fortifications are in order.

First Harvest

Monday, January 5th, 2009

The first edibles from the no-dig garden, not much more than two months after planting. Basil, two cherry tomatoes, a capsicum and a cucumber.

The cucumber just before it was picked.