Week Two

May 25, 2008 at 9:14 pm (Urban Vegetable Gardening) (, , )

The air was warm, the sky blue and the sunlight dazzling when I arrived at Plot 32 this weekend with my tomato plants and trowel. But I was less than happy with what I saw: the soil hard and dry and cracked like old leather. What was worse was the fact that I couldn’t tell where I had sown my lettuce, carrot and onion seed a week ago.

That’s right, I failed to mark my rows! I had wondered at the time if I should, but not having brought so much as a spare stick with me, I convinced myself that I would still be able to tell where my rows were even before the seeds germinated. No germination has occurred yet, and in the intervening days the combination of the wind that seems always to be blowing at the garden site and the small amounts of rain we had seems to have flattened the minuscule mounds that had marked my rows.

Still, I had a good idea of which half of the plot I hadn’t seeded last week and so I plunked in eight tomatoes and a small number of cucumber seeds. I gave the soil a good hosing, tip-toeing about in my mud like a short-strung marionette, unsure if the lumps that I was trying not to stand upon while I watered were the rows from last week.

Note to self: mark all rows next year.

My tomato plants get a visitor (the killdeer in foreground)As the wind and sun speedily began to dry up the just-watered ground, and a cute little killdeer began to explore my diggings (see photo), I realized I will be making nightly watering trips to my little veggie patch for the duration of this summer. The soil just does not seem to hold water well.

Further note to self: buy lots of compost next year. Work well into the soil before seeding anything.

Thank goodness I have the tomato plants in now. Their slender bits of green, so small and so few though they may be amid all that lumpy brown earth, actually make Plot 32 look like someone is using it. Or at least trying to.

Yet a further note to self: consider starting other vegetables indoors before spring and planting the seedlings rather than seeds. Looks way more like a real garden then, right at the start — and I won’t have to be left waiting so long to see if anything is going to grow!

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