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Jody Smith Williams GLEE Community Garden

Outline

 What’s Unique about Us?  Starting a Garden: The Basics  Siting Your Garden  Benefits of Raised Beds  Soil Building  Planting  Common Problems & Solutions  Jody’s Top 10  Summer Garden Care

 Growing Outside the Box  Resources

 What’s Unique About Us?  Space  Native “soil”, high Ph  Climate  Gardening calendar  Rainfall  Pests

3  Siting Your Garden: Location, location, location

 Vegetables need 6-8 hours of sunlight  Consider:  Fall/Winter shadows  Wind  Salt spray  Tree roots  Aesthetics, privacy

4  Benefits of Raised Beds:  Soil quality  No till, compaction  Drainage  Moisture retention  Weed control  Mobility (tall beds)

5  Materials:  Frame made of wood (Untreated), recycled plastic lumber, concrete block, etc.  Size  – no more than 4’ wide  - any length  6-8” deep, more for some root veggies

6 SOIL BUILDING: Most important part of organic gardening

The Soil Food Web is comprised of microorganisms that provide nutrients and health to the as well as the soil. 7 SOIL BUILDING  Line bottom of raised bed with newspaper or cardboard  Mix ~ equal parts topsoil, compost, vermiculite or sand  S FL needs more organic matter  Organic amendments:  Fish meal/emulsion , Seaweed Extract/kelp meal, Worm Castings, Plantone ® or other organic products

8 SOIL BUILDING cont’d  For tall beds, consider “lasagna gardening”

9  Considerations:  Grow things your family likes to eat  Cost/availability of store bought  Size of plants, time to maturity  Appropriateness for climate  Experiment!

10  Direct seed or seedlings?  Starting seedlings:  Sterile , fluffy starting medium  Container w/ drainage  Seed selection  Light water daily  Fertilize after 2 weeks  Transplant in shade  Moon cycles  Mulch  Buying seedlings: beware Big Box Stores  Grow Fest Oct. 19-20

11  Most common mistake: Plants too close  Tough love, must thin  Provide supports when plants are small (tomatoes, peppers, , pole beans)  Consider

12 13  Not too much, not too little, just right!  Drip or soaker irrigation on timer w/ rain detector ideal  Water soil, not plants  Finger test  Deeper watering, less often  1-2” per week  ½-1 gal per square foot.  4 x 10 plot needs 20-40 gallons

14  Common : aphids, white fly, thrips, cabbage worms, , snails/slugs, horn worms  The best offense is a good defense: healthy plants resist pests & disease  Disease resistant seeds  Foliar spray: compost tea, seaweed, fish emulsion  IPM: Attract/buy natural predators: ladybugs, lacewings, parasitic wasps, ben. nematodes 15  Organic methods of treatment: always consider impact on beneficials. Start with most benign.  Observation!  Wait for good guys  Sticky traps (yellow for white fly; blue for thrips)  Beer traps for snails/slugs  Water spray  Garlic/hot pepper /soap spray  “Two block method”  Food grade diatomaceous earth (DE)  Stronger treatments: Bt, Pyrethrum, Spinosad, Neem – may kill beneficials

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 Disease Prevention/Treatment:  Avoid Big Box stores, especially Nightshades  Cucurbits prone to powdery mildew – spray with diluted skim milk. Trellis vines for better air flow  Destroy diseased plants – DO NOT COMPOST

17  Chard  Vitamin  Kale Greens  Mustard  Mizuna  Collards  Arugula  Tatsoi  Lettuce

18  Nitrogen fixers  Bush (faster production)  Pole (longer harvest,  need trellis)  Innoculant for better yield

19  Needs 1 square foot  3-4 months to harvest

20  Cilantro  Dill  Rosemary  Parsley  Mint  Oregano  Thyme   Chives   Marjoram  Sage

21  Slow grower, small space (not too close)  Grow radishes (quick) before carrots mature

22  Slow grower, small space  Good for intercropping  Buy onion “sets”, leeks from seed

23  Bell peppers winter/spring  Hot peppers summer

24 Perennial in S. FL

25  Nitrogen fixer  Eat peas, pods and shoots

26  Prolific, low maintenance, can be kept small

27  Success unpredictable in S. FL  Prone to disease (fusarium wilt, mosaic virus, yellow curly virus, blight)  Cherry varieties do best  seedlings very deep and/or plant sideways  Trim suckers and stake plants  Don’t over water, esp before harvest  Plenty of calcium (eggshells, Epsom salts)  Consider determinate or indeterminate

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Nasturtium: Edible, Pest Deterrent Tagetes Marigold: Control 29 Wild arugula: edible, pollinator : edible, medicinal Borage: edible, pollinator, medicinal 30

31 32 33 34 35  Options:  Plant cover crop(s): Legumes, buckwheat, sunn hemp  Solarize soil  At the very least: cover with cardboard or mulch

36 Spiral Garden

37 Key hole Garden

38 Vertical Wall Garden Photo: JustOneBackyard.com

39  Florida Vegetable Gardening Guide1  University of FL IFAS Extension Service  http://edis.ifas.ufl.edu/EP124  Miami-Dade IFAS Extension Service  http://miami-dade.ifas.ufl.edu/lawn_and_garden/communitygarden.shtml  Gardeners Supply  http://www.gardeners.com/  Organic Gardening Magazine  http://www.organicgardening.com  GLEE Community Garden http://www.cgkw.pbworks.com/  http://www.communitygardenkeywest.com

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Happy Gardening!

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