Before anyone starts with the man-card crap....yes I care about the Earth and enjoy nature. Sue me. :lol:
Just wondering if anyone has even successfully started their own backyard garden. Especially in South Florida but other places as well. If so what is the easiest way to get started? Which vegetables are good for someone with a decent but slightly limited amount of space? What mistakes did you make that I could avoid?
I've done some research but most sites seem geared towards people with SOME experience. I have none. I'd also like to grow some herbs but that seems a lot easier.
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I started a Beer Garden. Built my own badass Kegerator and fully stocked fridge with frosted mug in the freezer.
Alex44 likes this. -
There is nothing wrong with a man growing vegetables. I'm thinking about doing that in the spring here in Maryland. A lot of my family in Florida grow and have grown vegetables down there. Some things I know they've grown well are okra, tomatoes, cucumbers, peas, various peppers, and squash. Granted this is north Florida but I wouldn't think there would be a huge difference.
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We do this all of the time A44, usually your local county govt has a webpage or the state dept of ag has guide for whatever area you are in.
Herbs are very easy to grow, and you can use them in oil to make an herb infused oil.
SFlorida should support just about anything, from Strawberries to Asparagus, my one caution is you are probably better off growing more expensive veggies rather than stuff like potatoes or what have you. Watch out for insects especially down there.
IMO it's a lot of fun and a good excuse to drink a couple of beers and hang out in the sunshine. -
Good starter plants are tomato plants. Grow them in 5 gallon buckets on your deck/porch. Fill the buckets with potting soil, plant your seeds and fertilize as necessary. To keep critters out, put chicken wire or something similar in the opening of the bucket and have it extend vertically a foot or so.
If you find that managing those are easy, then step up. Start a small garden in the ground, but be ready to work it daily.Alex44 likes this. -
Thanks for the input so far to everyone.
Also special thanks to Padre. By Googling the Dept. Of Agriculture (which I wouldn't have thought to do for a while) I came across a PDF file by the University Of Florida that has a lot of information about what grows best in Miami-Dade (Im Broward but close enough) and what issues one may encounter.
Any other input is still greatly appreciated as well. -
if you've got some extra money, I used to use those earthboxes - reservoir systems - when I lived in Atlanta. I had trouble growing in the ground because of the heat. the earthboxes grew so many veggies I had to throw many of them out. Had a tomato bush that grew about 4 feet high and 5 feet across. -
Back in high school I had a small garden in my closet...
Paul 13, Frumundah Finnatic, McLovin and 4 others like this. -
Don't start any garden if you think you might not have enough time to give it all the attention it needs considering you won't be working with an established root system.
Herbs are easy. I'm a fan of basil, rosemary, and oregano, but basil & oregano require some extra attention to grow 'em up well and keep 'em growing, so you'll have to study up on those two. It's significantly more cost effective to pay a few bucks for a basil plant, grow it up, and pick off it whenever needed.
Actually, I found most of it to be easy provided you follow the care instructions (how much watering & sun exposure needed, etc) and can stay consistent with it. If you can successfully follow a recipe for baking a cake, you should be ok with growing a small garden. IMO, being a successful gardener goes a long way when you feel a sense of pride in doing it, as well as treating the plants as if they're living creatures whose lives you're responsible for. Just make sure it's something you'd enjoy doing rather than treating it as though it's a chore.Alex44 likes this. -
Alex44 and MikeHoncho like this.
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I water at night when it's hot out as well. That's a good tip.Alex44 likes this. -
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Sent from my DROIDX using Tapatalk 2Alex44 likes this. -
How do u confse Gao with Garden?
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-Coffee grinds
-egg shells
-veggie left overs
And then just work them into the soil, the rain will break that stuff down and enrich your soil, a good tip is buy some fishing worms and add those and banana peels to your raised bed, that makes for a very very rich soil in a small space.
If your into it check out how the French use potagers:
http://www.frenchgardening.com/aupotager.html?pid=3104884985285027
worms in your soil:
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How important is proper soil PH? For anyone that knows.
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The importance of PH will depend on what you're growing. Some plants have a broader range of tolerances than others. Just search online with the name of what you're growing and PH and you should find out if it'll be an issue for you. I live in a different area, but the only time it mattered for me was when I had pine trees, whose needles raise the ph. I just looked for high ph loving produce for that area. I'm late to this thread, but my main point would have echoed Padre's. You find out what grows best in your area and your odds of success go up exponentially.
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I wish we had a bigger yard, we'd be all over growing our own veggies and fruits. We have one of those hanging tomato plants. Thing is kicking out tons of tomatoes.. This is the true organic way. The organic **** we buy in the stores here is labeled from Guatamela and Mexico... yeah i'm sure they just grow the stuff naturally... mm hmm... I totally want an avocado tree or several.
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I container garden, this summer had those aphids all over my tomato plants and did not want to use insecticide
So, found the local wasp nest and put the containers underneath it..about a week the aphids were strangely missing. -
Egg shells, the leftovers from seafood like crab leg husks, coffee grinds, veggie peels (even if you make stock with them).
I've heard great great things about adding worms into the mix tho, have not tried it, use them up when I fresh water fish..:lol: -
as far as worms, I've definitely found the best soils I've grown in have the most worms. land I have up here in Mass is the best I've ever seen. -
BUT the South has 3-4 growing season, if one is into it you can literally plant in February and harvest up until Nov/December
As for the doggies..bad dog! bad!
:lol:
Sidelight is my Grandmother retired to Florida in the late 60's to an old citrus grove, so we always had that available, hated grapefruit then but enjoy it now -
mods can we move this thread to the women's work forum. K thanks.
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With sequence or in my case menquence. -