EASY GARDENING TIPS

Resilience: Survive, thrive and farm another season!

Resilience: Survive, thrive and farm another season!

A willow tree overdue out herb garden.
Photo Bridget Aleshire

“The willow which bends to the tempest, often escapes largest than the oak which resists it.” Sir Walter Scott

I’m reading Laura Lengnick’s typesetting Resilient Agriculture, (review coming soon) and thinking well-nigh how growers thrive under varying situations, some of which we have no tenancy over. To retread to waffly weather conditions, to protract without challenges and get the weightier possible outcome whatever happens, we need to be alert, unsteadfast and quick on our feet, a bit like a Ju-Jitsu practitioner.

Being ready to tackle whatever happens includes recognizing and towers in many options, keeping all options unshut until the future is clearer, and knowing when and which way to jump. It involves stuff prepared with needed equipment (or at least phone numbers), and having our filing systems be wieldy all year, not in a big heap!

It includes getting good at understanding current conditions and predicting the future, getting to grips with radar maps and how to use Growing Degree Days. It involves keeping records of when unrepealable flowers viridity (phenology), and soil temperatures. This information helps us icon out when to plant equal to very conditions, rather than simply by the calendar, a method which is not useful as climate transpiration takes hold.

A honeybee on deadnettle weeds. Fall deadnettle germination shows that conditions are tomfool unbearable to sow spinach. Photo Kathryn Simmons

Making good assessments of conditions is the first step in cultivating adaptability. The second necessary skill-set is the worthiness to know how to make a swift and constructive visualization and locate the resources to put that visualization into practice. This includes information well-nigh soil temperatures and how long various crops take to emerge. Also, knowing how summer crops will respond to uneaten upper temperatures. And how winter crops will respond to horrifying low temperatures. When is it time to cut your losses on a struggling yield and till it in? I do a weekly tour of the gardens and re-prioritize tasks. Growing supplies is an organic process, non-linear!

These two skills are followed by a review process, so we can learn from what went wrong, as well as what went right! Usually this involves record-keeping, (dates, deportment and results) to inform next season. You can list other possible responses to fine-tune your choices next time. Record-keeping can include photos, audio recording, video clips. Whatever works. You may only need to tweak your response in future, or you may want a completely variegated approach. One of our garden mantras is “Never repeat the same mistake two years running.”

Get Ready for Farming Without Anything

Carol Deppe in The Resilient Gardener: Food Production and Self-Reliance in Uncertain Times recommends towers in slack, rather than planning to work unappetizing out every day. When something unexpected happens, you’ll have a bit of uneaten time misogynist to tackle the problem. Personal troubles like injury, health challenges, or family emergencies; or household events like financial problems can require time focused elsewhere; or disastrous weather that affects everyone virtually you. On her website, Carol has an interview tabbed Food in Uncertain Times: How to Grow and Store the Five Crops You Need to Survive. She says: “The resilient garden is designed and managed so that when things go wrong, they have less impact.” Grow supplies requiring minimal external inputs, know how to grow staple crops and save seeds. Some years you won’t need to employ these skills, but you’ll be ready when you do.

Being Flexible Well-nigh Growing Food

Our kale beds without heavy rain. Photo Wren Vile

We have a Garden Shift Honchos Guide to help whoever is leading the crew. It includes unstipulated guidelines: “Try to at least get the harvesting done, whatever the weather, (unless torrential rain, tornado, ice storm, thunder and lightning).” It suggests how to segregate jobs from our posted task list. My priority sequence is harvest, plant, mulch, prepare beds for planting, hoe, hand weed. The Honchos Guide has hints for contingencies:

  • If the day is likely to be very hot, get the physically taxing tasks washed-up first (especially anything involving shovels).
  • If the morning starts out with a heavy dew, postpone harvesting cucurbits, nightshades, strawberries and legumes until the leaves dry, to reduce the spread of disease.
  • After heavy rain: mulched perennials (fruit and asparagus) are the easiest places to work. Don’t work in sinking mud, it compacts the soil, which ways the plants go short on air, and the soil will be slower to phlebotomize without future rains. Standing on long boards is an option for harvesting or planting.
  • If heavy rain is expected and you might have to stop in a hurry, do weeding, not planting. It’s a waste of time to hoe if it’s well-nigh to rain, or that yield is due for overhead irrigation. Don’t leave pulled weeds on the beds surpassing rain or irrigation. They’ll re-root.
  • If you finger frazzled: choose a big simple task lots of people can do, like weeding strawberries, or hoeing corn. Or segregate two tasks geographically close, so it’s easy to alimony an eye on everything happening.
  • Choreographing the hairdo can be hard. It’s handy if everyone finishes harvesting virtually the same time. Perhaps spread out at first for miscellaneous harvesting, and then end up together on the yield that takes a long time.

Building in Options on the Farm

Stewart Brand in How Buildings Learn: What Happens Without They’re Built, advocates for constructing buildings that are easy to modify later, in gradual or drastic ways to meet the waffly needs of the people inside. Farms can be looked at similarly. Alimony as many options as possible (for crops, imbricate crops, yield layout) unshut for as long as possible.

It can be helpful to do some scenario planning, which I learned well-nigh in The Art of the Long View, by Peter Schwartz. Scenario Planning is a method of making flexible long-term plans, using stories (scenarios) to help us visualize variegated possible futures that include not only factors we don’t control, like the weather or the market’s enthusiasm for seedling fennel, but moreover intangibles such as our hopes and fears, beliefs and dreams. Variegated combinations of uncertainties and possibilities, including interactions of some major variables in plausible but uncomfortable as well as hoped-for combinations are used to create each scenario.

Sometimes the easiest way to compare scenarios is to set options out in a grid. For instance, in choosing which imbricate yield to sow pursuit a spring yield that we well-spoken in August-October in zone 7, we can say that the main variables are whether the season is dry or wet, and whether we are early or late planting. We can sow oats from mid-August to early September, to winter-kill, or winter rye once we reach September 1 (before that we risk the rye heading up surpassing winter and self-seeding).

Dry and Early: Sow cowpeas or soybeans with oats, for a winter-killed imbricate crop.Dry and Late: Sow winter rye or wheat alone.
Wet and Early: Sow a velvet mix in August, or hairy vetch with winter rye, 9/1-10/10Wet and Late: Sow Austrian winter peas with winter rye

Often there are increasingly variables, such as weediness. We might undersow our fall broccoli with a velvet mix in August, intending the clovers to wilt a Untried Fallow plot for the pursuit season. The next summer, we assess the situation. If the weeds are bad in July, we disk in the clovers and sow sorghum-sudan hybrid mixed with soy, as a winter-killed imbricate crop. If all looks well in July, but the weeds are gaining the upper hand in August, we have the option of tilling it in, and sowing oats mixed with soy. If the velvet is growing well, and the weeds are not bad, we over-winter the patch, and disk it in February.

Broccoli undersown with clover.
Photo Nina Gentle

Vegetable Yield Options

We have a few options recorded in our calendar:

  • If spring is unprepossessed and wet, grow transplants for the second planting of cucumbers and summer squash.
  • If the winter squash patch is too wet to disk, grow transplants, but don’t sow later-maturing varieties.
  • If the soil is to wet to hill the spring potatoes, flame weed instead.

Abundance Options

What to do if your yields are higher than planned: increase sales by giving out samples and recipes, and full-length the item on your website. Find sales to new customers (restaurants), process the yield for future out-of-season sale (if you have time), or donate it to a local supplies bank.

Shortage Options

With a CSA you can alimony a list of who gets Sun Gold tomatoes each week, until everyone has had some. This method has the wholesomeness of keeping the time spent picking cherry tomatoes lanugo to a reasonable level. The sharers get some as a treat a few times in the summer, but not every week.

You can mix leaves of several greens in an lulu tuft and undeniability it braising mix, or add unusual crops to unsober salad mix, or make up stir-fry or ratatouille packages. If a yield is really poor, it is often weightier to till it in and plant something else. For me, this eases the soul and lets me move on. We alimony a running list of crops looking for a home, so we can replace failures with fast-growing crops such as radishes, arugula, mizuna, Tokyo bekana, or salad mix. One year when our fall cabbage didn’t fill the zone intended, we used senposai, a tasty, fast-growing leaf green. If rutabagas don’t come up, sow turnips – there are very fast-growing turnips, and a small turnip is a delicacy, but a small rutabaga is a sad thing.

Hakurei turnips harvested late January.
Photo Pam Dawling

It helps to have a well-spoken and simple rotation. Our raised bed plan is ad-hoc. We make use of the flexibility: one August we were a bit late getting some tilling done, and we sowed the last cucumbers in the bed which was to have been squash. Cucumbers take a bit longer than squash to reach maturity, and I wanted to get them in the ground as soon as possible. The squash had to wait two increasingly days. Two days can make a lot of difference when planting for fall.

Finding Resilient Yield Varieties

We unchangingly read the information well-nigh disease resistance when choosing varieties, considering mid-Atlantic humidity is so conducive to fungal diseases. Depending on your climate you might pay increasingly sustentation to the cold-tolerance, or the number of days to maturity. Every year we trial small quantities of one or two new varieties of important crops slantingly our workhorses.

.