Dear Big Diggers,
After reading Carolyn Herriot's great book "A Year on the Garden Path - 52 weeks", I summarized the main items for each month into an easy-to-read, colourful document.
It's three double sided pages in pdf over at our P.I. email group.
CLICK HERE and sign in to see the pdf, if you'd like to print out your own copy. It has already been updated once thanks to Jim, and can continue to be updated by you if you have ideas to add.
Here are the first two months to look ahead at:
January
1st week– relax, read seed catalogues, plan, design, build. Test soil if unsure of acidity.
– make new, paper mason bee tubes for our bee houses that go outdoors in March.
2nd week
- use dolomite lime on beds where needed, leaving several months time for the lime to break down
- order seeds that do well in our west coast climate (Note: avoid Monsanto seed companies).
3rd week
- green pea and summer cabbage seeds can be started in cool greenhouse; grow peas to six inches in height before planting out.
4th week
- top dress soil and feed with organic mulch. Add layers to existing compost piles.
- in the greenhouse, remove dead or mouldy leaves. Watering: Keep winter mesclun fairly dry.
February
1st week– clean and maintain all tools; wipe wooden handles with oil (linseed/turps) 1-2 times per year.
– clean out/sterilize the greenhouse and get trays/pots ready for new seedlings
2nd week
– tend fruit trees (dormant spray; prune out diseased wood or cankers.)
3rd week
- can speed up rhubarb by covering with an upended terra cotta pot to force growth.
- sow fava or bell* beans from Feb. to early March for a July or August harvest date.
4th week
- in greenhouse sow onion, leek, lettuce, peas in pots, early cabbage, summer cabbage, spinach. Plan spaces for flower seeds.
I'm a novice gardener myself, and I really think these are handy lists to have. Please comment if you'd like to.
Best to all,
J.
*The fava beans are edible by summer (if you like them) but the bell beans (I just looked it up) are a cover crop that gets weed wacked and tilled under. Good for a fallow bed rotation before another pea crop, apparently. Useful info.