Come garden with us! No experience necessary but enthusiasm is! Each bed in The Peterson Garden Project has 24 sq. feet of gardening space. That allows for a lot of fresh produce for your family and friends. Before you commit, please be willing to: Visit your plot 2-3 times per week Be committed
boudreaulicious wrote:A friend and I (both small households) are looking for an additional person or two who might like to share in the cost (the plot contribution is $45 plus materials), labor, time and, most of all, harvest! While I have a nice space for container gardening, there are some things that I know would benefit tremendously from being grown in ground. I am also excited about having access to their gardening experts and know that even the tips from other gardeners will improve my results, both at there and at home. If you'd be interested in partnering with my friend Sean and I in this, please let me know by PM or email.
pairs4life wrote:boudreaulicious wrote:A friend and I (both small households) are looking for an additional person or two who might like to share in the cost (the plot contribution is $45 plus materials), labor, time and, most of all, harvest! While I have a nice space for container gardening, there are some things that I know would benefit tremendously from being grown in ground. I am also excited about having access to their gardening experts and know that even the tips from other gardeners will improve my results, both at there and at home. If you'd be interested in partnering with my friend Sean and I in this, please let me know by PM or email.
I'll do it. I'm thinking about melons & perhaps corn, who knows.
pairs4life wrote:I'll do it. I'm thinking about melons & perhaps corn, who knows.
David Hammond wrote:had very indistinct flavor).
Be interesting to see what happens with corn, which I believe is pretty tough to grow if all you have is a few rows.
boudreaulicious wrote:David and Steve--thanks for the feedback. I've only ever had container gardens so in ground is a whole new world for me. Any suggestions on what I might want to consider moving (figuratively since I haven't planted much of anything but lettuce, arugula and carrots yet) from my container plan to the plot?
boudreaulicious wrote:David and Steve--thanks for the feedback. I've only ever had container gardens so in ground is a whole new world for me. Any suggestions on what I might want to consider moving (figuratively since I haven't planted much of anything but lettuce, arugula and carrots yet) from my container plan to the plot?
Peterson Garden wrote:If you want an idea of the types of things you can grow, check this link out http://ow.ly/1DiYE It shows how much you can get in a raised bed (ours will be 6x4' so 24sq ft of growing area) and also provides ideas on what to grow.
Peterson Garden wrote:Hi all - Thanks for the interest in Peterson Garden!
If you want an idea of the types of things you can grow, check this link out http://ow.ly/1DiYE It shows how much you can get in a raised bed (ours will be 6x4' so 24sq ft of growing area) and also provides ideas on what to grow.
We'll also be on hand to help! We recently got some heirloom tomato starts donated so we'll have those and some seeds to share. It's going to be fun! Please help spread the word!
In a 6'X4' plot, I'd suggest limiting yourself to about four heirloom tomato plants,
auxen1 wrote:In a 6'X4' plot, I'd suggest limiting yourself to about four heirloom tomato plants,
For the $45 charge wouldn't you be better off buying an earth box, planting tomato plants in it, avoid burning fossil fuels going back and forth, and so forth.
And in year two you'd save the $45.
pairs4life wrote:auxen1 wrote:In a 6'X4' plot, I'd suggest limiting yourself to about four heirloom tomato plants,
For the $45 charge wouldn't you be better off buying an earth box, planting tomato plants in it, avoid burning fossil fuels going back and forth, and so forth.
And in year two you'd save the $45.
I'm bad w/ measurements. I scored 8 earthboxes so I was particularly interested in things that may desire more elbow room.
I've been encouraged to try my hand at melons in the earthboxes (quite a few folks do it w/ success) & there's a woman here who has home-made containers who has also been successful.
The increased sense of community & shared knowledge could be a positive that outweighs the initial cost & the burning of fossil fuels ( but as a 1 car family-- it can be a logistical pain in the bottom--hear you).
boudreaulicious wrote:I would say that I "hope" LaManda Joy can work another miracle and find a way to bring the Petersen Garden project back in 2011 but I'm pretty sure that she'll do that and more. And I look forward to joining her.
Links for Additional Information
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