Friday, June 4, 2010

Three Sisters Garden


We have dedicated a section of our land to doing a 3 Sisters Garden, an ancient method of gardening using an intercropping system which grows corn, beans, and squash crops simultaneously in the same growing area. The idea :

Corn is the oldest sister. She stands tall in the center.
Squash is the next sister. She grows over the mound, protecting her sisters from weeds and shades the soil from the sun with her leaves, keeping it cool and moist.
Beans are the third sister. She climbs through squash and then up corn to bind all together as she reaches for the sun. Beans help keep the soil fertile by coverting the sun's energy into nitrogen filled nodules that grow on its roots. As beans grow they use the stored nitrogen as food.



Dosen't look like much now but it will be tall and beautiful in a few months! We started the corn from seed indoors about a month ago. In this picture you can see that we planted 7 rows of 3 stalks. It is important to plant several rows close together or the stalks won't pollinate and then you won't get any corn! We planted 3 squash plants down the center of this bed. We had a dinner at the house back in april where we cooked a Butternut Squash. We simply saved the seeds from it, dried them out for a few days, and then planted them in a little soil and now they are beautiful little starts ready to go outside!

The third sister, beans, will get planted once the stalks are big enough for them to climb on, and the squash has leaves are large enough to provide shade for the little beans to get started under.

Sunflowers, Nasturtiums, & Marigolds !

Rebecca built this 20 ft long trench for a wall of sunflowers, with a lower canopy of marigolds and nasturtiums. Sunflowers are easy to grow (not too picky about the soil), they are beautiful, and they attract birds to your garden who can be beneficial in eating unwanted bugs (and hopefully not your plants!)

Nasturtiums and Marigolds are great because they are also very easy to grow, beautiful and colorful, totally edible(peppery, great in salads or as a garnish), and they ward off pest insects that could be damaging to your plants.


Everyone is starting to plant in their New Beds!




Monday, May 24, 2010

Trellis Built, Tomatoes Planted!!!




We built a trellis today out of concrete reinforcement and rebar. It's 20 feet long and 7 feet tall!

Under it we planted 17 Tomatoes plants. All heirloom and a nice variety - Reds, yellows, whites, blacks, marbled, ect. After reading Carrots Love Tomatoes, a wonderful book on companion planting by Louise Riotte, I decided to get some carrots in the ground in front of the Tom's.








In addition we planted about 100 French Breakfast Radishes over the weekend. They are great raw or cooked and only take about 25 days to grow!

Wednesday, May 19, 2010

Check out this time-lapse of growth

April 1

May 1

June 1
July 15

Everything is growing/Everything is happy!

The Potatoes are starting to come up!

New growth on the Brussels . . . getting big!

The Greens are loving this weather - we have been harvesting daily for salads. The Arugula is especially peppery . . . yumm!

The Artichoke has lots of new growth. Think we may need to transplant it though, it's gonna get pretty big and it might get in the way down the line.

Stanton St. Farms Expands!!! 2 New Chicken Coops & 5 Raised Beds!

Between the two houses we have two coops and 10 chickens!













Rebecca & Silas taking care of their new chickens . . .








Wednesday, May 5, 2010

20,000 Pounds of waste removed from future garden site!

Not the best pic, but this is the last dumpster on its way out. Thanks to the generous funding from Susan(property owner) and the hard labor of at least 15 neighbors we have reclaimed this patch of earth! We removed 10 tons ( that's right, 20,000 pounds) of roofing and waste! Now we will plant cover crops and hopefully we will have even more good earth to plant on next year! Great job everyone! You should all be proud. Your all stewards of the land!


Tuesday, May 4, 2010

2 Great resources for Portland gardeners!


Need lots of good soil to fill your beds, and cheap? Look no further! Portland collects its leaves and turns them into nutrient rich compost. An entire truckload (cubic yard) costs only $20 bucks! The same amount at a garden store would cost you about 10 times as much!

http://www.portlandonline.com/transportation/index.cfm?c=35730



Need lumber to build your beds? One of our gardeners, Tommy, just got a great deal on a bunch of cedar from this awesome Buiseness in sherwood

Building Material Recycling http://www.materialforless.com/about.html



Saturday, May 1, 2010

Spring Planting

So far - Arugula, Spinach, Butter lettuce, Beets, Rhubarb, Strawberry, Brussel sprouts, Onion, Shallot, Broccoli, Kale, and 17 Potato mounds.


2 year old Artichoke plant . . .
Strawberry & Rhubarb bed . . .