MARK YOUR CALENDARS FOR THE UPCOMING OTCG MEETING:
TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 18 at 6:30p at the CCA
- ALL-GARDENERS MEETING
- Any and all gardeners are welcome to come
See you in the garden!
MARK YOUR CALENDARS FOR THE UPCOMING OTCG MEETING:
TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 18 at 6:30p at the CCA
See you in the garden!
See you in the garden!
See you in the garden!
Saturday, April 19 at 10a at the OTCG
All gardeners are welcome to attend the ALL-GARDENERS MEETING on Thursday and everyone is invited to the OLD TOWN COMMUNITY GARDEN SPRING KICK-OFF!
See you there!
Tuesday, February 19 at 6:30p
Welcome gardeners,
You all worked hard this past season growing a productive garden while overcoming several tough obstacles --- Soil conditions, drainage problems and lots of rain to name a few. With the new
raised beds and planting soil in place, compost "working" in the bins and soon to be, if not yet completed, aisles refreshed with wood chips, you should all be excited about the next growing season.
A sample of our "ready to plant" soil mix was sent to the Texas A&M soil labs to be analyzed. We have the result and recommendations back. Not surprising it is devoid of nitrogen and needs some phosphorus but less than a pound of each for the size plots we have. The soil also tested a pH of 7.2 which is slightly alkaline, desired is 6.5. The soil delivered to us is largely sand and not as much fertile top soil we had expected. That being the case we will be adding organic matter and fertilizer according to the soil test results/ recommendations. Don't worry, Gary and Al will be available to interpret the test results and answer any questions. There are a number of simple ways to amend and rapidly improve the soil. You will have a very good growing soil and with the help of Mother Nature a very productive garden.
For now here are several things you can look at and think about for next year’s garden.
HELPFUL HINTS:
Now is the time to gather ideas for the garden next year.
Seed selections
A very good source of information is the web site of Texas A&M. The sequence I suggest is www.aggie-horticulture.tamu.edu then click in sequence in succeeding windows "gardening", "home gardening", "tx extension vegetable publications", "vegetable resources", "vegetable crop guides". Select the vegetable of choice and educate yourself about the plant.
That should keep you occupied for a month or two. There is a multitude of resources available to help you plan your garden. Have fun. After all that is what this is all about. FUN!
We'll give you a new list of HELPFUL HINTS in January. For the immediate future have a Merry Christmas and Blessed New Year!
Al