Fun
Buying Plants
Preparing Your Garden
Raised Bed Examples
-
- Raised beds dry out and heat up more quickly
- Make sure you can access all areas of the garden
- Let them lay fallow in the summer with turned in compost
- Irrigation around the perimeter – Drip line, soaker hose
Replace about every three years - DO NOT USE above the ground sprinklers
Planting in the Ground
- Dig hole at least twice as big as the root ball
- Plant in 1/2 native soil and 1/2 compost
- Remove rocks
- Soil in Arizona is 7.5 – 8.5 – Add compost 2x yearly
Potting Mix Mixture
- Mortar Mixing Basin – Toss about every other week
- Egg Carton
- Compost
- Bone meal
- Coffee Grounds or Blood meal
- Local ground
- Lava sand
- Soak in milk
Starting Seeds
- You can use a clamshell package (strawberries, blueberries use them)
- Put a wet paper towel in the bottom
- Fill with potting mixture
- Keep soil moist until they are one inch tall
- Transplant at 3-4 inches
Transplants
Garden Maintenance
Test trees for soil moisture
- Push stick in. It should go three foot into the dirty
- Water every two weeks
- Fertilize on schedule
Peppers
- Keep soil moist for peppers for milder and more flavorful
Plants with Moist Fruit
- Keep soil moist for plants with high moisture content such as cucumbers
Squash
- SUMMER Squash – Plant in spring, harvest in summer – quick growing
- WINTER Squash – Plant in spring, harvest in winter – slower growing
- EGGPLANT and ZUCCHINI – Cut off fruit to trigger more production
• Oriental Eggplant grows well in Arizona - Thin by cutting off at ground level. Leave the roots.
Flowers attract pollinators and repel pests
- Begonia, Marigold, Petunia, Finias, Alyssum, Zinnia, Snapdragons
- Plant in early autumn for flowers in early spring
Fertilize
- Bone meal – Phosphorous
- Corn meal
- Blood meal
- Molasses
- Compost
- Organic fertilizer
- Manure
- Tomato Blend – summer winds
- Bury fish for tomatoes
Tips and Tricks
- Garden sink? Route drainage to your tree
- Temperatures over 90º kill active pollen
- High temps can also kill roots – Mulch to three inches when temperatures go above 90º
- Start seeds inside 5-8 weeks before Transplants go into the ground
– Clam-shell strawberry box works well for this
– Consider a GREENHOUSE for your starts. - Seeds should be planted at a depth of twice the widest measurement of the seed width
– The problem is they will starve before germination if planted too deeply - IF ROOTBOUND – Soak, then cut bottom in quarters – Soak again, then plant
– Also remove a peat pot if this is used
– Keep soil moist until germination - Keep soil moist for high moisture fruit such as melons, cucumbers, etc.
- Re: SQUASH BEETLES – Pick them off in early morning
• Put a board on the ground, they will collect there - THREE SISTERS: Corn, Beans, Squash – Wait for corn to be at least four foot high before planting others
• Plan in a mound 1″ high and 2″ wide - Thin your plants or they ALL will do poorly
- Sprinkle Cayenne Pepper around to keep cats off your new transplants
Coffee grounds and orange peel also work - Nurseries will special order plants for you
Education
Book: The Garden Guy
Arizona Herb Association
Glendale Class – by Carol Stuttard
Handouts: PAGE 1 :: PAGE 2 :: PAGE 3 :: PAGE 4 :: PAGE 5 :: PAGE 6
Other notes have been incorporated somewhere within this page
Carol’s Gardening Blog
Timeline by MONTH
- NOTE: Any transplant can be started from seed INSIDE 5-8 weeks before moving outside. Transplant at 3-4 inches.
- Go by the Extension Service Calendar NOT the dates printed on the seed packet.
- CLICK HERE for reputable seed providers.
- For average temperatures, CLICK HERE or click on the chart
FREEZE RANGE – Worst case scenario – - Climate similar to Spain, South Affrica, Australia
January
- SEEDS – Lettuce – Mustard – Peas – Radishes – Rutabega – Spinach – Turnip – Bulb Onion – Green Onion – Spinach – Bok Choy – Carrots – Swiss Chard – Collard Greens – Basil
- TRANSPLANTS – Lettuce – Kohlrabi – Broccoli – Swiss Chard – Collard Greens –
- BULBS – Onion –
- OTHER – Potatoes
February
- SEEDS – Mustard Greens – Onion – Peas – Watermelon – Green Onion – Spinach – Sunflower – Bok Choy – Carrots – Collard Greens – Sweet Corn – Cucumber – Armenian Cucumber – Basil
- TRANSPLANTS – Tomatoes – Artichokes – Swiss Chard –
- BULBS – Onions –
- OTHER – Potatoes –
March
There is only a 20% chance of temperatures below 32º after March 1
Chances are 80% that the temperature will be about
- SEEDS – Watermelon – Cantaloupe – Green Onion – Pumpkin – Summer Squash -Winter Squash – Sunflower – Basil – Carrots – Sweet Corn – Cucumber – Armenian Cucumber –
- TRANSPLANTS – Peppers – Tomatoes – Artichokes – Basil – Eggplant –
- BULBS –
- OTHER – Sweet Potato Eyes –
- TIPS – Keep soil moist for high moisture fruit
April
- SEEDS – Cantaloupe – Green Onion – Summer Squash – Sunflower – Basil – Carrots – Sweet Corn – Cucumber – Armenian Cucumber –
- TRANSPLANTS – Artichokes – Basil –
- BULBS –
- OTHER – Sweet Potato Eyes – Peanuts
- TIPS – Keep soil moist for high moisture fruit
May
- SEEDS – Cantaloupe – Sunflower – Basil – Armenian Cucumber –
- TRANSPLANTS – Basil –
- BULBS –
- OTHER – Sweet Potato Eyes –
- TIPS – Keep soil moist for high moisture fruit
June
- SEEDS – Cantaloupe – Sunflower – Armenian Cucumber –
- TRANSPLANTS –
- BULBS –
- OTHER – Sweet Potato Eyes –
- TIPS – Shade bell peppers from intense sun – Keep soil moist for high moisture fruit
July
- SEEDS – Cantaloupe – Pumpkin – Winter Squash – Sunflower – Sweet Corn – Armenian Cucumber –
- TRANSPLANTS – Peppers – Tomatoes –
- BULBS –
- OTHER –
- TIPS – Shade bell peppers from intense sun – Keep soil moist for high moisture fruit
August
- SEEDS – Green Onion – Summer Squash – Brussels Sprouts – Carrots – Swiss Chard – Collard Greens – Sweet Corn – Cucumber –
- TRANSPLANTS – Tomatoes –
- BULBS –
- OTHER –
- TIPS – Shade bell peppers from intense sun – Keep soil moist for high moisture fruit
September
- SEEDS – Kale – Kohlrabi – Lettuce – Green Onion – Spinach – Bok Choy – Broccoli – Brussels Sprouts – Carrots – Swiss Chard – Collard Greens – Cucumber –
- TRANSPLANTS – Brussels Sprouts – Swiss Chard –
- BULBS –
- OTHER –
- TIPS – Shade bell peppers from intense sun – Keep soil moist for high moisture fruit
October
- SEEDS – Kale – Kohlrabi – Lettuce – Green Onion – Bulb Onion – Spinach – Bok Choy – Broccoli – Brussels Sprouts – Carrots – Swiss Chard – Collard Greens –
- TRANSPLANTS – Lettuce – Broccoli – Brussels Sprouts – Swiss Chard –
- BULBS – Garlic
- OTHER –
- TIPS –
November
- SEEDS – Kale – Kohlrabi – Lettuce – Green Onion – Bulb Onion – Spinach – Bok Choy – Broccoli – Brussels Sprouts – Carrots – Swiss Chard – Collard Greens –
- TRANSPLANTS – Kohlrabi – Lettuce – Broccoli – Brussels Sprouts – Swiss Chard –
- BULBS –
- OTHER –
- TIPS
December
- SEEDS – Kale – Lettuce – Green Onion – Spinach – Bok Choy – Broccoli – Carrots – Swiss Chard – Collard Greens –
- TRANSPLANTS – Kohlrabi – Lettuce – Broccoli – Swiss Chard –
- BULBS – Bulb Onion –
- OTHER –
- TIPS –
SHOULDERS ARE NOT COVERED WELL. SEE THE BELOW IMAGES FOR MORE EXACT TIMELINES.