Watch My Food Grow ~ A South Florida Raised Vegetable Garden

Florida Backyard Raised Vegetable Garden

Record Setting Rain Affects Vegetables: From Too Dry to Too Wet

May 29th, 2009 by Matthew Steinhoff
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How Much Rain Is Too Much Rain?

Cycling buddy George asks a great question about the amount of rain my Palm Beach Gardens raised vegetable garden has been getting lately.

I know the weather has sucked for cycling lately. But I’ve been looking on your blog for news on how it’s been treating your garden. Are the tomatoes bursting from too much water, or flooded out and drowning? Has all this wet crap helped or hurt things?

Usually, Not Enough Watering

I’m lousy when it comes to watering.

Previously, whenever it has rained, my raised vegetable garden has exploded with new growth and record vegetable production. That makes me think the plants were not getting enough water. In fact, I’m pretty sure I killed three of the four varieties of tomatoes I planted thanks to my lack of watering.

My Vegetables Are Getting Too Much Water

This last batch of rain (a foot in the last week?), however, has been bad for the garden.

The raised vegetable garden planters have turned into swimming pools. Normally, thanks to the specialized weed control cloth under the beds, the raised vegetable garden drains slow enough to hydrate the plants but quick enough that they don’t get root rot. However, the beds can only drain water so quickly when it is coming down at more than an inch an hour.

Causalities of Rain

I lost several cucumbers to mold and rot. My cucumber and watermelon vines are turning yellow. My Sun Sugar tomato plant — a steady producer since day one with always several tomatoes on the vine — is empty and looking pretty sad. (Part of that could be we’re getting near the end of growing season but, mostly, I think it is too much water and a good beating.)

Mulberries Trees Lose Their Fruit

The torrential downpours we have seen in Palm Beach County have also desecrated my mulberry trees. It used to be I could go outside and pick a gallon or more a week of ripe, black mulberries. The trees are now bare. All the ripe fruit has been washed off the trees. It’ll be a week or more before I have another crop.

Ask the Farmer

If you have any questions about my garden or gardening in South Florida, comment below or contact me directly: farmer (at) watchmyfoodgrow.com. No correct answered guaranteed but I do read my garden email.

—Farmer Matt

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Vegan Birthday Gifts from my Raised Vegetable Garden

May 27th, 2009 by Matthew Steinhoff
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Amanda and her Vegetables, With Hard HatAmanda has been a friend since we both attended Forest Hill High School back in the day. Her birthday a couple weeks ago. My wife was out of town visiting her garden-hating sister.

I had no time to shop as I was taking care of our son while she was gone.

What to do?

Fortunately, Amanda is a Tree-Hugging Vegetarian

But wait! I have a raised vegetable garden and Amanda eats vegetables pretty much exclusively. While she tends towards fake vegetables, the kind you buy in stores, I’m sure she’d appreciate real vegetables, too.

What I don’t have, however, is any talent at turning a bunch of random garden vegetables and mulberries from my raised garden into something worthy of presentation to a birthday girl.

Stefani, Palm Beach Organizer and Present Stylist

The conversation went something like this…

Me: ‘Stefani, save me. Sarah is out of town. I have to make something look pretty. I realize it’s early on a Saturday morning and I’m calling you at the absolute last minute but I need organizational presentational magic.’

Stefani, The Happy Organizer, Takes My Garden Vegetable Basket to Fancy TownHer: ‘No’.

Me: ‘Please’.

Her: ‘No’.

Me: ‘Please’.

Her: ‘No’.

Me: ‘I’ll promote your organizational, bookkeeping and personal assistant business in my world-renowned raised vegetable garden blog.’.

Her: ‘Okay, but you owe me.’

And, thus, the best Organizer for Palm Beach and Jupiter, Stefani made present magic happen.

Amanda Liked the Basket of Garden Goodies

The jar of picked-that-morning mulberries were gone even before the party was over. Much of the broccoli was eaten, dipped in ranch dressing. The sunflowers were admired by all. All in all, the present was well received. The backyard raised vegetable garden, once again, saves the day.

—Farmer Matt

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Sunflowers in the Raised Vegetable Garden

May 8th, 2009 by Matthew Steinhoff
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Sunflower Friday!

Want a cheap Mother’s Day gift? Plant sunflowers. Here is what Malcolm’s Mother is getting this year…

Sunflowers for Mother's Day

Don’t Tell Sarah About the Sunflowers

We want it to be a surprise.

—Farmer Matt

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