1. WHAT'S
GROWIN' ON IN MAY
This has been a busy month, both in the
garden and at Gardenerd.com. After a little bit of a late start,
the garden is bustling with the first zucchini and yellow crookneck
squashes forming on the vine. Potatoes are sending up foliage and
the newly planted asparagus crowns are taking off toward the sky.
Peppers and tomatoes are flowering, while the beans are getting ready to
do the same. We've also been harvesting seeds from cilantro and
sweet pea plants from last season. Strawberries are turning from
green to red, and the garlic is falling over - soon it will be time to
harvest!
This month we also had the Gardenerd
Organic Gardening Series once again. There's still one class left
in this series - Pruning, Tools and Tool Care, if you want to get in on
it.
CLICK HERE TO REGISTER NOW!
The series will be run again in August - just in time for fall planting.
Stay tuned for more details.
2.
VACATION WATERING
Whether it be a weekend getaway or a
two-week trip, you want your garden to be alive when you return.
Not to mention, you don't want to be worrying about it while you're
away. Here's a quick and easy solution for drip irrigation that
does the trick no matter how long you decide to disappear.
Vacation Watering Solution
3. GARDENERD
TIP OF THE MONTH: A Shade Gazebo
Spare your salad greens
and lettuces the pain and suffering of hot summer days. Spare
yourself the sadness of going without them all summer long. Build
a simple "Shade Gazebo" to keep your greens cool and crisp so you can
feast on them by the pool. Depending on the size of your lettuce
patch, you will need enough 2 foot stakes for each corner of the area,
plus several places in the middle. Measure the width of your
lettuce patch and cut shade cloth to fit, leaving an extra foot on
either side. You will also need garden pins or
Earth Staples to secure the shade cloth
to the ground.
Place the stakes around
the perimeter of your lettuce patch, then place several stakes along the
center, making these slightly taller than the outside stakes. Lay
the shade cloth over the top like a tent and secure it to the ground at
the edges with Earth Staples. You can water straight through the
cloth, but you can still remove it to check on and harvest your lettuces
throughout the summer.
As an alternative, (and
something we've done in the Gardenerd Test Garden as well) you can
create smaller "tents" by deconstructing standard tomato cages.
Cut the vertical wires of the cage just above the horizontal ring of the
bottom and middle rings. What you are left with are 3 rings that
each have 3 or 4 little legs extending out the bottom. Stick these
in the ground over your lettuce and drape the shade cloth over the top.
Secure with cloths pins.
4.
GARDENERD PRODUCT OF THE MONTH: Gardenerd Maternity Shirt
Since it's May and Mother Appreciate Month is still alive and kicking,
we've created a new product for expectant mothers. Been looking
for that perfect gift for your pregnant Gardenerd friends? Here ya
go:
Get
your Gardenerd Maternity Shirt Here
I've been
told that sizes run small, so if you're
REALLY pregnant, size up for comfort.