How My Garden is Growing
Garden Status: July 29, 2006
Radicchio and Cabbage have germinated
1 or 2 Carrots have come up
No sign of fennel
Leeks are coming up
Peas are about 2 inches tall.
Thanks,
Ebinla
How My Garden is Growing
Garden Status: July 29, 2006
Radicchio and Cabbage have germinated
1 or 2 Carrots have come up
No sign of fennel
Leeks are coming up
Peas are about 2 inches tall.
Thanks,
Ebinla
Garden Status: July 24
Barrel 1 – I left the parsley as is, it seems to be doing well. I ripped out the basil – which hadn’t even grown to one inch, and planted seeds for three fennel in the center. I then tucked King Richard leek seeds into the outer spaces between the parsley. I know it is too late in the season for the leeks to grow to full size, but I’m hoping that I can get some succulent baby leeks for my efforts.
Barrel 2 – The peas are coming up nicely!
Barrel 3 – I ripped out the remaining tomatoes and planted seeds for one head of cabbage – Super Red 80. In a circle around the cabbage, I planted four radicchio - Chioga Red Preco, and then quarter circles of mini-carrots - Mokum. So, the barrel planting looks like this:
Barrel 4 – Barrel 4 is planted with 5 broccoli seedlings that have germinated and been subjected to a preliminary thinning. I’m starting to think that 5 broccoli plants might be too much. I may get it down to just one broccoli and plant something else around the edge.
Barrel 5 – Barrel five has three zucchini plants that have grown a little bit and are in flower. I will leave them as is. I think they will produce some vegetables.

For poking around the bases of the wine barrels – zinnia, marigolds, chamomile, lobelia, foxglove, nasturtiums, chives
Garden Status: July 19, 2006
A short post - I have ripped out all my sun loving vegetables (tomatoes, eggplant and melon) and I've planted Peas in Barrel 2 and Broccoli in Barrel 4.
Ebinla

There are a few guidelines for selecting vegetables if you do not have a sunny spot. Generally, anything less that six hours is considered part-sun.
I’ve recently moved to a new home. When we bought the house in the middle of winter, I was excited to own one whole luxurious acre on which to garden. I picked the spot in the yard that I thought would receive the most light, but, not knowing exactly how much sun my veggie garden would receive, I decided to plant everything in half-wine barrels. If it didn’t work out, I could ‘move’ my garden to a more suitable spot.
In the spring, as the leaves grew on the trees, it became pretty obvious that my vegetables would not be receiving full sunlight. There isn’t a single spot on my luxurious (and heavily wooded) acre that receives more than four hours of sun.
At first I was desolate. In two months in the ground, my tomatoes did literally no growing. Within the same two months, my eggplant transplants still didn’t have real leaves, and the melon seedlings had only one set of true leaves. Every time I saw tomatoes or corn stretching towards the sky in some neighboring kitchen garden, I would feel a deep sense of shame and envy. Home grown vegetables were mocking me at every turn.
One day, I realized life had given me gardening lemons, and I needed to make lemonade. During a stroll through the yard, I optimistically realized that the parsley was doing quite well. Knowing that parsley likes some shade, this made sense. But even curious-er, the zucchini had grown, and while not actually prospering, had a substantial number of flowers.
I started to research which types of vegetables might grow in the shade.
Considering I do not have full-sun, I am quite lucky in that my little garden gets exactly four hours of sun a day, from 10:00 – 2:00. So, although it doesn’t receive full-sun, it does get the best sun of the day.
So, here is the chronicle of my adventures of gardening in the shade, or part-shade. It’s a radical idea, but I think it just might work.
Enjoy!
Ebinla