I just printed off a list of what is in my garden, section by section, row by row. It is three pages long, and makes me look uber organized. Which I find humorous, because while I always strive for organization, more often than not it eludes me. In fact, the whole reason I made this printed list is because I can never remember just exactly what is planted where. I can tell a tomato from a cabbage from an onion on a glance. But remembering which
type of tomato and which
type of cabbage and which
type of onion is a whole 'nother story. Since I usually want to stick with the best growers from year to year, I need to remember whether it was the National Pickling cukes that produced like rabbits, or if it was the Boston Pickling ones.
So, this year while planting the nearly quarter acre that is my garden, I actually had a clipboard, paper and pencil with me. I stopped at the end of each row and wrote down what I planted. So organized!!
Just don't look at the tomato rows, where it says "2 ?? tomatoes, 6 ?? tomatoes, 4 Mortgage Lifter tomato". . . Those ?? aren't I don't know how many I planted. No, they are I planted six tomatoes of all one type but forgot to write on the container which seeds I put in it!! Again, organization eludes me.
But, just to look impressive, here are my three pages of garden rows.
2013 Garden
NE Section
1. red potatoes from cellar
2. red potatoes from cellar
3. red potatoes from cellar
4. Yukon Gold potatoes (from FF&H)
5. Early Wonder beet
6. Detroit Dark Red beet
7. Catskill Brussels sprouts (seedlings from house, replant from seed 6/10)
8. Calabrese broccoli (seedlings from house)
9.Waltham broccoli (seedlings from house)
10.
Copenhagen Cabbage (seedlings from house)
SE Section
1. Danvers carrots
2. Blueberries w/leeks between plants
3. Berlicum carrots
4. Centennial Hops
5. Asparagus (3 E/W rows)
6. Garlic (4 E/W rows, Georgian Fire, German, Inchelium Red, Siberian )
7. 2 Gooseberry bushes
8. Strawberries (4 E/W rows after hops)
9. Strawberries (5 E/W rows after asparagus)
10.
Snow's Pickling cukes
11.
Boston Pickling cukes
12.
National Pickling cukes
NW Section
1. Bodacious corn (planted early May, poor germination; replant most of Bodacious 6/1)
2. Bodacious corn w/ Sweet & Early cantaloupe
3. Bodacious corn w/Sweet & Early cantaloupe
4. Bodacious corn
5. Bodacious corn
6. Bodacious corn
7. Honey & Cream corn (planted mid-May, doing fine)
8. Honey & Cream corn w/KY Wonder pole bean
9. Honey & Cream corn
10.
Honey & Cream corn w/KY Wonder pole bean
11.
Honey & Cream corn
12.
Honey & Cream corn w/KY Wonder pole bean
13.
Magic Lantern pumpkin
14.
Green Arrow pea (double row) (planted mid-May)
15.
Green Arrow pea (single row)
16.
Green Arrow pea (single row)
17.
Sugar baby watermelon w/parsnips, Cream of
Saskatchewan watermelon w/leeks
18.
Crimson Sweet watermelon w/spinach, Charleston
Grey watermelon w/spinach
19.
squash volunteers (acorn? Long Island cheese? pumpkin? )
20.
Crimson Sweet watermelon (1 from Dad) 18 Alma
Paprika peppers, 15 Pepperoncini
21. 12 Ancho peppers, 12 WI Lakes peppers, 1 Bull
Nose pepper
22.
7 Glacier tomatoes, 15 Bull Nose pepper
23.
19 Glacier tomato
24.
2?? Tomato, 6 ?? Tomato, 4 Mortgage Lifter tomato,
5 Celebrity tomato, 2 Glacier tomato
25.
4?? Tomato, 4 ?? Tomato, 6 ?? Tomato, 5 ?? tomato
26.
4 sandwich type tomato, 1 ?? tomato, 14 San
Marzano tomato
27.
3 Roma tomato, 15 San Marzano tomato, #9 Cherry
tomato (from Dad)
28.
17 Roma tomato, #7 Cherry tomato (from Dad), #1
Cherry tomato (from Dad)
SW Section
N/S rows
1. Experimental Tri-Color bush bean
2. Experimental Tri-Color bush bean
3. Filderkraut cabbage (seedlings from house)
4. Perfection Drumhead cabbage (seedlings from house)
5. 6 Perfection Drumhead cabbage (seedlings from house), Rd Lt. Green
zucchini (trail packet)
6. salad cukes (Ashley?)
7. 9 sweet potato, 4 Cauliflower, 4 Brussels
sprouts (from FF&H)
8. Honey & Cream corn (planted end of May)
9. Honey & Cream corn
10.
Honey & Cream corn
11.
Honey & Cream corn
12.
Honey & Cream corn
13.
Honey & Cream corn
14.
Bodacious corn (planted 6/8)
15.
Bodacious corn
16.
Bodacious corn
17.
Bodacious corn
18.
Bodacious corn
19.
Bodacious corn w/Waltham butternut squash &
Hubbard squash
20.
Green Arrow pea (planted 6/10)
21.
Green Arrow pea
22.
Filderkraut cabbage (from seed)
23.
Di Ciccio broccoli (from seed)
24.
Boston Pickling cukes (from seed)
25.
Boston pickling cukes w/ Long Island Dill
26.
Snow's Fancy pickling cukes w/Dukat dill
27.
Copenhagen cabbage (from seed)
28.
Rutabaga, kale, swiss chard
E/W rows
1. Grapes, niagara & concord
2. Spanish onion
3. Spanish onion, E 4 ft Long Day Sampler onion
4. Long Day Sampler onion
5. Copra onion
6. Artichokes, Black Beauty zucchini
7. Birdhouse gourd
8. Detroit Dark Red beet
9. Rhubarb (from Jimmy)
Looks great, right? I can see the omissions in it--like those darn unnamed tomatoes (I seeded Rutgers, Homestead, Red Alert, and Federle and apparently forgot to mark which container was which). I also know that it does not yet reflect exactly what is in each row, especially the tomatoes and peppers where I have filled in 'missing' plants (seedlings that did not survive transplant) with others--the cherry tomatoes "from Dad" are designated exactly how I want my records to read: which plant in the row is what kind. I lost a bunch of my peppers to a late frost and recently filled in some of the spots with banana peppers from a fellow farmers market vendor, but have not yet notated which numbers in that particular row are actually paprikas and which are banana. That is something for this afternoon, and, if I don't actually get to it, once the peppers are on the plants it is easy enough to tell a paprika from a banana; they are two different shapes.
Overall, though, it's a huge step up from prior gardens where I didn't write down anything, let alone which row was which. This will help not just with knowing what I planted this year, but where in the garden it sat, so I can avoid using the same section for the same vegetables sooner than every three years.