The great summer experiment this year is coming along very well and I’m very close to finalizing a design for a balcony, patio, deck or terrace (whatever you want to call a small private space with no place to stick a shovel) hydroponic vegetable garden. It’s very exciting because at this point I have a design that not only is dead simple to work with and is recognizable to just about anyone as a garden but it can also be brought to market for a better price than anything else out there.
I can swear to you that the plants I have in the hydroponic gardens are growing better than my pampered little beauties in their pots of compost- and they are much easier to care for- probably because I don’t have to water them every day and don’t need to worry that they’re going to just about expire if we get a hot day and I’m not around to water them
This is what I was aiming for when I started this project. High yield, organic and super low maintenance vegetable gardens in a small space. It’s all coming together now, but there was one thing I had forgotten about – Earwigs!
In my 20′s I did battle with them, only to learn that it isn’t worth the trouble and now I have them again, hiding in the lettuce, dining on my basil and chewing great jeezly holes in my peppers. Thirty years later and almost nothing has changed – except me.
So, we covered sunlight already – the only thing you can’t do too much about, unless you’re going to cut down a few trees or demolish the neighbours garage, which is probably not a great idea.
The next thing to think about is the question “Why?” as in’ Why do you want to grow your own vegetables?”
If you want access to favoured or hard to find treats like oriental eggplants or thai basil or snow peas that don’t have the texture of cardboard, or heritage tomatoes- thats one possible reason.
Another is that you’d simply like to grow a few vegetables that you and your family like and ýou want to know beyond a shadow of a doubt that they are organic, chemical free and as fresh as possible. Another perfectly valid reason.
Another reason is that, even though you don’t have much room you want a vegetable garden that will make a solid contribution to your families consumption by improving the quality of what you get and at the same time saving some money. Value is good.
Or just maybe you’ve simply been bitten by a desire to grow something, because it will make your soul happy. Welcome.
Every reason is a good one. Heck I don’t think there can possibly be a bad reason for growing a vegetable garden. But if you’re going to be growing on a patio, balcony or deck , space will be at a premium. If you want to be happy with the result, it won’t hurt to give a little thought to what result you’ll be happy with.
Every reason I’ve outlined will take you down a slightly different path when you plan your own garden- and anything is possible.
If you want to grow vegetables and you don’t have a lot of room, it doesn’t really matter if you have a balcony, a deck, a patio or simply a small unplantable space because what you’ll all have in common is the need to plant your vegetables in containers.
And everyone is working with the same simple equalizer- sunlight. If you want to grow vegetables you need sunlight and lots of it and preferably you need sun morning – noon and afternoon.
The amount of sunlight you get is the number one factor you need to take into consideration if you want to grow vegetables in containers and it’s probably the only consideration that you won’t be able to find a work-around for.
I’d say as a rule of thumb your bare minimum to grow vegetables is 5 hours of direct light and I mean direct afternoon sun. A spot that only gets morning sun simply will not cut it- sorry. So think of sun from lunch to 5 and remember that’s the minimum. You’ll get growth and a few things will grow reasonably well- but most of your plants will never hit their maximum potential unless they get the light all day.
This is especially true of tomatoes. They are -without a doubt -the numero uno vegetable choice, which you have to admit is a little ironic since technically, tomatoes are not a vegetable- they’re a fruit. sorry I couldn’t resist.
One of the (not completely ) answered questions for my summer vegetables in containers project was picking the best ones to grow. I was looking for a combination of decent yields for the work and – I guess you’d call it -functionality. I wanted vegetables that could be eaten immediately or could be preserved or could provide a sustained yield for a long time.
I also couldn’t choose all that many, because like the people I’m doing this for I’m pressed for time and space. Finally I wanted to work with plants that would let me test some different container styles – particularly for the soil less containers where I want to be able to check out larger single plant pots, smaller individual plants set into a pipe garden configuration and also I wanted to check out a “broadcast” planter box. I want to check into cut and come again salad greens so I wanted the most surface area I could acommodate in the space.
Here’s the list so far- Cherry tomatoes, beans, acorn squash, picking cucumbers, lettuce varieties (loose leaf) and hot peppers. If the hot peppers seem like a strange addition – all I can say is that they can be dried and held for a long time, I like the taste of hot peppers and I happen to really like the look of them too.
Although I’m kinda late getting off the ground, if I can I’ll try and also get some snow peas added into the mix and that will probably be it.
The seeds are sprouting – I dont’ have any pots and I haven’t built the hydroponic planters yet … got to get this in gear!
Today, I took the first step in setting up my project for the summer and I’m very excited about it. You see, I’ve loved gardening all my life and lately I’ve been really interested in things like small space, urban and container gardens, vegetable gardens, the whole idea of eating as much locally grown food as possible and what are the best ways to make that happen. I put myself in the shoes of someone working outside the home, maybe travelling a lot and maybe living in a condo or simply having only a tiny amount of ground or just a deck to work with.
So, here are the questions my summer project is going to solve:
1. Can I make it easy enough for busy, inexperienced gardeners to successfully grow vegetables in containers on decks, patios and postage stamp yards?
2. What vegetables will give them the best bang for the buck – so to speak?
3. Can they maximize the yield and minimize the work at the same time?
4. How does hydroponics play a role?
5. How can I make it affordable?
I am intrigued at the role that outdoor hydroponic systems can play to solve this problem and when I first started looking into it couldn’t understand why they aren’t used more widely. Now I understand all too well – the currently available systems are too expensive for broad adoption – unless of course your aiming for a far more lucrative cash crop than tomatoes and as far as hydroponics goes right now it’s WAY TOO COMPLICATED.
I want to fix that and that, is the project. I have some tomato seedlings on the way (I hadn’t really thought of my grand plan when I first ordered them) and today I started acorn squash, two types of hot peppers and pickling cucumbers. I have half the seeds started in jiffy pots and the other half in rockwool. I’m going to grow them side by side and compare the results.