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quart jar – gardenerscardiff.co.uk http://gardenerscardiff.co.uk For the Best Gardeners in the Cardiff Area Sun, 01 Feb 2015 20:05:02 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=5.0.21 Your Questions About Gardening http://gardenerscardiff.co.uk/your-questions-about-gardening-781/ http://gardenerscardiff.co.uk/your-questions-about-gardening-781/#respond Mon, 21 Apr 2014 13:05:02 +0000 http://gardenerscardiff.co.uk/your-questions-about-gardening-781/

Charles asks…

How big of a garden does one need to live off of it all year round with different fruits and veggies?

How big of a garden does one need to live off of it all year round with different fruits and veggies?

GardenersCardiff answers:

Hello x s,

I guess I was to poor to know the difference. I have always lived off my garden and fruit trees. Even today we have a 20×20 feet garden. We buy no vegetables or fruits (except watermelons) from the grocery stores. I can taste the chemicals farmers use on their vegetables they sell in grocery stores. A person could easily live off of a 10×10 feet (no melons) garden.

We give alway more vegetables and fruits than we can eat. This year we canned over 30 quart jars of tomatoes. Each Christmas, our relatives and friends will receive a big basket as a gift. Inside is a red and white checked table cloth, 1 quart jar mixed yellow and red tomatoes, 1 quart jar pickled beets, 1 quart jar pickled green cherry tomatoes, 1 quart jar carrots, 1 quart jar plum jam, 5 Ruby Red Gradefruit, 10 lemons, a bag of dried figs, and 15 Mandarin Oranges. They love us at Christmas. I also have nine rare fruit trees.

In order to live all year round, you would need to live in a place like Southern California. Today my garden still has tomatoes, green beans, garlic, onions, eggplants, brussel sprouts, and bell peppers.

You would need good soil. I use no chemicals or pesticides. I use home made compost and chicken manure to enrich my soil. Good soil produces twice the yields of bad soil.

If you wanted a variety all year long, you would have to learn to can your vegetables and fruits. We have enough canned vegetables to last us all winter.

Your question: A 10×10 feet garden is more than enough area. If you want four (4) dwaft fruit trees, than you would need a 20×20 feet area.

I have been a gardener for sixty (60) years. I love to help new gardeners get started. Just like my uncle helped me get started in the hills of Kentucky at the age (smile) of three. I helped.

You have a great day, from Los Angeles.

Laura asks…

What should I get as a gift for my host family when I go to Japan?

I’m 15 and I live in Canada. I’ll be hosting a student in March for two weeks(He’s the same age as myself), then in April I will stay with him for two weeks in Tokyo. But I wasn’t really sure what to get his family as gifts.(I already know what to get him since his form showed his interests) His Father is 47, his mother is 44 and he has a younger brother who is 13. My teacher said it was a good idea to look for Canadian made items. Any suggestions would be amazing thanks!

GardenersCardiff answers:

While Canadian foods are nice, try to include something that they can remember you by long after the food is gone. There are tons of items like a photo calendar of Canada, picture books, coasters, ashtrays, fragrant lotions or soap, cologne, sports team shirts, and so on. There are many food items you can bring also: cookies, syrup, flavored coffee, tea, and jam (try less known ones like boysenberry, blackberry, etc), powdered marinade mixes, sauces, dressings, etc. You can get lots of ideas just walking down the supermarket aisles.
Try to give an item to each member of the family as well as to the family as a whole, and when the student is visiting your place, get him active as a family member – do the shopping, laundry, gardening or light chores together – it will make him feel included and be a new and educational experience for him as well.

Donald asks…

What types of plants do i need to put into a small to medium memory garden?

I am a life scout and i want to make a memory garden for my church for my eagle project and i dont know what types. i want plants that bloom year around and all so, if u have any thing to help me out with plants, ideas on how to get donations, and umm mabye advice on a memory thanks a lot

GardenersCardiff answers:

Cameron, the plant donations should primarily come from the church membership itself. Each family could donate a plant, depending on where your garden will be placed (shadey, sunny, or semi-shadey location). You might want to make small signs for each plant, telling people what the plant is and who it is in memory of.

At this time of year, church members could also buy some new tulip bulbs or other spring bulbs to add to your garden.

Some good hardy perennials? Daylilies, peonies, sedum, tiger lilies, asiatic lilies, irises, and daisies. And mums really add a lot of fall color.

A little shrub rose would look nice too.

You might too want to ask for money so you can buy seeds or annual plants for next year to add to the garden in the spring. If it is a really sunny place, throw some moss rose seeds near the front. This is a type of plant that reseeds itself every year too. Allysum is another fine border plant.

Another thing you are going to have to consider too is who is going to take care of your garden once you are finished. Who will water it? Who will weed it the next year? See if someone will help you out there from the congregation membership. Remember, everyone has certain “gifts” given to them in a church, and there are people in your church who were blessed with green thumbs.

Good luck! A great idea for an Eagle Scout project!

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Your Questions About Gardening http://gardenerscardiff.co.uk/your-questions-about-gardening-287/ http://gardenerscardiff.co.uk/your-questions-about-gardening-287/#respond Thu, 13 Dec 2012 12:05:02 +0000 http://gardenerscardiff.co.uk/your-questions-about-gardening-287/

Mary asks…

What are some tips for starting an herb garden and growing berries and vegetables?

…and can I grow them in the same garden or should I use pots for them?

GardenersCardiff answers:

Good Evening Jack Lapidus,

My first and most important tip would be: If you are going to be a gardener, than grow the best. What does that mean? Ninety (90%) per cent of the vegetables and fruits in the grocery stores are not the best as far as taste. Commercial farmers grow a variety of vegetables which can import and export better.

Examples: garlic. Most garlic is imported from China. The taste, smell and flavor is not the best, but it does export better than other varieties of garlic. Also, most people would not know the difference. They have nothing to compare. Cooking with good garlic is awesome.

There are many varieties of garlic. It is my favorite vegetable to grow. Try and get some garlic bulbs from Gilroy, California. They grow one of the best in the world. Their garlic festival each year draws people from all over the world. Hopefully, web site below can link you to a supplier.

Http://www.ksbw.com/garlicfestival/index.html

Corn is another vegetable which is grown commercially. The taste of grocery store corn is terrible. But the variety is easy to ship and export. I grow a Honey Corn. The corn ear is white, but every third kernel is yellow. It is the best tasting corn I know of.

I grow a purple green bean, because it has less insect problems and the taste is great.

I don’t grow strawberries, because I grow a Strawberry Guava Tree. The guavas off my tree taste better than a strawberry. Plus it bears twice a year. The fruit is very high in vitamin C. I eat ten a day (smile). I am sorry but I do not grow berries. I could advise you, but I only back what I grow.

I could go on but I hope you get my point. Some varieties are getting harder to find. But it is worth searching and hunting for.

Second tip: Soil. Buy a Ph soil test kit. Soil ph is very important to plants. Your plants are healtier. With good soil, you get twice the yields and less insects. Therefore test your soil. Most plants like a ph of 6.5. If your soil is too acidic add lime. If your soil is too alkaline add pine needles. Changing soil ph can take two years. Test your soil Ph every two or three years.

Third tip: Herbs. I grow a lot of dill, because we eat fish every week. Grow dill in your garden or in your flower garden around the house. The plant is too big for containers. My dill plants grow three feet tall. The wind can blow the plants over. Plant in three week intervals.

Rosemary is a good container plant, because you have to bring it inside in the winter.

I grow two diference varieties of Basil. Each variety has its own taste. Grow the plants right in the garden. Keep leaves cut, otherwise they turn to seed very fast.

Well Jack Lapidus, I hope you know about compost and fertilizers. I use chicken manure. It is the best. I mix the chicken manure in my home make compost bin.

I could go on but I put down twenty (20) bags of steer manure this morning on my lawns and my wife’s flowers. We are looking for rain tomorrow and all next week. I am a little tired, and I am not getting any (don’t smile) younger. Which reminds me. Start with a small garden. A garden is work. I hope these were the tips you needed.

You received these tips from a gardener with sixty (60) years experience. I started learning at the age of three (smile) from my uncle in the hills of Kentucky. I do not use pesticides or chemicals. I go out at night and hand pick the few insects. We do a lot of canning.

I have a 20×20 feet garden and nine (9) rare fruit trees. Each Christmas my friends and relatives receive a basket with a red and white checked table cloth. Inside, 1 quart jar of red and yellow tomatoes (with one clove of garlic and basil leaf), 1 quart jar plum jam, 1 quart jar of pickled green cherry tomatoes made with fresh dill seeds, 1 quart jar green bean, 1 quart jar bread & butter pickles, a bag of rudy red grapefruits, bag of lemons, bag of Mandarin Oranges, and a bag of dried figs. They love to see us coming, and we enjoy giving.

I hope this can be you in a year. I love to help other gardeners. You have a great day from Los Angeles.

Ken asks…

How to stop neighbors looking into my garden?

We have fences as high as were allowed where we live, but my neighbors to the left, right and down the back are all really nosey and whenever I’m in my garden (gardening or just chilling) I always catch them looking. How can I stop them? :/
haha@Cathy…love the second option.

GardenersCardiff answers:

I’d say taller plants and or bushes and trees. Some are fast growing and give you the added benefit of flowers through the growing season.

Could you get away with strategically placed arbors or panels that plants could climb on? Then you could add climbing roses, clematis, bittersweet (the birds love the berries!) and other plants. We’ve done that in certain areas; our neighbor is a doll but he’s messy and we hide his garage mess with a couple rose arbors made from 4′ x 8′ lattice panels and have climbing roses mixed in with some taller bushes and shrubs. We opted for the PVC lattice because it never needs painting and is easy to work with.

Joseph asks…

What are good websites for affordable and easy to make recipes? ?

I lived at home up until June, and am starting to realize that eating out/microwave/ready made dinners are really getting gross and probably not healthy. I don’t know anything about cooking but I want to learn, also I am on a tight budget, any ideas? Individual recipes are appreciated as well!

GardenersCardiff answers:

Good for you for wanting to start learning how to cook your own food! As far as expense goes, I think that you will find that just by switching to making your own food instead of buying pre-packaged, frozen dinners, you will save a lot of money. RecipeZaar and many other cooking sites (AOL’s cooking section is another one) have an option to select recipes that use only 5-ingredients or less, so, with a few basic items in your cabinet you can make a variety of meals. Here is the link to that site:

http://www.recipezaar.com/recipes/5-or-less-ingredients

Other tips: Prepare ahead! If you can make, say, enough rice for more than one meal, you have it pre-cooked and can eat it as a side, as fried-rice, use it in soup, etc. The same is true for things like pasta.

Try and use similar ingredients for a few different dishes- this will save you money and cut down on waste, as you rarely need, say, 4 chicken breast for one meal, especially if you are only feeding one person!

Have a good, easy cookbook handy. One I like that has really helped to build my confidence in cooking is called ‘Anyone Can Cook’. I think it is published by Better Homes and Gardens. It is super basic, but with some excellent, easy to follow recipes and a lot of extra reference guides. Here is a link to more info on this book from Amazon.com, but it is pretty easy to find at bookstores as well:

http://www.amazon.com/Anyone-Cook-Better-Homes-Gardens/dp/0696232936

Good luck!

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