During the dog days of summer, you should be enjoying the fruits of your labors. You've worked hard to get your garden growing. Don't let drought rob you of your harvest. Here are some tips to help your gardening efforts pay off, even when the weather isn't on your side.
Irrigate efficiently
Rule number one is to know how much water you are actually applying to your garden. The easiest way to do this is to turn on your faucet and measure how long it takes to fill a one-gallon jug from it. Then, figure out how many gallons per minute come out of your tap. The number will probably be somewhere between two and seven gallons per minute. Just being aware of how much water comes out of the end of your garden hose will help you water more conservatively. If you know that your tomato plant doesn't need 500 gallons of water a day, you know not leave the sprinkler on it for an hour.
How and when you water is also very important. Watering at night will reduce the amount of water that evaporates, and watering with efficient irrigation systems will use much less water than watering with a normal lawn sprinkler. In fact, microsprinkler and drip-irrigation systems use 30% to 50% less water than lawn sprinklers, and they are relatively easy and affordable to install. They also allow you to get water directly to your garden plant's roots without watering your lawn, the sidewalk, the side of your house or whatever else is typically in the path of you lawn sprinkler's spray.
If drip irrigation isn't an option for you right now, consider hand-watering your plants using a garden hose fitted with a rainfall nozzle. These nozzles emit a gentle, raindrop flow that will reduce water runoff and keep your plants' delicate roots from getting beat up by the water.
Grow plants that use less water
Reconsider growing water guzzlers such as giant pumpkins or full-sized watermelons: they'll slurp down hundreds of gallons of water. All vegetables need regular watering, but some need more than others. For example, Swiss chard and cabbage use much less water than their respective cousins lettuce and Brussels sprouts.
Seed or set out your plants at the right time
You can increase your plants' survival rates by planting them during a cool time of day (or night) and right before a predicted rainfall.
Planting crops either very early or at the tail end of their possible growing seasons can also be a good drought-proofing move. My most successful pepper plants are usually ones that I transplant in August, not the ones that I put in during the month of May and leave to swelter all summer in the heat. My best-yielding tomato plants are the ones that I set out very early (late March) and baby through the frosts so that they can give me tomatoes during the relatively cool, moist and pest-free days of late June and early July.
Reduce tillage
The University of Wisconsin Cooperative Extension sums this point up: "The best advice on tillage during a drought may be: avoid it." Tilling during a drought allows stored soil moisture to escape and harms you soil's structure. This structural damage leaves your soil very vulnerable to erosion and reduces its capacity to store moisture.
Use mulch
Using ground covers such as straw or leaves on your garden helps keep soil moisture from evaporating, which gives your plants access to more water. Mulching your garden also helps the soil to soak up more water when it does rain, allowing it to keep your plants' thirst satisfied for a longer time. A mulched garden will also need less frequent irrigation than a bare one.
Use these tips to help your garden thrive, even when there's not a rain cloud in sight.
All too often, eggplant gets a bum rap. People complain that it's hard to grow, hard to cook bitter tasting and not diet friendly. Not surprisingly, it's not included, or even welcome, in many an organic garden. Are these accusations against eggplant true, or do the gardeners of America owe eggplant a collective apology? |
One of the most important things you can pass along to kids is the love and importance of organic gardening. Organic gardens are free of chemicals and much better for the environment. Organic gardening is a state of mind. |