April Garden Prep

 

sugar snap pea starts

April is a busy time in the garden!  So much to do and longer days for doing. Dream BIG and do what you can.

If you are reading this, you have a garden; either well-loved, benignly neglected or somewhere in between. If you do not have a garden, read on, and be inspired to start one.

April 21 is technically our last frost date, so it’s likely to be safe to plant after that.

Vashon-Maury has many microclimates. It’s important to know where your garden is in relation to sun, wind, high ground or low, sandy, loamy or clay soil. Before prepping your garden, prep your body! Stretch your back, shoulders, and hamstrings. These muscles have much work to do!

First, loosen your soil with a broadfork, garden fork or a shovel and grab a big handful. Do you see worms and other wiggly creatures? Does it smell deliciously earthy? I find this seemingly insignificant exercise both inspiring and informative. If the soil clumps together tightly, it may still be too wet. If it falls apart like biscuit batter, your soil is ready to grow food, flowers, herbs, whatever you wish. You may consider adding compost and some organic fertilizer. The possibilities for soil amendments are endless and there are many resources and opinions available to you.

Stinging Nettles are coming up fast and furious so now is a good time to start your stinky-good nettle tea plant food. Nettle tea is loaded with potassium, phosphorus, calcium, and trace minerals. Wearing your garden gloves, take a 5-gallon bucket and chop as much nettles into it as you can stand. Fill it nearly to the top with water and cover. Give it a good stir every day and in a week or two or three it will have a rich stink. Dilute 1 part stink to 5 parts water and feed your plants once a week or so.

You can do the same with comfrey, manure, and your compost.

If you have a compost bin, turn it if you have not done so already. If you do not have a compost bin, consider starting one for leaves, twiggy pieces, garden refuse. It does not have to be fancy; a wire fence circle with some T posts or a 4-pallet square are easy and inexpensive. If you put a cover on it, you will help keep it from getting too wet.

April is a good month for direct sowing peas, lettuce and other salad greens, beets, and marigolds. Covering your seeds with fabric row cover will help keep the birds and squirrels from eating them or the little seedlings as they emerge. Later in April you can direct seed cucumbers, winter squash and zucchini.

Do not be fooled into planting your tomatoes too soon! Consider purchasing your tomato starts from Vashon’s own Pacific Potager or Langley Fine Gardens but wait ‘til about mid-may or when the soil is plus 50 degrees.

Speaking of seeds and starts; As it is important to know where your food comes from, it is equally important to know where your seeds come from.

When you grow seeds from your local environment, you create locally adapted varieties of those plants. Each area presents its own unique factors around humidity, temperature, disease, pests, and soil composition. In turn, each variety of plant can be adapted for those specific factors. The more generations a plant’s seeds are grown and saved in the same region, the better and healthier that plant will grow in that specific area and the more locally-adapted it will be. If we want food that is climate-resilient, we need to put in the work to increase biodiversity in plants.

On Vashon, we are fortunate to have Jen Williams’ Wild Dreams Farm growing seeds for our Vashon climate.

Also check out:

Uprising Seeds in Bellingham, WA

 Adaptive Seeds in Sweet Home, Oregon.

No matter your seed or starts choice, plan your slug control! Slugs love dark, cool, and wet environments. Lay some boards down, go out in the morning and discover all the slugs waiting to be snipped, speared, and squished. Beer bait also works. There are some among us who are quite happy hand picking and dispatching slugs. Every slug we eliminate also eliminates hundreds of slug eggs.

References

Michelle Crawford, owner- Pacific Potager Farm & Nursery

TILTH Alliance Gardening Guide — available at bookstores, including our own Vashon Books

VIGA Get Growing video

Charles Dowding — Super informative and his garden in England is a similar climate to ours on Vashon

For flower growers, check out Georgie Newbery and Common Farm Flowers. She offers so much information with short YouTube clips, online workshops and books.

 

Most important, start wherever you are and Enjoy your garden! Eat what you grow, cut flowers for your table and share your abundance.

 

 

 

 

 

 

~ by Karen Biondo — Owner of LaBiondo Farm and Kitchen

7 Responses

  1. Susie Fitzhugh
    | Reply

    Your Blog is akways the best & mist welcome thing to appear in my email, Karen. Thank you!!!!!❤️🤗❤️🤗❤️

    • Karen Biondo
      | Reply

      Thank you Suzie!

  2. Fran
    | Reply

    Oh, how I miss my Ocean Shores garden! Wonderful post. I know that so many gardeners will enjoy this post. I love your farm. Thank you for tending to the earth so beautifully! Fran

  3. Merrilee Runyan
    | Reply

    yay! Going to harvest my nettles right now!!!

  4. Susan L Pitiger
    | Reply

    Inspiring. Thank you! I can hear you speaking the words with your zest for life!

  5. Molly Malone
    | Reply

    Great information. Got me out into the yard with my gardener gloves on ! Thank you Karen et alia.

  6. Dana E Illo
    | Reply

    Thank you, Karen! Lifts my spirits on this cold April morning!!!
    And I LOVE the eggs you crafted! Beautiful.

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