The summer of 2003 was the first growing season in our new
demonstration garden, located in the Eleanor Community Garden within Eleanor
Pardee Park at the corner of Channing Avenue and Center Drive. On this site we
started work on our projectās goal of creating two gardens that each emphasize
pleasing design and best practices for home gardening.
Our initial focus was on getting the Edible Demonstration Garden started.
There we planned to grow edible and decorative plants together in one garden,
showcasing new and unusual varieties of flowers, vegetables and fruits.
Our Water-Wise Nature Garden of drought tolerant ornamental plants that attract
birds and beneficial insects would be started in the fall.
The first tasks were to establish weed control and to fence in the garden on a
large site that was formerly a meadow. We covered the entire growing area
with a thin layer of Palo Alto city compost followed by a thick layer of
cardboard sheets and topped with a thick layer of wood chips. The covering
materials were all available to us at no charge and they
generally have
smothered the weeds. We fenced the garden using wire fencing stretched
between metal T-posts. Friends of our project made wooden, locking gates for the
fence.
With the space enclosed, we opened three beds in the Edible Demonstration Garden
establishing a permanent, circular herb garden and two annual beds that were
planted in summer vegetables. All three were prepared for planting by digging,
removing as much weed material as possible and amending with composted horse
manure.
The herb bed is at the center of the entire edible
garden. It is populated with at least thirty kinds of culinary herbs, laid
out in pie-shaped sections. This summer there were six varieties each of basil,
thyme, sage and oregano growing with dill, lovage, bronze fennel and clary sage providing
height. Perilla, epazote and lemon grass are some of the non-European herbs included in
the bed.
The annual garden beds surround the herb bed.
One of
these was planted with three vegetables of the solanaceae family: tomatoes, peppers and eggplants.
Tomato varieties included Crimson Carmello, Black Zebra, Ernieās Plump,
Indische Fleish and Copia. Pepper varieties included Corno di Toro, Golden
Marconi, Aji Amarillo, Pimiento de Padron and French Cayenne. Neon, Snowy
and Long Red were the eggplant varieties planted. As companions to the
solanaceae plants, we planted several varieties of nasturtium and basil
including African Blue basil, that also attracts pollinators.
The other annual bed was planted with the vegetables traditionally planted as
companions by
gardeners of the indigenous North American people. These are
corn, beans and squash, often called the Three Sisters. In this ancient
planting combination, squash runs along the ground shading out
weed competition with itās large leaves; beans planted by each corn stalk run
up the cornstalks and fix nitrogen that can be used by the corn. We grew
Serendipity, a bicolor, hybrid (Se-synergistic/TripleSweet) corn, Painted Lady runner beans,
two varieties of vining, French pumpkins or winter squash, Galeuse dā Eysine
and Potimarron and three varieties of bush summer squash, Baby Round, Gris de
Algiers and Zapallo del Tronco.
The first 75 feet of our fence line was planted
with a couple of roses, Rosa happenstance and Rose of Ophir, some sunflowers and annual
vines for this summer. Here the seeds were planted into 5ä of composted horse manure
placed on top of the cardboard and wood chips. The vining plants included
Painted Lady runners and yard-long beans, cucumbers Chelsea Prize and Que ho,
Queen Anneās Pocket Melon, Charantais melon, Rouge Vif dāEtampes the
Cinderella pumpkin and vining nasturtium.
On September 6, just as the Edible Garden was at its growth peak, we hosted Open
Garden Day for the Eleanor Community gardeners, neighbors of Eleanor Pardee Park
and interested Master Gardeners. About 30 gardeners and friends visited
the garden where they strolled the beds that were marked with plot plans and
identifying plant name tags. Visitors participated in a tomato tasting and
learned about our summerās project results. They could see a newly
opened fourth annual bed and observe our technique and progress at weed
suppression in the Water-wise Garden.
By mid-September, the third and newest annual bed was planted with seeds and
seedlings of winter green leafy vegetables and the decorative, circular planting
pattern was clearly visible. We have chards, kales, chicories, leeks,
mustards, bok choys, gai lan, peas and mache growing there; varieties include
Giant Red, Osaka Purple and Purple Wave mustards; Bright Lights chard; Sui Cai
mizuna; Red Winter, Dwarf Blue and Nero Toscana Italian Lacinato kales.
Production was heaviest during October with plant growth slowed in Novemberās
cool, short days.
Weed suppression and soil preparation work were completed in the Water-Wise
garden in mid-November and we began to plant the mounded beds with donated and
purchased drought tolerant plants. We expect to add more
plants as they
become available and will manage the garden with no added fertility and minimal
water during the dry summer months, once the plantings are established.
The Palo Alto Demonstration Garden is open each Monday morning during our weekly
project workday and visitors are welcome.