HOW TO MAKE A FLAX TEEPEE

Similar documents
SEASONAL PLANTING STRATEGY AT A GLANCE

Here are some tips for growing pole beans that should help you get a bigger and longer lasting harvest, and (usually) better tasting beans.

Growing Vegetables Part II. To Direct Seed or to Transplant? Why Use Transplants? 1/18/2012

Master Gardener Vegetable Specialist Training. Prepared by: Thomas LeRoy

Planning Your Vegetable Garden

ANNUAL SEMINOLE GARDEN PROJECT.

Gardening Basics. If you are lucky to have a big, sunny space for planting, you may only need to add good soil on top of what you already have.

SEED SOWING INSTRUCTIONS

GARDEN MANUAL. Agro-Bio Diversity. October 2015 / Issue 01

Introduce edible flint and the reason this guide was created

Vertical Gardening Using Trellises, Stakes, and Cages

Page1. Title: Planning a Garden Using a Grid Grades: 3 Subject: Science, Math Time: 45 minutes

Preparation of a Vegetable Nursery and Transplanting

Vegetable Gardening. Courtney Keck, M.S. Horticulture Horticulture/4-H Educator Canadian County OSU Extension

We consider them to be the ultimate crop for the lazy gardener, plant them in minutes and come back weeks later to harvest them

Harvest & Post-harvest Handling. By Liz Birkhauser Farm Manager, Birch House Farm

Owyhee County 4-H Cloverbud. Gardening Activity Book. Name. Age Year in 4-H 20. Club Name. Member s Signature. Parent/Guardian s Signature

Turf. Winterize your sprinkling system!

IN OUR COASTAL CLIMATE

SUMMER GROWING SEASON

Unit D: Fruit and Vegetable Crop Production. Lesson 1: Planning and Preparing a Vegetable Garden Site

Vegetables Chapter 10 OSUE MGV Training. Pam Bennett OSUE State MGV Coordinator Horticulture Educator

Sweet Pea Production. SWEET PEA (Lathyrus odoratus)

Vegetable Gardening 101

Vegetables. There are two different types of vegetable planting:

Two Key Principles. Backyard Vegetables. Five Factors to Consider in Selecting a Garden Site. Drip Irrigation

Land clearing and nursery bed establishment

HOME-GROWN ORGANIC TOMATOES

READ THESE DIRECTIONS CAREFULLY before unpacking your Garden Tower!

Concept Objectives: Understand what seeds need to grow. Know how to read a seed packet. Know the proper way to plant a seed.

Do you want to plant a garden? Yes. Then let s see how to plant one.

GREAT JONES COUNTY FAIR

Getting Started with Your Vegetable Garden

Growing Guide. A product of Mountain Valley Seed Co. THE 100% NON-HYBRID, NON GMO LONG TERM STORAGE SEEDS

TECHNICAL BULLETIN. Tomatoes, Peppers and Eggplant

BASIC ORGANIC GARDENING Specific Harvests: Cool and Warm Season Crops; Cole; Vine; and Perennial Crops with Introduction to Berries

Carefully brush of most dirt and store remainder in cool dark place Cage Method Dig several inches of compost into soil and place seed potatoes 6

Container Gardening for Small Spaces

Growing Vegetables In Containers

SOIL TESTING RESOURCES MSU

THE SOLANACEAE LESSON SIX Growing the Solanaceae

TRACKS Lesson Plan. Lesson 4: Physical Activity and Planting a Garden Grades 9 12

Level 2 Certificate: Principles of Garden Planning, Establishment and Maintenance

Building a Raised Bed Vegetable Garden: The Easy Way For South Florida Gardens & Schools

Session 3: Raised Beds and Container Gardens

Horticulture. Flower Gardening

HOME GROWN FACTS 121 Second Street, Oriskany, NY (315) or (315) FAX: (315)

SUMMER GROWING SEASON

Site Requirements. 8 hours full sun. Close to water. Deep, well drained and uncontaminated soil

roses How to set up a rose garden...

How to Grow Leaf Lettuce

Some Things to Start Off With

Outreach Programs: Plant Survival 2 nd & 3 rd Grade

Bitter gourd (Momordica charantia)

Edible gardens Early Learning

Risley Avenue Primary School Scheme of Work 2016/17

Vegetable Gardening When Mother Nature Doesn t Cooperate

Recommended Resources: The following resources may be useful in teaching this

Victory Garden Reference Guide

GROWING DAHLIAS CLASSES OF DAHLIAS

Starting Transplants & Sowing Seeds. George Bushell

My 2018 Vegetable Garden Journal Introduction

Horticulture 2011 Newsletter No. 10 March 9, 2011

Session 4: Maintaining Your Garden

CLASS NOTES ON WATERING YOUR VEGETABLE GARDEN

Vegetarian Newsletter

Garden Tasks Number 0001 April 2, 2009

A Guide to Planting Hedges

Oregon Agricultural College Bulletin

SUMMER GROWING SEASON

Container Gardening In The Southwest Desert

Fairytale Plants. Procedure: 40 min class

Starting Your Garden Indoors. Coppell Environmental Education December 8, 2012

Plant Life Cycle Begins

Starting Seeds for Maplewood Vegetable Gardens

Controlled Environment Agriculture

Plant Parts In the Garden LESSON

Growing Grapes From Cuttings

Vegetables Information Leaflet No. 36

Fall Vegetable Gardening

Land clearing. Week 1:

The Gardening Timetable. The Timeline:

Vegetable production guidelines for 12 common aquaponic plants

Super Soil for Organic Gardening. George Bushell

Children s Vegetable Garden Program - Fall 2014 Session September 13, 2014

Roof top gardens and better urban design Pilots, ideas & projects for Islamabad. Update and plan for 2014

Promoting Oregon Summer squash

Vegetables in the Gainesville Garden

Season Extension for Market Gardeners Oklahoma Women in Ag and Small Business Conference August 2015

How Seeds Become Plants - Worksheet

VEGETABLE GARDENING. Debby Newman, Harvey Buchite, Terry Ferris and Bob Velander

EPUB // HOW TO GROW TOMATO AT HOME

Starting Seeds at Home

Sustainable Vegetable Gardening

Seed Starting. What is a seed? Why Start Seeds? 2/17/2016. O Living time capsule of a plants DNA

TAKE YOUR GARDEN TO HIGHER LEVEL! Rebecca Krans Michigan State University Extension Consumer Horticulture Educator

Container Gardening Basics

satg WATERMELON CULTIVATION DISEASES PESTS

HOW TO PRODUCE TREE SEEDLINGS

Unit B: Establishing a Fruit Garden. Lesson 3: Growing and Maintaining Small Fruits

Transcription:

HOW TO MAKE A FLAX TEEPEE THINGS YOU LL NEED: 3x Flax flower stakes (dried) Hemp twine Strong rubber band Scissors Beans and sweet pea seeds to plant Seed raising soil Garden hoe Compost Garden trowel Fruit and vegetable fertilizer Watering can and water METHOD: NB: Be careful of where you source your harakeke flowers from. If you are foraging them from a public site, be sure to return them to where you find them once you are finished with them. You can also recite a karakia. Make sure to only take what you need. Do not burn them. 1. How many stakes do you need? The number of stakes you require depends on the shape of the garden bed or pot you are using. If you are putting the teepee in a rectangular/square container or in a garden bed, 4 stakes is usually a good stable number to use. In a round pot, try 3 stakes as these sit in a circle much better than 4.

2. How high should your Flax stakes should be? The height of the stakes depends on the variety of climbing crop you choose to grow. Some people find that indeterminate tomatoes and cucumbers do well on taller teepees. 3. Choose a planting site for your veges/flowers that receives at least 6 hours of sun each day. The area should also be well-ventilated to help reduce the likelihood of downy mildew developing on the plant. 4. Loosen the area's soil with a garden hoe to a depth of at least 6 inches and work in compost to help improve the soil's drainage and add nutrients; looser soil also makes it easier to insert the stakes 5. Simply space the stakes evenly in a circle, in your soil, pushing them well down so they stay put! 6. Grab the top of all the stakes together in one hand, so the ends of the stakes are level with each other. With your other hand secure the rubber band around the top of all the stakes about 5cm (2 inches) from the top to hold them all together. 7. Make sure the top of all the stakes are level before securing a strong rubber band around them. Usually twice around will do. This leaves both your hands free to wind the twine around the stakes.

8. Use twine to tie the stakes together where they meet; make several loops around each stake to tie them securely. Use a step stool or small ladder to do this, if needed. 9. The rubber band won t stand up to the sun for long, so you need to thread the string just below the rubber band over AND under each of the 3 or 4 stakes until they are well secured to each other. Once you have completed winding the string, tie it off in a bow and remove the rubber band. 10. For additional support, I like to wind some extra string around each of the 3 or 4 stakes at three different horizontal levels. At about 10-20cm (4-8 in) from the bottom, 40cm (16 in) from the bottom and then again about 15cm (6 in) above that again. Depending on the height of the stakes, you can just divide it roughly into thirds and add your strings there. These will create shelves for the peas to cling to. TIPS For vigorous climbers you can use longer, thicker lengths of bamboo with more strength. Horizontal string lines are used at intervals up the structure for additional support. You can also use foraged bamboo!

GROWING BEANS & SWEET PEAS 1. Choose a BEAN to plant that likes to climb. Any pole bean or runner bean will work. Do not use bush beans. Scarlet runner beans are a popular choice due to their brilliant red flowers, but a bean with an interesting pod, like a purple pod pole bean, would also be fun. 2. Nick your SWEET PEA - They have the best chance of germinating if you help penetrate the seed shell before planting. Use a tiny knife or nail clippers to nick the surface of each seed. 3. Plant a Bean seed on each side of every 2nd pole. The bean seed should be planted about 5cm deep. 4. Sow sweet pea seeds, one every other pole - about 1cm deep. 5. Water well. 6. The bean seeds should germinate in about a week. Once the beans are tall enough to be handled, tie them loosely to the bean teepee poles. After this, they should be able to climb on their own. You can also pinch the tops of the bean plants to force them to branch out and grow more densely.

7. Train the plants up the teepee trellis as they grow. When each plant reaches 10 to 12 inches tall, use cloth ties to tie them to their stake. As the plants grow, gently wrap the vines around the stake and tie them in place, as needed. 8. Water the plants enough to keep the soil moist, but not wet. Apply water only to the soil rather than spraying the plants' leaves and water in the early morning. This helps reduce the chance of mildew developing. 9. Feed with a fertilizer 10. Harvest. It is important to pick runner beans regularly (at least twice a week), when they are young and tender, because overly mature pods are less appetizing and suppress the formation of new flowers. With the sweet peas remember to remove faded blossoms, which sap energy from the plant and prevent more flowers from growing. TIPS By keeping the stems, leaves and fruit up off the soil or mulch, they are also less likely to be accessible to pests. Horizontal and diagonal string supports help make the most of otherwise unusable air space in the centre of the tepee. This also helps aeration and provides maximum plant support. You can easily cover your teepee with shade cloth or netting to protect your plants from weather extremes. Once you ve finished growing beans or peas on your teepee, re-use it for other edible climbers like tomatoes or cucumbers. For soil and plant health, crop rotation is recommended. When you are not using the teepee, collapse it down. Fold all the stakes in tight together and wrap a rubber band around them. They take up virtually no space to store and are ready to go when you need them for the next crop! They are also an easy, fun project for kids to get started in the garden.

Some of the most popular vining food plants are climbing beans, cucumbers and squash. Other vegetables that can grow vertically are tomatoes, bell peppers, peas and lima beans. Grapes, passion fruit, pumpkins and melons are fruits that can be grown vertically, though the latter two fruits need support. Small fruited varieties work best for vertical gardening. Squash also need support or they will break off. Corn grows vertically naturally and beans can be attached to the corn to grow upward. WATERING TIPS BEANS: Throughout the growing season you will need to water your beans regularly, particularly as they start to develop flowers. A lack of moisture is one of the main reasons why Runner Bean flowers can fail to set pods. A liquid feed applied every 14 days will also help to maximise your crop. SWEET PEAS: Water them often during the hot months. Sweet peas must be kept nice and wet throughout the summer. Water them lightly every day it does not rain. Check the soil surrounding the sweet pea stems often to make sure it doesn't dry out. Fertilize once a month. Harvest the sweet pea flowers regularly. Cutting the flowers promotes new growth, so don't hesitate to bring in some fresh blossoms or make a bouquet for a friend. Wait until the flowers have reached their fragrant and colourful peaks before cutting.