Gardening for the Soul Series Part 2: Setting up a Perennial Garden

Gardening for the Soul…

Here I am, in my small corner of the world, smack-dab in the middle of Massachusetts. This five-part blog series is for anyone who finds nature feeds their soul and for whom may want to learn a bit more about setting up vegetable, fruit, and flower gardens.

My experience: I’ve been obsessing over flower gardens for fifteen years, my berries/apples for about seven years, and I’m relatively new to vegetables, four years in now (thanks to impulse pandemic gardening). I only know what I know. My background is in science, and I now write novels full-time. The way I garden is only one way. I am no expert, but feel free to glean whatever information you can from my series…

Let’s talk about flowers!

Designing your garden comes with much artistic freedom so let’s begin with the basics.

Let’s start by drawing a map.

Draw your property and label compass directions. Add in tree locations, walkways, and the areas you’d like to have your garden beds. Do you want flowers lining a walkway, flanking shrubs, climbing a trellis, or bordering the house or a wall/fence? Do you have standalone flower bed options? Don’t forget to determine your planting hardiness zone.

Sun

South-facing gardens get the most sun exposure (“full-sun” flowers) and north-facing the least (“shade” flowers). Morning sun hits the east-facing gardens, and that bright, hot afternoon sun shines upon west-facing gardens (both can have partial to full-sun flowers). Do you have trees or other tall structures? Shade-loving or partial-sun flowers do well beneath them.

Bloom time

Planting flowers that bloom at different times will guarantee lasting colorful gardens through spring, summer, and autumn. Things to consider when choosing your flowers: How long do they bloom for? Do they bloom more than once? Do they need to be dead-headed or pruned?

Color and style

Though I have an organized personality, my gardens are a bright rainbow and have been a trial-and-error project for nearly fifteen years. Purple, white, yellow, and pink dominate my color palette. Do you want an overflowing garden, or do you want it evenly spaced out? I have country-style, standalone flower beds full of flowers, whereas my walkway beds are evenly spaced and mostly symmetrical. What colors do you want in your garden—vibrant or subdued? Do the blooms change color over time (my Pee Gee hydrangeas go from white to soft pink to rusty pink)? Consider spacing, patterns, shapes, textures and foliage. What will your garden look like in winter? Plant evergreens for your fourth season: winter. Check out some of my garden arrangements (because they are three-season gardens, only some blooms are shown in the photos).

Height and size

Flower height is important to consider (tall in back/middle/along fences, and shorter in front). If you are lining walkways, how tall is too tall? Fences are a great place to put tall flowers like orange daylilies, tall phlox, sunflowers, delphinium, tall asters etc. Likewise, size matters. Do the plants grow to massive mounds like wave petunias, or gigantic shrubs like hydrangea and euonymus? Are they groundcovers like creeping phlox or thyme? Do they grow slow or fast? Note: some plants may need trellises or supports.

Soil and fertilizer

There is a science to soil and fertilizer. You can even send a sample out to be tested. A mixture of compost, peat, and topsoil works for most beds. Worm, ground beetle, centipede, and spider activity, fungi presence, root spreading, good water drainage, and dark crumbling soil are signs of healthy soil. Don’t forget to add those eggshells and coffee grounds! I feed my flowers twice a year with an 8-8-8 fertilizer (slow release), an acidic fertilizer for the azaleas, hydrangeas, and rhododendron, and monthly I spray them with my favorite “seaweed juice” (Neptune’s Harvest Fish & Seaweed).

A note about annuals

These flowers last one year. In warmer climates they can stay year-round, but typically you plant them each year (whereas perennials get pruned in the spring or fall and come back year after year). I fill in spots in my gardens, porch pots, and window boxes with petunias and marigolds. Geraniums are lovely and can “winter” inside. I also have tropical plants like mandevilla and hibiscus in pots.

What flowers bedazzle my gardens?

I’ve lost track of all the flowers I’ve planted. Here are some currently in my flower beds, pots, or boxes: Asters, astilbe, azalea, black-eyed (and red-eyed) Susan, bleeding heart, canna lily, catmint, coneflower, creeping phlox, coral bells, daffodil, daylily (about 12 variations), euonymus, geranium, holly, hydrangea (pee gee and creeping), iris (a variety), lady’s mantle, marigold, peonies, petunia, phlox (tall), primrose, rhododendron, sage, salvia, Shasta daisy…and more I can’t remember.

Now for a fun fact!

Did you know there are 10,000 daylily species? My favorite failure: lupine. They just don’t like my soil as much as I like them!

Final Tips…

·        Keep plants of similar irrigation/soil needs together.

·        Not sure what to plant? Ask at your local nursery. Plant nurseries in your area typically only carry flowers suitable for your region.

·        Let the tags guide you… Most plants come with a small tag indicating sun/shade, height, bloom time, and other pertinent details.

·        Don’t forget to plant flowers that attract pollinators.

Have specific gardening questions? Drop me an email through my website contact form. Join me next time to talk about vegetable harvests and fall pruning/planting. 

More in the series:

Part 1 (June): Setting up Vegetable Gardens

Part 3 (August): Fruit Extravaganza (berries and apples, oh my!)

Part 4 (September): Harvesting your Veggies & Planting for Late/Second Harvests

Part 5 (October): Pruning Your Perennials and Preparing For Winter (veggies & flowers)

Gardening for the Soul Series Part 1: Starting Vegetable Gardens

Gardening for the Soul…

Me and my phlox! (Okay, it’s an artsy version of it - those are tall and robust purple phlox in all their fall glory!)

Here I am, in my small corner of the world, smack-dab in the middle of Massachusetts. This five-part blog series is for anyone who finds nature feeds their soul and for whom may want to learn a bit more about setting up vegetable, fruit, and flower gardens.

My experience: I’ve been obsessing over flower gardens for fifteen years, my berries/apples for about seven years, and I’m relatively new to vegetables, four years in now (thanks to impulse pandemic gardening). I only know what I know. My background is in science, and I now write novels full-time. The way I garden is only one way. I am no expert, but feel free to glean whatever information you can from my series…

Let’s talk about vegetables!

From Seed to Seedling: Starting Inside

Supply list: soil, spoon/cup/trowel for scooping, seed-starting trays with dome lids, or small pots/containers, seeds, a sunny spot, and sunny outlook!

Before you choose your seeds, your first assignment is to determine your season length (mine is late May through October in Massachusetts, but you can also plant some vegetables in fall for a spring harvest), hardiness zone, and first/last frost dates. Where you live impacts what you can plant. [P.s. I love using the Farmer’s Almanac online to answer my gardening questions]

Next, choose your vegetables! What do you want to eat? Climate and germination time determine your indoor planting date. I start slower growers in March (inside) and quicker growers in April (my final frost date is typically around the end of May). Seed packets usually give information on when to start inside.

Here we go! Using seed starter or potting soil, plant the seeds in multi-well trays (like these). The bigger the seed, the fewer you put in each cell. Keep them watered and keep the dome on to contain moisture until seedlings pop up (like a little greenhouse), then remove the plastic dome. You can also use small pots, leftover yogurt containers, or biodegradable pots. Whatever works. If I know they will get big (e.g. cucumbers, zucchini, squash) I start them in three or five-inch pots. Some vegetables, like tomatoes and peppers, like heat for germination, so I use heat pads under my domed seed tray. For sunlight, hang lights over the trays, or place by/in a sunny window. I have a garden window in my kitchen. Once the seedlings graduate out of their little cells (a few weeks, depending on big they are), transplant them up to three or five-inch pots. You may need to divide some, or selectively thin out seedlings. Keep watering and feeding with sunshine!

My kitchen window gets west-north-east sunlight. As they grow out of these small wells, I move them up into 3 to 5 inch pots (top left), and then place them around my house by windows on raised tables (I have two good spots: west facing, and even north facing). As the plants grow and grow, aching to be transplanted outside (April, May, June), I always daydream about having a garden room or green house…one day, right?

Transplants and Direct Sowing

I transplant my seedlings to the gardens in May through early June. However, some seeds prefer to be directly sown outside because they are either too fragile (onions, lettuce), or get long and viney and can break upon transplant (beans, peas), or are vegetables that grow in the ground and need space (carrots, potatoes, onions/shallots). Some seeds swing both ways like lettuce, spinach, Swiss chard, collards, zucchini, and cucumbers. I buy lettuce already started in six-packs from a local nursery because my seedlings are too fragile with the wind of spring, and shallots/onions I buy as bulbs.

Captain’s Log:

Mid-March: began marigolds, phlox, collards, swiss chard, peppers, tomatoes inside; grew celery from old cutting (it re-grows!), set up potato experiments inside

April: directly sowed peas, spinach, shallots, swiss chard, lettuce (pre-grown six packs from a nursery), and carrots outside; began cucumbers, squash, zucchini inside; moved collards outside

April to May: moved up seedlings as they grew out of wells; moved potatoes outside

Late May: transplanted tomatoes, peppers, cucumbers, squash, cucumbers, marigolds, and celery outside; directly sowed green beans

June: directly sowed a few more cucumber, squash, and zucchini to replace those lost from hot/freeze temps

Designing Your Square-foot Companion Bed

Have less space? Daunted by the idea of huge gardens? Never fear…the answer lies in square-foot companion gardens. Simply put, each square foot of a raised bed (wood or metal framed “boxes” of any shape or size) is designated for a different vegetable. For those that love grids, this is fun! Here’s a guide on how many seeds/seedlings to plant per foot. All you need is a smidge of space in your yard with good sunlight (my two raised beds are 4x8’ each and get west and south sunlight).

My planting schematic. 2 raised beds, and a bunch of grow bags or containers (even window boxes) on my back deck.

Benefits of a raised bed include weed control, better drainage, soil control, and rodent protection (line the bottom with hardware cloth). I use PVC pipe arches and bird netting to cover my raised beds during the seedling phase (and sometimes all season long—I am very protective of my plants). Some vegetables need support (e.g tomatoes, peas): use trellises, cages, or poles. Some vegetables like space so give them plenty of room (e.g. collards, broccoli, squash, zucchini, cucumbers).

What is companion planting? Like siblings who don’t get along, you want to keep certain vegetables apart and certain ones close (they thrive off each other and help keep pests at bay). Do a little reading online to determine who likes or doesn’t like who.

What about containers? If you can grow it in a raised bed, you can grow it in a pot, growing bag, window box, or bin! Experiment. I’ve done tomatoes, cucumbers, zucchini, green beans, lettuce, spinach, and Swiss chard all in containers. This year: collard greens.

What about soil and fertilizer?

I’ll admit I’m still perfecting my ideal soil. My seeds start in a seed-starting soil mix or a potting soil with plant food (e.g. Miracle-Gro). My raised beds have “raised bed” soil specific for vegetables and herbs. I mix in compost (bagged or you can get it from local farms). Add in kitchen scraps like coffee grounds, eggs, or material from your own compost bin. I’ve added perlite to my potato experiment this year. Worm castings are also recommended (I just bought those this year). I spray my flowers and vegetables with fish and seaweed fertilizer a few times per season. There are lots of “plant foods” out there to choose from. I also top my soil bed with mulch.

This is what the garden beds look like now in early June. Plants can be moody, and we’ve had some hot, hot 90-degree days, and some bitter cold nights (even a freeze, where I had to cover them) and wet 40s stretch currently. As a result, half of my tomatoes are on their last limb (vine?) and a few of my cucumbers/squash look poorly. I directly sowed more squash/zucchini/cucumber seeds last week. They are fast growers, so I hope that makes up for the few that may not recover. Plant Experimentation is my middle name!

Final Tips…

·         Don’t be afraid to experiment. We learn from everything we do. I’m a former scientist so trial and error and tweaking are my jam!

Harvest! More to come in the fall when I talk about harvesting and storage.

·         Take notes! Keep a notebook or binder with highs/lows, dates, and other information useful for next year. I create a spreadsheet to keep a log of my seed start/transplant dates (which is helpful for the next year).

·         Add flowers to keep pests away (e.g. marigolds, nasturtiums).

·         Most seed packs have instructions on when/how to start seeds inside or outside.

·         Choosing seeds? I try to buy heirlooms as much as I can, and I shop from a few regional online/mailer catalogs, but you can get seed packs at any garden center, too, or even on eBay.

·         Some vegetables can have a second harvest (e.g. the early spring vegetables like lettuce, peas, and collards can be planted again in late summer for a fall harvest). Want longer harvests? Try succession planting (for example: keep planting lettuce every 3-4 weeks for a long harvest).

Have specific gardening questions? Drop me an email through my website contact form.

Coming soon:

Part 2 (July): Setting up Perennial Flower Gardens

Part 3 (August): Fruit Extravaganza (berries and apples, oh my!)

Part 4 (September): Harvesting your Veggies & Planting for Late/Second Harvests

Part 5 (October): Pruning Your Perennials and Preparing For Winter (veggies & flowers)









 

Seeker is here!

It’s here! Time to party!

Yes, there was cake! I dabbled with an ombre and naturally wanted to pipe buttercream thistles on top!

Find it on Amazon - ebook, in Kindle Unlimited, and as paperback: HERE.

What is SEEKER about?

Journey to 14th century Scotland:

An ambitious archer.

A future war chieftain.

Rivaling clans.

A magical mortar and pestle.

Can her arrow secure peace? Will it find love?

And don’t forget to check out the other books in the Mortar & Pestle series - collect them all!

A sneak peek into Seeker

WOOT! The cat is out of the bag! My new book, SEEKER is coming out March 9th! This medieval Scottish romance is part of a 7-book series that spans time and genre - from castles to pirates to modern day vampires, artists, and treasure hunters. The series has a bit for everyone.

If you’ve not yet subscribed to my newsletter, it’s loaded with info.

Newsletter subscribers always get an earlier sneak peek plus get access to other free and fun opportunities. :)

Now for that book…

Seeker: Nock, draw, release. Can she unite her clans before it's too late?

〰️

Seeker: Nock, draw, release. Can she unite her clans before it's too late? 〰️

Aileana Montgomerie’s bloodline holds valuable gifts of foresight and healing, but with each honor comes a curse. Even though she is descended from the mystical isles’ folk, she lacks the ability of the Scottish Ancients and wonders if she belongs in a magical family. Aileana just wants a purpose. What good is her bow and arrow if she is denied the right to fight for her clan?

Brodie MacDougall is ordained to be the next war chieftain of his clan. The title is a privilege as long as his brother, the future laird, doesn’t expect him to lift a sword and charge into battle. Chronic pain and nervous vapors force him to spend his days alone. Can his strategic skills keep him one step ahead of his conspiring brother?

Through a magical Mortar & Pestle, Brodie finds his heart’s desire. But there’s a catch. The seat on his brother’s council is no longer dependent upon his health…but on Aileana’s strength. With rumblings of unrest among their clans, will their love foster an alliance or be a step toward war?

Preorder SEEKER now through March 8th at 99¢!

Do you like to read and write reviews? Sign up to be an ARC READER for SEEKER.

The Mortar and Pestle series…

New release coming your way & a bit about our Ecuador trip

It’s been a busy summer!

If you’ve not yet subscribed to my newsletter, it’s chockful of info this fall: new release info, a whirlwind summary of our trip to Ecuador & the Galapagos this summer (a longer post on that coming soon but skim down to get a snippet…), my upcoming conferences, book recommendations, and other author highlights.

Newsletter subscribers always get an earlier sneak peek plus get access to other free and fun opportunities. :)

Now for that book…

Seeker: coming soon!

〰️

Seeker: coming soon! 〰️

Pre-order SEEKER on February 10, 2023, which is just around the corner!

SEEKER will be part of a 7-book romantic novella series. Each book is a standalone story, but they can all be read in or out of order for the full Mortar & Pestle experience. More details will be coming in my December newsletter, including information about being an ARC READER for SEEKER. Interested? Sign up!

The Mortar and Pestle series…

A wisp of smoke, a swirl of promise, a breath of destiny…a message within the Mortar & Pestle for those who want to believe.

Throughout time people have sought heir heart’s desire. But true love is often elusive.

Carved with Ancient Norse runes, the Mortar & Pestle shows paths to happily-ever-afters.

Once you capture the Mortar & Pestle’s scent of magic, you’ll want to read all seven individual romances.

Just a few photos from our AMAZING trip to Ecuador!

I am still falling back into the routine of life after our family trip to Ecuador in August. It was our first trip internationally with our children. I have yet to sit and write a blog post, let alone print or order photos! Choosing about 20 of 1700 photos (and that wasn't even enough!) is hard but I did my best (see above). Writing about the beauty that is Ecuador, even harder. I'll summarize our adventure (stay tuned for a more detailed blog post)...

15 days, 4 people, 6 flights, a dozen destinations, sea level to 13,000 feet elevation, wicked altitude sickness, rocky speed boat "ferries," 2 islands, lush wildlife (sea turtles, sea lions, highland tortoises, sharks, rays, marine & land iguanas, blue-footed boobies, Galapagos penguins, toucans, hummingbirds), snorkeling, kayaking, hiking, biking, volcanoes, beaches, cloud forest, Andes mountains, equator, cultural learnings, national parks, zigzagging drives, ice cream & gelato & lattes & so much food, busy city, quiet countryside, amazing tour guides & naturalists, Darwin...

...and more memories than I can write down! I highly recommend a trip to this gem of a place if you wish to explore 4 different ecosystems in one country (islands, coast, mountains, jungle), love nature and science and animals and history/art, have an adventurous side, appreciate learning about new cultures, and well, love to travel. As a former scientist, visiting the beloved Galapagos Islands was a dream.