Monday, January 12, 2009

Dreaming of Apple and Peach Pies!


I am so excited – in about three years I will be making apple and peach pies from the fruit off my new urban orchard! I can hardly wait!

That’s right – I planted the apple and peach trees in my front yard yesterday. I now am the proud momma of 2 Anna and 1 Dorset Golden apple and 2 Mid-Pride and 1 Florida Prince peach trees.

I planted them in two mini orchards with the apples in one large hole and the peaches in another. Thank goodness I had the help of a neighbor to dig the holes. I spent almost an hour on one hole before he showed up – and I wasn’t even done. And my soil was fairly moist and easy to dig! The apples are in the top right of the photo - they look like sticks! I also planted Iris bulbs under the apple trees to start my apple guild.

Here’s a photo of the peach trees all snug in their holes. They are just in front of the trellis with the Lady Banks Rose. The stepping stones lead up to them between the new vegetable bed and the desert tree mulch pit.

As we were planting them, I caught myself calling them my "babies" and "he" or "she" – I am pretty sure Art thought I was losing it from too much sun!

I pruned them myself after they were in the ground. I made sure the grafting node faced northeast (protects it from too much sun) and carefully cut off the broken branches and any that would eventually be in the path or which pointed in the wrong direction. (If a branch either points straight out or down, it will probably break under the weight of fruit).

I was hesitant to prune too much so I chose a light pruning. I will keep the trees height at about 8 feet so I can harvest them easily. There will be more opportunities to prune over the next few years.

My front yard is finally beginning to look like an edible yard. I am having gutters installed in about a week. One section will channel the water from the roof into the lowered garden bed where the apple trees live, providing them with rain water, which will supplement (and sometimes replace) the municipal water needed.

So I do feel like it is coming together, yet I still have several things to do before it gets too hot – plant a desert tree in the mulch pit, upgrade the irrigation system, build a shade structure for the first few summers and lay the bricks for the patio. Whew – sure feels like a lot – but I know it will all be worth it when it is done.

How’s your garden project coming?

Happy Digging, Doreen

For more gardening tips and resources visit www.down2earthgardens.com

1 comments:

Sweet Life Garden said...

hi Doreen, One day all this work will be so worth it. Its going to be beautiful!jill green

Labels

AZ vegetable gardens (12) arizona gardening (12) compost (10) Garden Goddess (9) Down 2 Earth Gardens (8) Phoenix (7) permaculture (6) vegetable Gardens (6) AZ (5) bermuda grass removal (5) community garden consultant (5) edible gardens (5) gardens (5) monsoon rains (5) Garden planning (4) seed saving (4) Community Gardens (3) Companion planting (3) Garden design (3) Soil (3) apple trees (3) beets (3) computer garden design tools (3) desert (3) fall planting (3) herbs (3) low desert gardening (3) low desert winter gardens (3) mosquitoes (3) mulching (3) rain harvesting (3) Garden Maintenance (2) Gardening tips (2) Master Gardeners (2) Rain barrels (2) Squash Bugs (2) Swiss Chard (2) Three sisters garden (2) amending soil (2) apple (2) basil (2) bats (2) citrus (2) design (2) earth day (2) edible (2) flowers (2) gardening (2) green peppers (2) mint (2) nematodes (2) pruning (2) rain guage (2) rosemary (2) soil secrets (2) sustainable gardens (2) tomatoes (2) tree (2) "Bill McDorman" (1) ARMLS (1) African marigolds (1) Blossom End Rot (1) Christmas Cactus (1) Clay (1) Coirn (1) Companion planting. (1) Contest (1) Cornville (1) Corriander seed (1) Deswrt gardening (1) Doreen Pollack (1) Double digging (1) Fall garden clean up (1) Fall gardens (1) Gambusia (1) Garden Tools (1) Garden books (1) Garden workshops (1) Grden Journals (1) Healing Gardens (1) Heirloom seeds (1) Home Staging (1) Humus (1) Japanese beetles (1) Johnny Jump-ups (1) Kohlrabi (1) Loam (1) Mesquite Flour (1) Microorganisms (1) Phoeniz (1) Pole Beans (1) Red amaranth (1) Sand (1) Sierra Club (1) Slow Food Phoenix (1) Soil Food Web (1) Squash (1) Sweet 100 Cherry Tomatoes (1) Toby Hemenway (1) Tree Pruning (1) Wildlife habitats (1) amaranth (1) artichoke seeds (1) bachelor button (1) bermudal grass removal (1) bird netting (1) bok choy (1) broccoli rabe (1) brussel sprouts (1) bugs (1) cilantro (1) compost. bugs (1) corn cups (1) cutworms (1) dandelion greens (1) digging (1) dirt (1) earthworks (1) eating from the garden (1) edible cactus (1) edible container garden (1) feeding fruit trees (1) fertilizer (1) fleas (1) flies (1) flower gardens (1) food (1) frost (1) fruit trees (1) garden (1) garden bed preparation (1) garden coaching (1) garden disease control (1) garden journal (1) gardening quiz (1) grass (1) green (1) green beans (1) green features (1) green gift giving (1) grren beans (1) harvesting (1) heirloom (1) holloyhocks (1) home selling (1) how much to plant (1) infections (1) injury in the garden (1) ladybird (1) ladybud (1) lavender (1) leafy greens (1) leaves (1) lettuce (1) mosquities (1) mosquito control (1) mycorrhizae (1) native foods (1) native seeds (1) natural mosquito repellant (1) natural mosquitoe repellant (1) new garden (1) olive trees (1) on-line garden club (1) oregano (1) palo verd tree (1) pansies (1) peach (1) peach trees (1) peaches (1) permaculture design (1) permaculture design course (1) pest control (1) pesticides (1) plastic (1) poor drainage (1) praying mantis (1) prickly pear (1) professional gardener (1) protecting fruit trees from birds (1) radicchio (1) radishes (1) rain water (1) rain water harvesting (1) ratoons (1) recycle (1) root rot (1) second crop (1) soil building (1) soil secrets. nitrogen (1) soil testing (1) southwest vegetable gardens (1) spinach (1) squash vines (1) stock (1) summer (1) sunflower (1) sunflowers (1) surface water (1) sustainability (1) sweet peppers (1) tilling (1) tomato (1) transplant (1) trash (1) trees (1) vegetable (1) vegetablvegetable Gardens (1) violas (1) water use (1) waterharvesting (1) watering a garden (1) weather (1) wildflowers (1) wind (1) xeriscape plant (1) year-round gardening (1)