• Menu
  • Skip to content

ss_site_title

Just another WordPress site

Garden of the Month

Garden of the Month: August

August 11, 2019 //  by jessica.m.ricco@gmail.com//  Leave a Comment

Walking into Sandra Love’s garden is a jaw drop moment. She lives in an HOA monitored neighborhood and her front yard is quite unassuming. You walk down a little side yard and suddenly it all opens up. It is clear she is trying to create a tropical paradise. I was immediately drawn to the side of her yard with her raised veggie beds. They are lush with huge tomato plants, peppers, melons, squashes, herbs, and more. The okras are gigantic. Passion fruit vine covers a wall and provides some shade to eggplants and chilies. A trellis arch is covered with grapes, squashes, and melons. The vines are heavy with fruit. Strawberries grow happily in the shade of this vine covered arch.  There is a variety of fruit trees, mostly tropical. An apple tree is covered in ripening apples. Citrus dot the property and there are also pomegranate and mulberry trees. Guava, jujube, bananas, calmondin, mangoes, and Vietnamese Cherimoya are strategically placed around the property in the best areas conducive to their growth. Some provide shade for younger trees and veggies, others need the shade of the larger trees. Sandra’s non-food passion is growing Plumeria. The other side of her yard houses many, many varieties of plumeria, and she keeps adding to this collection. 

Sandra does have a mini garden helper. He recently got his own little planting box and he relishes harvesting food every day with Sandra. He enjoys snacking on peas, carrots, tomatoes. and fruit that he picks as he wants. He is a proud little gardener and eager to give visitors a tour of the garden. 

A tangle of lush tomatoes and other plants_
AJ and more squash
AJ Displaying His Squash Harvest_
AJ_S Garden Box
Another productive harvest
Baanana patch
Banana and other edible and ornamental plants
Banana flower and bananas
Banana Squash grown on the hoop trellis
Bananas getting bigger
Cheddar Cauliflower
Eggplant and Chile Harvest
Georgia Collard greens_
Harvesting
Masses of green_
Napa Cabbage
okra
Overhead view
Plumeria Blossoms_
Plumeria in Bloom
Pool and greenery
Productive raised beds_
Ridiculously large okra_
Trellis Hoop
Trombocino Squash and smiles_
Winter garden
Winter squashes_

What is gardening to you?

Gardening to me is many things. It’s being able to provide my family with fresh food grown with hard work and love, on top of the ability to control what it is that goes into our produce (therefore our bodies). Gardening is tranquility,  where I go to relax and feel peacefulness, where I can feel in harmony with Mother Earth. I’m extremely fascinated with biology and all things life, and gardening allows me to surround myself with exactly that. 

How did your garden adventure begin?

 

When I was growing up both my parents gardened. Later when I was raising my kids it was fun to garden with them, to pull up radishes from the garden for example. I do garden more now since they are grown.

What changes have you made that have been really impactful?

Compost. Being as I’m from California, gardening was quite easy for me. Anything grew, we didn’t have to give all the extra care as we do here in Arizona. In recent years since moving here, I’ve added compost and compost tea to my fertilizing schedule and it has helped me combat a lot of problems I see others having here due to our very difficult climate. 

What do you enjoy growing?

Whatever grows. If it feeds me, even better. I’m especially big on vegetable growing. I cook a lot, so anything that helps me in the kitchen, it’s in the garden. Since buying a home with a fairly large lot, I’ve been adding more and more variety to the garden. What started out as mainly tomatoes, peppers, eggplants and okra in very few varieties, has expanded to a plethora of different varieties of those along with my ability and space now to grow summer and winter squash, cucumbers, melons and fruit trees. I also enjoy growing things that others don’t have. Different varieties, rare fruit, something not commonly seen in your regular landscape, I’m all for it. 

What do you want other gardeners to know about your garden?

You can do it too. I’m often told by others how amazing my garden is, yet I feel no more special than anyone else with a hobby. People receive from things what they put into it. I don’t believe it’s a hard hobby. Challenging yes, but with any challenge comes the need to put forth an effort to learn. I just love to learn. You can’t be good at something if you already know it all and are unwilling to learn from others or put in a little footwork. If you want to learn to garden, you WILL be able to garden.

What are your biggest gardening challenges?

Most in Arizona would say the sun and its relentless need to try to kill us in the summer. But I say the winter cold snaps. Aside from vegetables, tropical fruit is another one of my needs in the garden. Being from the tropics, I miss the landscape. Being surrounded by banana trees, guavas, cherimoyas… I’m also a big Plumeria collector and our cold climate is just not friendly to this hobby. That’s what I’m trying to replicate in a portion of my yard is a tropical climate, and it has definitely been one of the biggest challenges.

What are your biggest successes?

Going by what others have told me and what I see others having difficulty with, I would have to say bananas. I see so many people having issues with growing bananas and mine are just shooting up and popping up pups everywhere. If you were to ask me what my secret is, I would have to say the same thing as I say with any other plant in my yard. Location, water and feed your soil. 

Any tips to share with others?

Planting location is my #1 tip to any gardener in Arizona. Yes, soil, water, and fertilizer matter, but those are things that can be fixed if done incorrectly. Location can’t. The first thing I looked at when buying our home was the backyard exposure and possible placement of planters, raised beds and trees. My garden was planned in my head before our home was purchased. My bananas thrive because of where I put them, but 10 feet over, they would suffer. My garden beds also thrive because of where I placed them. Placement matters very much in the desert. Heat intolerant plants must go to the east of a structure such as your home, wall or tree to keep them healthy throughout our brutal summers. For those who don’t have this option, shade cloth is a must. This is the starting basis of a successful garden. You can change your watering and fertilizing schedule, you can amend your soil… but if you put your avocado tree dead center in the middle of your yard with no sun protection, there is nothing you can do to amend this without having to relocate your tree. The same would apply if you put a garden bed against your south wall and realize your plants do not have any sun in December. So yes, start everything with placement.

Follow SANDRA:

@LovesAZDesertGarden

Category: Garden of the Month

Garden of the Month: July

July 8, 2019 //  by jessica.m.ricco@gmail.com//  3 Comments

Anna Apple Tree
Apple Harvest
Artichoke Flower with many pollinators
Assassin Bug On Carrot Flowers
Banana patch
Blackberries
Blackberry patch
loqouat Tree
Passionfruit Flower
Passionfruit Flowers
Passionfruit Vine
Pomegranate Tree
Summer Harvest
The Veggie Patch
Tomato Harvest

Nancy Schmehl needs no introduction in the Phoenix gardening circles. She is an admin in one of the largest facebook gardening groups, Organic Gardens of Maricopa County, and shares her invaluable knowledge with our gardening community. That knowledge and gardening experience is reflected in this fantastic property.

A huge shady mulberry graces the entrance to her garden.  A patch of blackberries have happily established underneath, while sweet potato vine creeps along as a ground cover. On the far end, I notice very healthy looking fruit trees. Nancy gardens on a property that is just under an acre. It is an irrigated lot which is perfect for fruit trees. A neighborhood cat keeps us company as Nancy shows me around. This is her little garden buddy.

Life is visible everywhere here. There are several artichoke plants in flower that are supporting the pollinators. Herbs and roses are interspersed in between the artichokes. Close by, a shaded veggie patch is in high production. Cucumbers, tomatoes, beans, and eggplants are grown together, providing in abundance. Several carrot plants are flowering and on the way to setting seed. They house many assassin bugs and attract scores of pollinators. The orchard area of the property includes apple trees, citrus, loquat, pomegranate, and mulberries. There are also figs, peaches and a lovely banana patch. Everything is green and lush and covered in fruit. Blackberry season is over for Nancy, and she has been harvesting peaches, and now, apples are starting to ripen as well. There will be an plethora of produce all season long.

We sit down to find out what inspired this garden.

What is gardening to you?

It is a connection to my mom. When I am out there, she is on my mind. It is sad that she never got to see what it has become.

It is also my exercise and my sanity. It always lifts my spirits. It is being able to eat organic, fresh and tasty food. I missed my mom’s tomatoes and also citrus. The ones in the store tastes so bad and the citrus is not like the citrus from Santa Barbara.  Having this garden means I can grow my own. 

How did your garden adventure begin?

When I lived in an apartment here, my husband got me a bulb of the month subscription. I bought pots and soil and planted them and they grew. I had a very stressful job, it was my antidote. I would come home and sit with my plants. Later we moved to a rental home and the owner said I could have a garden. I planted tomatoes and zucchini and got the bug!

What changes have you made that have been really impactful?

Composting! It is the single biggest thing. It made a huge difference in plants thriving versus them just growing. The soil is more fertile. I got started with kitchen scraps. Friends from Canada were visiting, and told me about compost. My compost gets up to 160 degrees. I compost vegetable scraps and yard waste including grass trimmings. I do not compost anything in the solanaceae family since they could spread diseases. Joining the facebook garden groups also helped. Another really important change was allowing some plants to flower to bring in beneficial bugs. Cilantro and dill  are lady bug factories, but also pollinator attractors. The carrots and artichokes are pollinator magnets. The carrots also bring in a lot of assassin bugs. 

What do you enjoy growing?

Tomatoes! They are probably my number one, I am a tomato fanatic. Also the peaches, blackberries, apples and citrus. There is nothing like being out there and eating right from the garden. I love eating breakfast right out of the garden.

What do you want other gardeners to know about your garden?

It’s not perfect. It’s messy and weedy. Perfection is not required.

What are your biggest gardening challenges?

Battling invasive weeds. Some came from the bird feeders. 

What are your biggest successes?

Tomatoes! I KNOW how to grow tomatoes. Compost. Pomegranates.

Any tips to share with others?

Compost! There’s a theme here. Compost! Compost! Compost!

What would grow in your dream garden if climate was not an obstacle?

Lilacs! I had a Persian lilac here, but it was not an ideal spot and eventually died. I have not been able to find another one. The smell of lilacs is like nothing else. I love them so much, one sniff takes me back immediately to a summer evening in my childhood, playing hide and seek with the other kids in the neighborhood.

Category: Garden of the Month

Garden of the Month: June

June 16, 2019 //  by jessica.m.ricco@gmail.com//  Leave a Comment

Yerba Mansa
The Little Free Library
Tea in the garden
Roses at Dusk
Resident rescue kitty
Muscovy ducks
Malaysian Red Guava
Jamaican Cnerry
Fun Play in front of the little library
Grapes and nasturtium
Front Yard
Cuban Oregano
Chickens are natural pest control_
Certified Wildlife Habitat plaque
Castor Bean Seedling
Beautiful Roses
Beautiful rainbow_

As I drive up to City Farm, a small family of quail scutter across the street from this wildlife sanctuary. It’s 9am and already 90 degrees (F), yet the garden has this cooling and slowing down atmosphere to it. I appreciate the lovely perfume of the creosote bushes as I walk up to the door, checking out what’s growing on the way.

City Farm belongs to Dephane and her family. This garden is a true wildlife refuge, having received two plaques, one from the National Wildlife Federation and the other for providing safe Monarch butterfly habitat.

Dephane is wonderfully warm and welcoming, and all her surroundings reflect that. As she takes me for a tour through her garden, I notice all the lovely spots designed for relaxing, entertaining, and enjoying the outdoors. Sofa beds are tucked away in shady corners, lovely chairs, a table for tea, and candle holders that are definitely well used are strategically placed throughout. Gentle gurgles of water fade in and out as we walk around. There are seven watering stations throughout the garden, as well as 3 very busy bird feeding stations.

This garden is home to several Muscovy ducks, a few chickens and a precious rooster named Peaches.  An array of herbs, several tomatoes plants, and younger cuttings and seedlings are grown on a shady patio. There are several figs trees, mulberries, and many bananas plants throughout the back and front gardens. Native passion fruit, honeysuckle, and other vining plants clamber up trellises. A huge grapevine shades the chicken coop. In the front yard, native desert plants share space with more fruit trees and some impressive rose bushes. Drought tolerant flowers and several sunflowers add even more color and food for pollinators.

City Farm also has a Little Free Library on the property where neighbors or any interested readers can pick up a book or drop some off. During cooler months, the library is not only stocked with books, but also seeds and plant cuttings. While sharing a delicious tea Dephane brewed, I got to find out more about this lovely garden.

What is gardening to you?

It means growing my own food. It is being out in nature. It is the joy of planting one tiny seed and knowing it can grow into something wonderful.

How did your garden adventure begin?

When I was growing up both my parents gardened. Later when I was raising my kids it was fun to garden with them, to pull up radishes from the garden for example. I do garden more now since they are grown.

What changes have you made that have been really impactful?

Designing our garden so that we can use it to teach about wildlife. We hold several classes on how to provide habitats for Monarch butterflies, teaching people how to grow food, even how to have a garden to support wildlife.

What do you enjoy growing?

Fruit trees. I think they are easier than vegetables and they do not die at the end of the season. I cannot wait for all my bananas to be producing.

What do you want other gardeners to know about your garden?

I love to share.  I love to spend time in my garden. I like having friends over for tea in the garden.

What are your biggest gardening challenges?

Bugs. Hungry bugs and critters eating stuff.Sometimes, the dogs.

What are your biggest successes?

The sharing I can do. There is sharing with the little library, a seed library as well. There’s progressive dinners in the neighborhood, where we do a different course at a different home and we can share and learn and teach others how to garden.

Any tips to share with others?

The importance of composting and using waste materials for good. We use the cleanings from the chicken coop in compost. There are also composting worms. We add kombucha and all the kitchen food scraps to the compost. Also, we use leaf debris to build soil. The water from the duck pool is used to water the bananas.

Follow Dephane:

@Dephane_Marcelle_CityFarm
City Farm on Facebook

Category: Garden of the Month

Garden of the Month: May

May 21, 2019 //  by jessica.m.ricco@gmail.com//  Leave a Comment

[vc_row css=”.vc_custom_1557977943174{padding-bottom: 5% !important;}”][vc_column][vc_custom_heading text=”Our featured garden for May belongs to a lovely family of four: Shripad, Priya and their two children Ria and Rohan. They grow a mix of fruit trees, vegetables, and flowers. Their love of tropical trees is very apparent. Moringa, tamarind, amla berry, and Barbados cherries grow in the front yard, in carefully planned microclimates. They do not have a large space for planting in the backyard, but that does not hold them back. Before they were bitten by the garden bug, they installed a pool which took up much of the room in the backyard. They make great use of the planting borders along the block walls and a small side yard.” font_container=”tag:p|font_size:20|text_align:left|line_height:1.3″ use_theme_fonts=”yes”][vc_custom_heading text=”The backyard is home to a grapevine, a giant fig tree, and an impressive mulberry tree. There are guava trees, citrus, several mangoes, June plum, lychee, boysenberries, and an extremely impressive Saturn blackberry. Pomegranates, peaches, and loquats have also found a spot. Several varieties of chilies, eggplants, tomatoes, fennel, and other veggies are also mixed in.” font_container=”tag:p|font_size:20|text_align:left|line_height:1.3″ use_theme_fonts=”yes”][vc_custom_heading text=”There are also a number of stunning rose bushes, and colorful flowers lining the pathway and brighten up the borders. They started this garden three years ago and it gets even better with each year. It is really refreshing to observe how enthusiastic their five-year-old son Rohan is about this garden and he had much to add as they showed me around and answered my questions. He handed me calendula seeds, and pointed out the painted daisies he helped plant. He wanted to show me peas that he had also planted, and could not contain his excitement about the blackberries. I get the sense that the gardening gene is strong in this little one!” font_container=”tag:p|font_size:20|text_align:left|line_height:1.3″ use_theme_fonts=”yes”][/vc_column][/vc_row][vc_row css=”.vc_custom_1558373198248{padding-top: 5% !important;}”][vc_column][vc_custom_heading text=”HOW DID YOUR GARDENING ADVENTURE BEGIN?” font_container=”tag:p|font_size:28|text_align:left|line_height:1.5″ use_theme_fonts=”yes” css=”.vc_custom_1558457471740{padding-top: 5% !important;}”][vc_single_image image=”1208″][vc_custom_heading text=”(Priya) I wanted a garden and we decided to get some small trees. We decided to get guavas, figs, pomegranates, mulberry, and custard apple. (Shripad) They invoked memories of growing up and eating these fruit. (Priya) Shripad went to pick up the trees and found alphonso mango and he was hooked from that moment. This was the turning point! Our adventure is driven by memories.” font_container=”tag:p|text_align:left|line_height:1.8″ use_theme_fonts=”yes”][/vc_column][/vc_row][vc_row css=”.vc_custom_1558373198248{padding-top: 5% !important;}”][vc_column][vc_custom_heading text=”WHAT CHANGES HAVE YOU MADE THAT HAVE BEEN REALLY IMPACTFUL?” font_container=”tag:p|font_size:28|text_align:left|line_height:1.5″ use_theme_fonts=”yes” css=”.vc_custom_1558451623100{padding-top: 5% !important;}”][vc_single_image image=”1208″][vc_custom_heading text=”Adding mulch made a big difference and learning to feed and build the soil. Also watering correctly and getting away from just the drip system. We still use the drip system, but we also deep soak weekly to make sure plants are getting watered correctly.” font_container=”tag:p|text_align:left|line_height:1.8″ use_theme_fonts=”yes”][/vc_column][/vc_row][vc_row css=”.vc_custom_1558373198248{padding-top: 5% !important;}”][vc_column][vc_custom_heading text=”WHAT DO YOU MOST ENJOY GROWING?” font_container=”tag:p|font_size:28|text_align:left|line_height:1.5″ use_theme_fonts=”yes” css=”.vc_custom_1558451650347{padding-top: 5% !important;}”][vc_single_image image=”1208″][vc_custom_heading text=”Fruit trees, types that we grew up with. Guavas, mangoes, figs, mulberries. (Rohan) Blackberries! Also peaches. (Priya) I love roses too. (Ria) Kumquats.” font_container=”tag:p|text_align:left|line_height:1.8″ use_theme_fonts=”yes”][/vc_column][/vc_row][vc_row css=”.vc_custom_1558373198248{padding-top: 5% !important;}”][vc_column][vc_custom_heading text=”WHAT DO YOU WANT OTHER GARDENERS TO KNOW ABOUT YOUR GARDEN?” font_container=”tag:p|font_size:28|text_align:left|line_height:1.5″ use_theme_fonts=”yes”][vc_single_image image=”1208″][vc_custom_heading text=”A productive garden is possible regardless of space. We treat it as a learning experience and are very patient. We do not expect instant gratification. We got to know the soil and microclimate in our yard, so we know how to work with the soil and use the microclimate. By doing this we encourage tree growth getting them off to a good start. We are always paying attention.” font_container=”tag:p|text_align:left|line_height:1.8″ use_theme_fonts=”yes”][/vc_column][/vc_row][vc_row css=”.vc_custom_1558373198248{padding-top: 5% !important;}”][vc_column][vc_custom_heading text=”WHAT ARE YOUR BIGGEST GARDENING CHALLENGES?” font_container=”tag:p|font_size:28|text_align:left|line_height:1.5″ use_theme_fonts=”yes” css=”.vc_custom_1558451659990{padding-top: 5% !important;}”][vc_single_image image=”1208″][vc_custom_heading text=”Getting the watering right. The tree requirements vary. We had to observe, and learn how to group trees with similar needs together. We also had to learn which varieties will do best in our yard and we did have some failures. Sugar apple, Persimmon, and Jamaican Cherry have not done well for us.” font_container=”tag:p|text_align:left|line_height:1.8″ use_theme_fonts=”yes”][/vc_column][/vc_row][vc_row css=”.vc_custom_1558373198248{padding-top: 5% !important;}”][vc_column][vc_custom_heading text=”WHAT ARE YOUR BIGGEST SUCCESSES?” font_container=”tag:p|font_size:28|text_align:left|line_height:1.5″ use_theme_fonts=”yes” css=”.vc_custom_1558451668732{padding-top: 5% !important;}”][vc_single_image image=”1208″][vc_custom_heading text=”Mulberries. The first year we got one berry and the four of us shared it. Last year we got a lot more. This year there is so much we cannot keep up and have shared with so many friends. Figs, guavas, blackberries, and pomegranates. Our grapes are doing very well and our roses have given us a lot of beautiful blooms.” font_container=”tag:p|text_align:left|line_height:1.8″ use_theme_fonts=”yes”][/vc_column][/vc_row][vc_row css=”.vc_custom_1558373198248{padding-top: 5% !important;}”][vc_column][vc_custom_heading text=”ANY TIPS TO SHARE WITH OTHERS?” font_container=”tag:p|font_size:28|text_align:left|line_height:1.5″ use_theme_fonts=”yes” css=”.vc_custom_1558451676785{padding-top: 5% !important;}”][vc_single_image image=”1208″][vc_custom_heading text=”Buy smaller plants. They get better acclimated than larger trees. Plant closer together, they protect each other. Also, we found that having more than one of something helped them do better. For example, we have two pomegranate trees and they seem to do better, they like company. Assume you are overwatering, which can be a big problem for trees. If the mulch is dry on top and you think the plants are dry, check. The top may be dry but the ground under the mulch is still moist. Know what to plant in which areas of your yard. Join local gardening groups, speak to other gardeners and get support to learn how to grow things here.” font_container=”tag:p|text_align:left|line_height:1.8″ use_theme_fonts=”yes”][/vc_column][/vc_row][vc_row css=”.vc_custom_1558373212645{padding-top: 5% !important;padding-bottom: 5% !important;}”][vc_column][vc_masonry_media_grid style=”load-more” items_per_page=”8″ element_width=”3″ grid_id=”vc_gid:1558481072117-68e60c32-c4bf-2″ include=”2888,2887,2886,2885,2884,2883,2882,2881,2880,2879,2878,2876,2875,2874,2871,2870,2866,2865,2864,2863,2862,2861,2860″ css=”.vc_custom_1558451705554{padding-top: 5% !important;}”][/vc_column][/vc_row]

Category: Garden of the Month

Copyright © 2026 ss_site_title · All Rights Reserved · Powered by Mai Theme