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UC Marin Master Gardeners

Maintenance

How to Maintain an Edible Garden
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Monitor the garden for pests and diseases as you maintain it. Photo: Courtesy UC Regents
Monitor the garden for pests and diseases as you maintain it. Photo: Courtesy UC Regents

Once the fruit trees, berries, herbs and vegetables are planted, the magic begins. Even seasoned gardeners marvel at how the seed becomes the plant that produces a vegetable that appears on a plate. But abundant growth and harvest don’t "just happen." To have a successful edible garden, a gardener must be a midwife, a caregiver, and a coaxer. Here's how to care for your edible garden.
 

Ongoing maintenance

• Spend time in the vegetable garden. Become an astute observer. Look for signs of trouble, such as wilting or eaten leaves or stunted growth. 
• Monitor for pests.
• Monitor for disease.
• Check soil for moisture.
• Keep vertical plants supported.
• Taste for ripeness and harvest when just right.
• Pull weeds.
• Replenish mulch.
• Check irrigation and adjust as the season progresses.
• Add plant waste to the compost pile. 
Prune fruit trees.

Recommended: keep a garden journal to chronicle your successes and learning moments.

 

Monthly reminders

Use this Edible Garden Monthly Planting and Maintenance Schedule to keep your garden in tip top shape all year. 

> MONTHLY PLANTING & MAINTENANCE 
 
BACK TO EDIBLES
> What Edible Gardens Need
> Best Choices for Marin
> How to Prepare
> How to Plant
> Edibles in Containers
> Planting Calendar
> Grow & Care Sheets for Vegetables, Herbs & Fruits
> Tips & Techniques
> How to Maintain
> Fruit Trees
> Top 20 Edible Garden Problems
> Cover Crops & Soil Enhancements in the Off-season
> Conserving Water

•••••••••

Visit our EDIBLE DEMO GARDEN at IVC Organic Farm & Garden

 

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Oxalis pes-carpe, Bermuda buttercup or Cape sorrel. Photo: Wikimedia Commons
UC Marin Master Gardeners: Article

April 2021: Controlling Weeds

March 31, 2021
March brought many unwelcome guests to our garden. Weeds! Weeds compete with our crops for nutrients, water, sunlight, and space...
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Photo: Jonathan Kemper, Unsplash
UC Marin Master Gardeners: Article

March 2021: Growing Edibles in Drought

March 31, 2021
The Edibles Demonstration Garden team took steps in the last month to move toward spring and summer plantings. We also made the decision to postpone our dreams of expanding our fruit tree orchard until the next bare-root season...
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Kale. Photo: Erda Estremera, Unsplash
UC Marin Master Gardeners: Article

February 2021: Winter Pruning

March 31, 2021
As we welcomed the New Year, our winter garden had come to life. We are now harvesting the fruits of our fall labors: beautiful heads of broccoli, arugula, spicy mesclun mix, lettuce, spinach, kale...
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Photo: Joan Kozlowski
UC Marin Master Gardeners: Article

January 2021: Propagation

March 31, 2021
December arrived and found our team enjoying some well-deserved rest. The planting of our winter garden is finished and now we are just waiting for it to start producing.
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Slices of watermelon radishes. Photo: Michele Blacksell, Unsplash
UC Marin Master Gardeners: Article

December 2020: What to Grow in Winter

March 31, 2021
What a busy month weve had in the Edibles Demonstration Garden. We finished out the busy summer season by harvesting our winter squash...
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Fava beans are a great cover crop.
UC Marin Master Gardeners: Article

November 2020: Cover Crops

March 31, 2021
This fall our team has been busy ordering seeds for our winter garden and then starting them in the greenhouse to get a good jump on our plantings.
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