Growing Food In the High Desert Country
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Growing Food In the High Desert Country - Julie Behrend Weinberg
Growing Food In the High Desert Country
Growing Food In the High Desert Country
By
Julie Behrend Weinberg
Copyright © 1985 by Julie Behrend Weinberg.
All Rights Reserved.
Printed and bound in the United States of America. No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any electronic or mechanical means including information storage and retrieval systems without permission in writing from the publisher, except by a reviewer who may quote brief passages in a review.
Sunstone books may be purchased for educational, business, or sales promotional use. For information please write: Special Markets Department, Sunstone Press, P.O. Box 2321, Santa Fe, New Mexico 87504-2321.
10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data:
Weinberg, Julie Behrend, 1957–
Growing food in the high desert country.
Bibliography: p.93
Includes index.
1. Vegetable gardening—Southwest, New. 2. Fruit-culture—Southwest, New 3. Desert gardening—Southwest, New. I. Title.
SB321.W44 1985 635’.0970 85-2682
ISBN: 0-86534-066-8
Published by SUNSTONE PRESS
Post Office Box 2321
Santa Fe, NM 87504-2321 / USA
(505) 988-4418 / orders only (800) 243-5644
FAX (505) 988-1025
www.sunstonepress.com
CONTENTS
Introduction
I The High Desert Country’s Troublesome Trio: Climate, Water Supply and Soil
II Plants: Some Basic Facts
III Starting the Garden
IV Building the Soil
V Soil pH
VI Fertilizers
VII Water
VIII Mulch
IX Planning the Garden
X Vegetables and Their Culture in High Desert Country
XI Pests
XII Orchards
List of Drought-Hardy Perennials
List of Drought-Hardy Shrubs
List of Drought-Hardy Trees
Recommended Reading
Bibliography
Index
Acknowledgement
I want to thank my husband, Richard Y. Weinberg; my parents, Dean and Sandra Behrend; and my grandparents, Irving and Ceil Klein for the love and support that helped to make this book a reality.
Dedication
This book is dedicated to the memory of my grandparents, Morris and Molly Behrend.
INTRODUCTION
When it was first suggested that I write this book, I immediately objected. What the world didn’t need, I felt was another gardening book. But as I thought about it, I realized that the Southwest, especially the high desert country, has long been ignored by most of the horticultural community. Frequently envisioned as an endless desert where nothing but cacti grow, little has been written to help the high desert dweller cope with the problems of raising plants in a dry land.
The first vegetable garden I attempted in the Southwest was situated on the eastern slopes of the Sandia Mountains, the range that lies just east of Albuquerque, New Mexico. I was an eastern
gardener then and I was surprised, frustrated and dismayed that my nifty, East Coast gardening techniques proved to be unsuitable for the conditions in the high desert. Thus began my journey into the world of high desert gardening, and though I’m sure that I’ll learn a lot more before the journey is finished, over the years I’ve come up with a basic approach that works within the limits of this beautiful but austere area.
The high desert country
that this book refers to is generally above 5500 feet and receives about 12 inches of rain annually. In general, if the locale has hot but not blistering summer days (mean highs in the 80s), cool summer nights (lows ranging from 50 to 65 degrees F.), a lot of wind, a dry spring and a monsoon season sometime between July and September, then this book is suited to that area. I also feel that this book is relevant for areas of the high desert that receive higher amounts of precipitation, such as the Flagstaff, Arizona area and the high mountain valleys. And for those hardy souls living in the highest elevations of the Sonoran Desert in southern Arizona, the techniques presented on the following pages will also work in your area, taking into account the slightly different climate and growing season. Even the Central Rio Grande Valley gardener who has the benefits of more moderate winter temperatures and warm summer nights can take advantage of many of the ideas and techniques presented in this book.
This book is not meant to be an exhaustive text about gardening. There are a number of excellent gardening books that provide lots of general information that all gardeners need to know. Unfortunately, the big volumes rarely include a section about gardening in the desert, let alone the high desert. Beginning high desert gardeners often run into problems trying to follow the advice of most general gardening books. So this book is designed to supplement and complement the general gardening volumes, providing information and ideas that will make high desert gardening a successful endeavor for everyone.
I have chosen to concentrate on food gardening for two basic reasons. The first is that vegetable gardening and orcharding are pleasant pastimes and extremely useful. While flower gardens and ornamental trees beautify our homes, which is very important, vegetable gardens and fruit trees fill our freezers and pantries. With high prices and low quality at the produce counter, not to mention the lack of variety, a vegetable garden and/or an orchard is a sane way to provide our families with good and varied food at economy prices.
The harvest provides a bonus above and beyond filling our stomachs: a feeling of satisfaction and freedom. That green patch in the yard or in the community garden will come to represent liberation from the pesticide-laden valleys of California, from the wage demands of truck drivers, and the vagaries of the marketplace.
While I focus on food gardening, those readers who also want to grow flowers and ornamental trees and shrubs (and I encourage everyone to do so) can find the basic information provided in this book useful. Simply learn what each plant demands in the way of nutrients, environment and care, and then apply the principles spelled out in the following chapters. Listings of drought-tolerant ornamental perennials, shrubs, and trees are provided at the end of the book.
The second reason I wrote this book was to encourage people to garden and thus get to know and respect the high desert more intimately. Here in the high desert, a person is confronted by its stark beauty every time he or she steps outside, yet so few of us are really in tune with this beauty. What better way to learn about the rhythms of the high desert and this planet than to put your hands in its soil and your face in its sun?
Stand in the first summer rain. Fill your lungs with the ozone-flavored air that follows a thunderstorm. Get to know the four basic elements — soil, sun, water and air — that nourish all livings things on Earth. From this intimate knowledge comes a respect and concern for the quality of the environmnent and the quality of life, today and in the future.
A garden always improves the quality of life, and gardening with respect for the fragile high desert ecosystem helps to preserve the good quality of life that is found here. In this day and age, when the hustle and bustle of modern life seems to be invading the traditionally slower-paced towns of the high desert, the human spirit needs a place to go and a job to do that is at once relaxing and creative. A vegetable garden, no matter what size it is, is that place and that job. It will reward you every season of the year.
I
THE HIGH DESERT’S TROUBLESOME TRIO: CLIMATE, WATER SUPPLY AND SOIL
Many of the world’s earliest civilizations developed in the fertile river valleys of arid lands. It is widely thought that agriculture, the base upon which civilization grew, was first practiced in the valleys of the Tigris and the Euphrates rivers. These rivers flow through a very arid land: present-day Iraq.
The Anasazi Indians of the high desert developed their civilizations in the river valleys of what is today called northern New Mexico, northern Arizona, southern Colorado and southern Utah. Given the choice, they could hardly have selected a more difficult climate to farm in all of the temperate world. But the choice was not theirs to make, and they struggled to feed themselves in a land of perpetual drought, undependable ground water supplies and poor soil. Today, many of the Anasazi’s descendants still farm the high desert, battling the ancient foes with modern tools.
It is certain that any gardener, anywhere in the United States, will tell you that he’s got adverse soil and weather conditions, too. But few places can compare to the odds that the high desert gardener has to overcome. The climate, the water supply and the soil all determine, to a great extent, the activities of the high desert gardener.
The most obvious problem in the high desert is the climate. It is dry, of course. Santa Fe, New Mexico, averages only 13.8 inches of rainfall annually. Flagstaff, Arizona, receives an average of 19.3 inches of rainfall per year.
June, when young seedlings need moist and mild weather, is usually the hottest and driest month of the year. The relative humidity often drops below 10 percent during much of June, straining vegetable crops.
Rain during the growing season usually comes in the monsoon season which, in a good year, starts in early July and ends in early September. Some years the monsoons don’t start until August and last only for a few weeks.
Lack of rain is the most obvious climatic problem in the high desert, but it isn’t the only one. Though average high temperatures in the summer range from the high 70s to mid-80s, the average nighttime temperatures dip into the mid to upper-50s. The cool nights are great for sleeping, but they delay the ripening of many heat-loving crops. For instance, the big, sweet and juicy tomato that is harvested in back yards thoughout America is nearly impossible to grow in the high desert — the nights are too cool.
Then there are the winds. During the spring, due to the jetstream and the wide difference between daytime and nighttime temperatures, the winds blow incessantly. They quickly rob the soil of any moisture it might have accumulated from the winter snows, and they suck the moisture out of tender seedlings. In some cases the winds are so strong they snap young seedlings in half. In most parts of the high desert, the winds subside in June and only kick up around monsoon thunderstorms.
Thunderstorms are the high desert’s main source of moisture during the summer. Yet these storms can be severe and instead of dropping rain they drop hail. A hailstorm in the high desert can transform