Wednesday, February 8, 2017

A small vegetable patch!


This entry written by Logan Sander on January 26, 2017

            We’ve made several significant improvements to the field station’s land since our last update. Key among them – we’ve begun planting out specimens from our nursery!

            Faced with burgeoning stocks of plants that were rapidly outgrowing their polybags (mostly ornamental flowers and edible bean crops we grew from seeds), we decided that we needed to find a space to grow them to maturity. We still haven’t completed our designs for the overall homegarden, but these are mostly fast-growing plants that can grow near the house (on land already cleared) and can potentially offer yields before we leave our posts here. 

            The soils immediately surrounding the field station are infertile, droughty sands and “rotten” bedrock that was exposed during the initial construction. Before the field station was built, these soils would have been several meters below grade – in the humid tropics, this usually means they are extremely low in nutrients. Still, several opportunities presented themselves – the site was flat, easy to access (literally, right out the door), and relatively rich topsoil can be found in abundance 20 meters away in the fallowed fernland. We marked off an area and got to work making a “raised bed."

Laura laid out the plants that would go in the bed and started planting

Our “ vegetable garden” is about 4 x 6m in extent, up against the escarpment that was excavated around the field station. We built a perimeter wall by staking in kitul palm boards and filled the area 6” deep with topsoil (kalu pas, or “black soil”). Against the escarpment, we built wooden trellises of a tree species that may root and continue to grow, creating a living structure on which to grow climbing beans. We needed to protect this area from wild boars, as much of what we hope to plant is the boar’s favored food including kiri alla or taro and manyoka or yucca (as we’ve already learned in the nursery…).  On one side of the field station this was already taken care of: the escarpments leading to the field station are likely too steep for boar to descend (we hope…). On the other sides we simply extended the walls of the field station with 1m-high fences, creating a narrow protected zone around the field station.

The south side fence with the vegetable bed  and trellis behind it. On the right, you see a removable entry gate.
The new fence on the northside of the field station. Eventually, there will be lots of plants over here too!

Into our over-sized garden bed we planted an assortment of plants gathered from Pitikele’s homegardens – mostly early-successional food plants with relatively short-life cycles. Interestingly, many of these plants are “annuals” in temperate areas, while in the tropics they can live several years as perennials. In addition to the following species, we intend to plant manioc, a few bananas, and other food plants that require defending from the wild boars.

Homegarden plants of the “patio’s” initial planting (Sinhala name; English name; scientific name):


kiri alla (taro, Colocasia esculenta)
demas alla (coco yam, Xanthosoma sagittifolium)
Singhamoku Ornamental Flower
makeral (climbing bean)
cowpi (black-eyed pea)
bonchi (climbing bean)
dambala (winged bean, Psophocarpus tetragonolous)
das mal (marigold, Tagetes erecta)
gas lunu (ornamental bulb flower)
battala (sweet potato, Ipomoea batatas)
begonia (Begonia spp.)
gota kola (Centella asiatica)
gam miris (black pepper, Piper nigrum)
goda manil (ornamental bulb flower)
Japan rose (ornamental flower)
kudelo mal (Impatiens spp.)
akapana (Kalanchoe pinnata)
miris (chili pepper, Capsicum spp.)
takkali (tomato, Lycopersicon esculentum)
tibbatu (Solanum violaceum)
parabombatu (eggplant, Solanum spp.)
singhamoku (ornamental flower)

This is a little map Laura created of where she planted each plant and which ones are where.

The garden bed with mulch added. This bed gets a lot of sunlight, especially in the front.
This protected gardening area provides several opportunities for us to improve our homegarden project. As already mentioned, we can create long-term planting sites for those plants that require protecting. Also, this gardening site’s proximity to the field station makes it valuable for higher maintenance plants. This includes those in need of frequent watering (believe it or not, we just had over three-weeks with no appreciable rainfall) or harvest. Additionally, and perhaps most importantly, growing plants right outside our door gives us the opportunity to observe and learn from them before we greatly expand the project. 

In fact, just one day after we planted this garden bed, I observed that a kudelo mal (Impatiens spp.) plant had several leaves curled up or chewed apart. This morning, I noticed that all the leaves on the plant were either consumed or curled up. Fine silky webs sprinkled with copious amounts insect larvae frass (aka poop) encircled the few remaining leaves. As I inspected the plant, Tillekaratne walked up and explained that the problems were a result of “worms.” He pulled apart one of the leaves and out popped a wriggling green caterpillar. As we’ve been told many times before, we needed to apply ash to these plants to prevent worms. Lesson learned!

The green caterpillar culprit
This is one of the more satisfying developments in our project to date. Our frequent admiration and inspection of the garden ensures that it will be watered, every inch of ground will remain mulched and any destructive factors will be promptly mitigated. This garden bed benefits both from its proximity to our dwelling (and the aforementioned benefits this entails) and its novelty as our first significant planting effort. Soon we will greatly expand our plantings and our responsibilities will multiply. Until then, these few lucky plants are the show’s main attraction.      

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