Moving and Getting to Know a New Garden in Zone 10

Last year, we moved. It was hard. Hard doesn’t begin to explain it – we got married, had a baby and bought a house. And although it seems like the trifecta of happiness, it can be so hard to leave behind an old house with so many memories and accept change.

My previous garden was limited to raised beds on top of concrete, but there was a lot of learning happening in those raised beds. I mainly overwatered and didn’t really research too much about my zone or the history of my neighborhood. I lived in Elysian Valley, now referred to as Frog Town. It’s on the edge of the Los Angeles river and it’s a hotbed of controversy – which I’ll post about at a later date. The river delivered a lot of sediment and really nurtured the land previously – to the point that there are some magnificent trees with an abundance of citrus. Just about everyone gardened there and walked everywhere. It was a place to learn for sure. We moved to Burbank which is a suburb of Los Angeles and although the zone is the similar if not the same, the soil quality was significantly different – ground versus raised bed. The temperature tends to be hotter in the summer, and much cooler in the winter.

Since this is our first home and we’re no longer renting, I wanted to spend time falling in love with the trees and getting to know the soil. There was a lot already planted – but the cacti were rooting from the inside out and although we had a lot of beautiful trees, it seemed like they were neglected. I didn’t see any guavas the entire first year, and the mandarins produced maybe a dozen or so fruit.

One thing I really dove into was understanding my zone for Burbank, I used USDA hardiness zone: https://planthardiness.ars.usda.gov/PHZMWeb/. My zone is 10a according to this, and other lists give me 10b. I think Burbank straddles both and I see similarities so I just go with it. The second thing we did was get a bunch of mulch delivered and we killed the front yard grass. Part of me was just trying to make a statement about not needing grass in Los Angeles, but part of me knew this would heal the soil – but mainly the first part.

Chip Drop delivery to our front yard

I’ll keep posting about my adventures as I get to know my garden, it’s a whole new beast but I will say, we did benefit from beautiful trees that were already established and I can’t wait to plant more.

Learning to Garden & Post

4x4 raised beds

I’m excited to crank out my first post, as a welcome to you and also as invite to this new adventure.

The goal with this gardening blog is to encourage others, specially those with limited spaces and limited gardening experience to learn more about gardening. When I first started gardening, I had 2 roommates and no working soil so I started planting in pots. It was frustrating to want big tomatoes when I didn’t know how to grow them, and it was infuriating when my vision and my harvest were worlds apart.

Gardening is easy, and it’s accessible. Just like quality food should be.