Pigeons are destroying the plants in one of my planter tables

An easy solution for a pigeon problem and growing lettuce

This spring I had sown a few things in my planter table, but nothing really came. What was appearing where dents in the soil and a dill plant that got picked of.

An eaten off dill plant in a wooden planter

One day my husband saw pigeons feasting in the planter table. For that we have an easy solution. We tied a rope criss-cross over the plant space and pigeons can not land here anymore.

Now the dill can grow and I planted lettuce seedlings which grew well and we are eating off already.

Planter table with a rope criss-cross and lettuce

The second planter table, strangely enough, did not get touched by the pigeons. The herbs I planted this spring and a second batch of lettuce I planted only recently as a succession planting.

Wooden planter table with herbs

Findings to the first growing season of our planter tables

How did the planter tables produce for us? Did they hold water?

I have been a bit disappointed with the results. The soil was not holding water very well, despite the fact that I hat put in so much sheep wool and woodchips. When I watered the planter tables most of the water would drip out of the bottom, so that did not bring much.

The plants in the planter table did not grow very good. It looked nice and green, but there was not really much to harvest.

A planter table filled with plants, looking nice and green

We had a very tiny Hokkaido pumpkin and a lot of tiny red beets. For a direct comparison I had planted some parsley seedlings in the planter table and in the garden at the same time. I forgot to take a picture of the parsley in the garden, but I actually harvested of those twice as to harvesting nothing from the parsley in the planter table, since these hardly grew.

Very small parsley

The only thing that kept doing well, even in summer with little water and a lot of heat, was chard.

Obviously we only made the planter tables last spring and the soil has to set and develop first, so we are not going to jump to conclusions. In the spring we will ad some compost and mulch in form of woodchips to the planter tables and we have to think about what we are going to plant in there. I think plants that need a lot of nutrients and/ or water are not a good choice. We are probably going to plant some flowers, herbs and some lettuce, but who knows what I will think of until spring comes.

Is a planter table the solution against the couch grass?

Couch grass everywhere, so we experiment with growing vegetables out of reach of the couch grass.

Well, if the ground is full of couch grass, what better solution is there to avoid it, than raising the “garden”. Our solution looks like this.

A wooden planter table with a sturdy trellis with a lot of plants growing in it, in front of a beautiful garden

My husband and son build me 2 of these planter tables to try them out this growing season.

We filled them by starting with a good layer of sheep wool to store moisture and prevent soil from falling out trough slits between the boards. Next came a good layer of woodchips followed by a good layer of composted cow manure. After sowing we finished the bed of with a layer of woodchips that came out of the chicken coop. These woodchips are already partially breaking down and bring there own nitrogen (in form of chicken poop) they need for the ongoing decomposing process.

The compost we used was very dry, which I do not mind while sowing, but after sowing a good watering was need and after covering the compost with the woodchips the water had the change to really soak into the compost. Since this growing season is a ratter rainy one I did not have to tent much to the planter tables.

Since I have 2 planter tables I wanted to do a little experiment. I had seen someone use a tarp with the black side up to trap moisture and warmth underneath to help carrots germinate. So I covered one of the planter tables with a thick black foil for a few days. After 3 days I took of the foil because a few sprouts where visible.

A little sprout peaking up from underneath woodchips

Shortly after taking of the foil the sprouts where gone though, but it did not take long for other things to sprout. After a few weeks some things I had sown where slightly earlier in the planter table that had the foil as in the planter table that did not had the foil. A remarkable difference was with the pumpkin, of which I had put one seed in each planter table. Both actually sprouted, but the one in the planter table with the foil was weeks earlier than the one without the foil.

Young pumpkin plant in a planter table
Pumpkin sprout with woodchips at its feet

Since the spring was so cold it took a while before things started to grow, but it looked promising by the time summer came.

Healthy looking lettuces and herbs

After that some things started to turn. Every variety that belongs to the Brassicaceae started to get damages on there leafs. It is from some kind of very small bugs that also go on the cabbages and the mustard every year. The white radishes also started to look wilted, so I harvested these. Some white radishes where just big enough to prepare to eat, but others where still so small that we fed them to our hair. I found very tiny white caterpillars with a black head in the root of the white radishes. The reason they where wilted.

After cleaning out the planter tables of everything that did not look good, a lot of room came free. I’m thinking of sowing some more lettuces there, since these seem to do well in the planter table. Beside the lettuces, the runner beans are doing well also.

A runner bean with beautiful red flowers climbing towards the trellis

Some herbs and flowers came up as well. The red beets looked promising, but are not building any bulbs, but that must be the wetter, since they are not building bulbs in other parts of the garden as well (or maybe I am too inpatient). The peas looked promising, but before it was time to harvest they started to wilt and die. Maybe that was from the sudden heat, as I have heard they do not like heat. The carrots sprouted, but do not really seem to grow much yet.

Surprisingly a volunteer tomato emerged between other plants. I have no idea how that seed ended up there.

A volunteer tomato emerging from between other plants

Well, I do not want to go on about the different plants and I do not want to jump into any conclusions. I am just going to try and fill in the empty spots with things that do grow in the planter tables this growing season and try all the different things again next year.

Some pictures from middle of June

A small runner bean in the corner of a planter table
Blooming healthy looking pea plants
A white radish in the corner of a planter table

Ending this post with a few pictures from middle of July

A pink Zinnia among chard, morning glory, lettuce, carrots and some herbs
A small fennel growing in a planter table
A healthy looking pumpkin in a raised planter table surrounded by other plants