Hey y'all nice to see ya!
I was just talking to my dh last night telling him I want to do a small garden in the ground this year in addition to the kiddie pools. I am not sure if we will get a new raised bed built before time to plant. But I sure hope so. We have a spot out behind the chicken coop that we have been dumping the bedding from the coop and brooder clean outs and I am hoping to get it mixed into the ground for spring planting. The trick is going to be getting our tiller back to use for a few days. We will have to put a new floor on our small trailer to go get it. hahhaa
We are going to grow okra, squash, cuc's, cantalouple and a few other things in the ground. And I will keep my tomatoes, eggplant in the kiddie pools.
I think you'll be pleased with your crops in the ground. Less maintenance and watering involved. As I stated to microchick, if your coop bedding still has a lot of visible shavings in it, don't till it in. Raw wood tends to just sit in the soil and rob nitrogen. It takes forever for it to break down when mixed in. Does better if used as a top dressing mulch. See below post. Lasagna gardening may be just what you need. Can you continue collecting compostable materials throughout the winter??? I'm going to sheet compost an area (about 25' x 30') next spring. Have collected 130 bags of leaves, and will be adding grass clippings, and goodies collected from the town compost area to build up the sheet compost (basically a large lasagna garden bed.)
I went small this year simply because I was having a lot of back problems. I'm still having the problems but have a plan for next year. 1) bigger garden 2) plant sugar pumpkins for our use and the chickens, and 3) ignore the back pain as much as possible and when not possible use my prescription medication, go out and dig in the dirt, which I LOVE to do.
I had a lot of trouble with what garden I did plant. Beans didn't do well, carrots didn't do well, radishes were very hot. I think it was the weather in all honesty. We had a very wet spring and early summer. My apple trees got hit with fire blight, the peaches got hit by first the late frost and then what survived the frost got hit by the deer. The only thing I seemed to have an abundance of was blackberries and I think we picked over 50 pounds of them. I've made lots of jelly and jam and we even tried to make some wine which I have to admit came out pretty darned good.
I've got to figure out what caused my beans and root crops to fail. I'm thinking that on top of the wet weather soil quality has something to do with it. DH will be tilling compose from the coop into the soil for me. Hopefully that will help things along.
Low of 11 here tonight. I'm ready for spring already.
Sorry you are having back problems. I'm gonna suggest that you consider hay or straw bale gardening IF you can do so with ample water supply, having hose access to your garden. You could also use soaker hose. Gardening in the ground is easier in a lot of ways b/c it is easier to keep things watered. But, for the gardener with back problems, hay bale gardening is wonderful, b/c it gets the crops up off the ground, so you don't do as much bending. Also, growing many of your veggies on trellises will help your back immensely. Also, consider gardening under a deep mulch. You can use hay, straw, leaves, grass clippings, what ever you can get your hands on. This will hold the moisture, and keep weeds at bay.
You might consider having a soil test done before you get started this spring. That could make all the difference between a successful garden and a poor yield.
If your coop compost has a lot of shavings in it, you might not want to till it into the ground. Those shavings tend to just sit, and tie up nitrogen if they are tilled in. Not as problematic if they are applied to the TOP of the garden. Check out Back to Eden garden. Paul has an awesome video that just might be what you are looking for. This man has some very obvious disability, yet is able to grow an ample garden every year, and has it open to the public to come and sample and tour throughout the growing season.
I'm also ready for spring.