Planting a Three Sisters Garden
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Mantis eggs which might be sold on line are for the very invasive, aggresive Chinese mantis. The native Carolina mantis has almost been wiped out and the Chinese mantis attacks and EATS migrating Ruby Throat humming birds in the fall!
I'm wondering about the sunflowers. Sunflowers typically kill most things planted around them due to some weed suppressing chemicals used by sunflowers to drown out the competition. I guess you could plant them several feet away and they would be ok.
Well, I see that although this article is dated May 2020, the comment thread goes all the way back to 2013. Questions about the type of corn appear to be addressed in the (presumed) update to the article last year. Questions about the mound, however, received only vague comments about drainage, and to Iroquois mythology.
I first heard about three sisters in the Southwest, far from Iroquois territory, and use of a mound appears to be hit or miss; even the included video might be slightly mounded but it sure isn't a foot high. And I don't understand the description of where to put the optional sunflowers (I'm trying mine in the center of the corn circle). On your next update it would be helpful to clarify these ambiguities.
The how-to video included in this post literally gives no information on how to plant these three things together...you just reiterate the same information you gave in the text. Pretty please add an actual demonstration of building the mound and planting the seeds. In the meantime I guess I am just winging it. Thanks!
1. What is the purpose of the mound? Why build it up at all? Couldn't you just plant the same layout at existing ground level?
2. Your math doesn't add up. Step 2 says to make the flat top of the mound "about 10 inches across." Step 4, however, says to plant the corn kernels on the flat top "in a circle about 2 feet in diameter." Step 4's dimensions make more sense - assuming there's a reason for the mound at all - but which is it?
I grow this every year and it works... The purpose for the mound is 1. you actually bury your fertilizer under the mound. Native Americans used fish parts but you can use whatever.. I use rabbit manure as it's plentiful here. 2. it elevates the corn and beans above the squash so you can get to the beans for picking later. Once you plant this garden harvesting is difficult but as the article states a great producer on small land. You train the squash vines (the best you can) to stay around the mounds...You should give it a try...
Good luck
The plan for this garden is to produce food to DRY at the END of the season. You will be making dry corn to grind into meal or store whole to rehydrate in a stew, dried beans to rehydrate in stew and winter squash to keep for the winter. You will not be growing fresh sweet corn, fresh grean beans or summer .squash. The people had no way to preserve fresh vegetables and three sisters was a source of WINTER food. Do not try to harvest during the growing season because you will damage the other plants in the group.
Although Native Americans used this method to grow field corn, dry beans, and winter squash for the winter, I have successfully used it to grow sweet/green corn, green beans, and summer squash. A few suggestions: 1) Using a bush variety of summer squash, like pattypan, will allow you to get to the corn and beans more easily for harvest; 2) Many sweet corn varieties have short stalks that won't support tall bean varieties, so be sure to pick appropriate varieties; and 3) Your beans will probably produce for a while after the corn has been harvested, so don't remove the corn stalks when harvesting the corn.
My corn was planted about a month ago and beans were planted when the corn was a foot tall and the squash was planted about a week ago.
When should I fertilize, and what kind?
I’m in region 8
I'm wanting to try planting a very small version of the 3 sisters garden. Wondering if I could plant snow peas instead of the bean varieties metioned, as these also grow on 'vines'.
Also, would there be a good substitute for the squash - I don't really like it, and have no one to give it to. I don't want to grow something that will only be wasted.
Thanks
Kate