vegetable love

July 20, 2008

Garden update -July

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Haven't been able to spend as much time as I'd hoped in the garden this summer, so the jungle just keeps growing.   Guess it's been a saving grace that's it's been cooler than normal.  Today was the first heavy watering for the year. I'd say that's about a month behind normal. 

Here's a summary:   

Raspberries: 34 cups and counting. I'm freezing, canning, and munching away.

Snap peas:  4 1/2 pounds plus what's still on the vine.  I'm trying to dry some of the pods for my own seed or to try as a dried pea. 

Blueberries:  Just started picking.  Probably won't measure 'cause they keep getting eaten before they make it to the kitchen!  I do have the best crop I've ever had.

Lettuce:  I'm getting closer to growing just the amount that I can eat, but still not quite there yet.



Potatoes:  Trying very hard to leave them alone so that they will store better.  What's been harvested was very good. 

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Strawberries:  Just a few handfuls from the strawberry pot.  I splurged and bought a flat to make jam.  Replanting a strawberry bed next year is definitely on the "to-do" list.

Fennel:  Wish I liked eating it better.

Beans:  Found the first three  2 1/2 inch  beans.  It's a shelling variety, so not ready to eat.

Tomatoes:  Finally setting fruit!  Just teeny-tiny still.

Yellow Transparent Apples:  Not ready to harvest yet.  Usually they are ready around July 4th for an apple pie.  Maybe by August?

Quince:  The second season in the garden, the first fruit.  Just one. 

Squash:  Buds starting to form.  Maybe they will bloom this week?

Cukes:  Looking good, no blossoms yet.

Sweet Potatoes:  Well, they finally looking healthy.  Not counting on having anything though.

Cabbage:  2 plants are starting to form heads.  More starts to go in the ground for a fall/winter crop.  Also swiss chard, kale, and cauliflower.  Slugs/snails have done a lot of damage in this part of the garden.

Grapes:  Growing like mad.  Keeping fingers crossed. 

I know there's more growing out there, but that's it for now!

June 29, 2008

Watering the garden, one can at a time

Page_1 My corner of the world is approaching our drought season.  About two to three months of little rain fall.  Over the last couple years I’ve been experimenting with how much water the garden really needs.  I try to reserve water for new shrubs and perennials that have been planted the current year, plants in containers, and vegetables/fruits that need water to grow. 

One thing I’ve realized is that some vegetables need a lot less water than thought.  Last year the peas produced a reasonable crop without putting water on them once (other than rain).  The year before I grew a patch of cherry tomatoes that weren’t watered after July.    Those plants produced just about as well as the ones that were watered. 

This year’s experiment is shell beans (“Dragon tongue).  They will be watered by hand and I am measuring how much water I use.  I want to see how much rainwater would have to be stored to have a crop.  I watered them for the first time yesterday-1 gallon. 

June 27, 2008

Garden update for the end of June

Page_1_2It's been one of the coldest springs on record this year and the garden is showing it. 

Picked my first couple of strawberries this week.

Starting to have tomatoes bloom, nothing is setting fruit. 

Lettuce, kale and peas are doing great.

Cucumbers, squash and beans are just getting started. 

Sweet potatoes are looking rather pathetic. 

Rugosa and old fashioned roses look great. 

Slugs are having a feast....  Especially with the winter squash and the cabbage starts. 

Potatoes are doing very well, especially the ones in the trash can.  Might go looking for some "baby"  potatoes next weekend.

And, of course, the weeds are taking over. 

June 02, 2008

How many food crops can you find?

Page_1_2 It's a jungle out there!  In about  a week the bronze fennel will be towering over everything else and all the sage will be in full bloom.  The roses (mostly rugosas and heirloom varieties) are just starting to blossom.  The peas are blooming.  Might have some to eat in a couple weeks.  Not much growth on the tomatoes, but they look good.  A few cabbages have been chewed on by the slugs, but mostly they are surviving.  I'm guessing in about a month I'll have enough raspberries to eat all I want, preserve all I want and still share.  Raspberries have pretty much entered weed status in the garden.  It's, well, a jungle. 

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And then there is the container collection.  The potatoes in the garbage can got ahead of me.  The can is about 3/4 full of compost.  These are by far my healthiest looking potatoes.  It will be very interesting to see how many potatoes it produces. 

My cut-and-come-again lettuce is ready to cut in two places.  Salads will be featured prominently on the menu this week.  The wash tub also has some carrots and strawberries.  After the lettuce is cut a second time,  something different will be planted in this space that will give the carrots room to mature. 

The other hanging basket has cucumbers in it (these are organic starts that I bought).  My goal here is to remember to water them frequently and to keep pests out of the cucumbers.  Last year something (a mouse?) hollowed out a couple of the cucumbers completely.  The cucumbers will get plenty of sun this way too. 

One thing I want to keep track of with the cucumbers is cost effectiveness.  I'm figuring $3.50 for the start of this project (1.50 for the starts and 2.00 for the organic potting soil).  The basket is being reused from last year so I'm not going to figure that in.  I'm going to water the cucumber with water saved from waiting for the water to heat up for dishes or collected rain water, so water won't be included in expenses either.  What I want to do is compare how much my basket produces against how much it would cost to buy the equivalent amount from the farmer's market or the grocery store. 

As for the jungle, there are six crops that are visible (apples, rhubarb, potatoes, fennel, garlic, plums) plus 6 more that aren't (strawberries, beans, tomatoes, a tomatillio, raspberries and roses), and two spaces cleared in the back for where a patch of corn and a couple sunflowers are going to go and a space for the hull-less pumpkins.   

May 25, 2008

Sweet Potatoes in the garden

Img_7925Sweet potatoes were my plant of choice for The Growing Challenge hosted by Elements in Time.   And here they are!

I'm growing Georgia Jets that were ordered from Irish Eyes.  Not my first choice, but what was available.  Probably for the best as they are the variety with the shortest days to maturity.  They arrived as a bundle of slips and with a sheet of instructions.  The weather was still really cold at night when they came, so I decided  to soak them in a little water overnight and then planted them in 4 inch containers so that they could be easily brought in and out (like the tomatoes).    When the night time temperatures started hitting a low of at least 50 degrees Fahrenheit ( please let it stay there, please), they were planted up to 5 gallon black plastic containers.  They are going to live on the back porch- the hottest, sunniest spot in the garden.  Now I have to hope for about 90 days of warm weather.


May 23, 2008

A few pictures of the vegetable garden

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Cut-and-come again lettuce in a hanging basket.

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Teeny-tiny asparagus.

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Potatoes in a trash can.


May 18, 2008

All victory gardens should include flowers!

Img_7777I think this captures the weekend the best...glorious yellow sunshine, well, a "Lady Banks" rose. 

So much happening in the garden:

*Planted out most of the tomatoes.
*Planted my sweet potatoes in containers.  They look rather sad.
*Still hilling up the potatoes.
* Assembled one huggelkultur.  Tomorrow I'll plant the winter squash I've started indoors. 
*Weeded my asparagus bed.  I found one teeny-tiny stalk coming up.  It's the first year for this bed so it won't be harvested. 
*Figured out where  to put the lavender and two rosemary plants that need a home.
*Observed a lot of bees working in the garden.   Hoping that there are enough flowers blooming to keep them happy! 

The to-do list is even longer unfortunately.   More weeds to pull, more seeds to plant (cucumbers, beans, and summer squash), and some mulching to do.  I have a stash of cardboard I'm going to put around the blueberries. 

Something else that is making me very happy in the garden:

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I've waited four years for my tree peony to bloom.  Here's the first blossom.

May 14, 2008

Rhubarb bread and other garden news

Img_7558Yummy stuff!  Starting to have a really good crop of rhubarb.  Last weekend I made rhubarb-walnut bread.  Local ingredients:  milk, eggs (mom and dad's chickens), flour, walnuts and my rhubarb.  I've been eating it for breakfast this week. 

Other garden news:   

The sweet potatoes arrived.  I've planted them in 4 inch containers for now.  It's still pretty cold at night so they are being moved in and out with the tomatoes. 

The potatoes are growing like mad.  I've had to hill them several times now.  The ones in the garbage can are looking great.

The lettuce and spinach seedlings have their first true leaves.   Probably will start harvesting in a week or so.  A few will be transplanted from the cut-and-come again beds so that they can grow to full size.  There are two small heads of lettuce that could be picked (bought as starts).  Should plant more lettuce seed tomorrow.    

Beans (shell varieties-decided to plant those first as they need a longer season) will probably pop tomorrow if the forecast for heat is right.  They've pushed themselves up to the surface.  This weekend the rest of the beans need to be planted. 

A few volunteer  squash of some sort are coming up outside.  It's always a tough decision as to whether to leave them and see what comes, or to pull them out.  The winter squash that were started inside are starting to germinate. 

The tomatillios I planted aren't doing anything.  Mom has beautiful starts, so I think I'll have to snag some of hers. 

Now I just need to do something about the slugs and snails....

May 07, 2008

Tonight's garden tour...

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Spent about an hour outside tonight.  Planted carrots, beets, shelling beans, Swiss chard and another batch of radishes.  Noticed that some of the cut-and-come again lettuce have sprouted.   Started hilling up the potatoes.  The potatoes will probably have to be checked every day now. The potatoes in the trash can seem to be a little slower, but they are coming along too. 

Also thinned the radishes that are growing in a washtub.  I'll be planting about 6 washtubs and two whiskey barrels with various vegetables.  Crops such as carrots and beets do better for me in containers. 

Vegetables are taking over the front garden too.  The cabbages are settling in quite nicely in the former primrose patch.  I also dug out a corner for winter squash.  Tomorrow I'm starting some scarlet runner beans for the front arbor.

It feels good to have so much happening in the garden.


April 28, 2008

Vegetable love - an update

Img_7201"My vegetable love should grow vaster than empires, and more slow."   Andrew Marvell

The idea of "vegetable love" has always made me smile. 

Hoping that we had the last heavy frost of the year on Saturday.  It was an incredibly beautiful day and a fair amount got done in the garden.

One project was moving primroses.  The primrose bed was in the shade during the afternoon.  Not any more!

What replaced the primroses?  Cabbages!  Also planted a little bit of lettuce.  Might stick a few radishes in too.  This is in the front garden too!  In general, the vegetables are really getting mixed up with the perennials, herbs and shrubs.    

I also weeded the area where the squash are going, planted a small asparagus bed, put the onion sets out, and planted a few shrubs that I was given. Felt like a very productive four hours!

Today  a bit more lettuce and some sweet peas were planted.  And I reorganized my vegetable seed/plant info.  I wanted to put my seed/plant list in one spot where it would be easy to update.  Taking photos of everything to help me keep track was getting a bit hard to manage.   The goal this year is to keep track of what is planted, when it was planted, when it gets harvested, and how much was harvested.   This is my solution:  The Victory Garden Plant/Seed list.  Just looking at my archives for "Vegetable Love" made me realize how much more complete my garden notes are this year. 

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Odds and Ends about this Blog

  • My goal for responses to creative prompts: As part of my attempts to live more lightly in this world, my goal is to include recycled or reclaimed items in every project that I make.
  • Grown in the Pacific Northwest
  • Copyright 2007, 2008 Deborah Gorr (unless otherwise noted)

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Ten ways to bee creative everyday

  • 1. Read something that is good for my heart and soul. 2. Write something or create something in response to what I've read. 3. Eat good food. 4. Find something beautiful in the day. 5. Give something (including time) away. 6. Alter my journal in some way. 7. Connect with someone. 8. Take a picture. 9. Live lightly on the earth. 10. Find a quiet space.