Well, we had a rather cool and overcast weekend last week which made for perfect weather for planting the broccoli starts. I've put 18 plants of Atlantic Broccoli in this year. I've got 6 Golden Acre, 6 Red cabbage plants and some Cauliflower starts to go in later, around the 1st of August. I've also started my pumpkin seeds. Last year I planted my pumpkin seeds around April 15th (with everything else) and the Pumpkins ripened way to quick and were rotten well before even September arrived. So this year I've held off so that they ripen just before Halloween (with any luck). We'll see what happens.
This is one of the things I love about gardening, trying new things. I like trying to grow different plants, and different varieties and even trying different methods and timing now and again. It is one of the better things about annuals, in that you can try something out, and see the results within that one season of growth. You don't have to wait years to see if that daylilly cross you attempted this year a) sets seed b) if the seed is viable c) if the plant blooms within 3 years d) if the flower is pretty e) if the plant is hardy. If you try a tomato variety this year and you don't like it for whatever reason, you are not chained to caring for it for several years to see if that is indeed the case.
We lost another hen this past week as well. If has been awful hot and poor Roxie passed away. I believe it was heat exhaustion or dehydration. Roxie got her name from the boxer Rocky. Roxie was born with her bottom beak pointing to the left and her top beak pointing to the right. So eating and drinking were more difficult for her than for the average chicken. I think this caused her passing as she just couldn't keep hydrated enough in our hot summer. So we are down to one hen now. Just the big fat red I've taken to calling Cartman (from the South Park show). Cartman seems happy enough by herself, I may try to add more pullets next spring or I may not, I haven't quite made up my mind on that.
I'll be sowing some carrot seed this weekend. I'll take some burlap I got from the local Starbucks store and wet it down to lay over the seed bed to keep the soil from crusting over. I also plant them about twice as deep in summer to get them down to where the soil stays a little moister. They should germinate in about 2-3 weeks at which time I'll take the burlap off.
Wednesday, July 20, 2011
Wednesday, July 6, 2011
What to do with your tomato harvest!
It is prime tomato season around here. Just about every type I have is turning ripe. From Box Car Willie, Mortgage Lifter, Stupice, Juan Flamee, and Celebrity. The only one that hasn't produced a ripe mater for me is Kellogg's Breakfast. It's a really sweet, yellow, large heirloom variety that does not produce an abundant crop for me, but what it produces is terrific. So sweet it could be called a dessert tomato!
On the 4th I picked a bucket of tomatoes and some green peppers and made up 16 1/2 pints of salsa. That will just about get me through football season this winter. Most of my recipes for canning come from 'The Ball Complete Book of Home Preserving', or the instruction manual that came with my canner. One has to use caution when canning stuff. The method and recipe must be just so, to prevent spoilage and ruining your product and endangering your health.
Tonight I am making 4 quarts of spaghetti sauce. It is quite time consuming, but the end result of having a nice dinner made with things you grew in your own garden is worth it. The taste of homemade spaghetti sauce, made from garden fresh ingredients is something everyone should experience.
We are starting to get fresh corn from the garden. I grew an heirloom variety named Stowell's evergreen this year. The yield on this variety is not what you will get from hybrids, but the corn is quite tasty, with fair sized ears. We have had more than our share of thunderstorms this summer and they have done a number on the corn. I would guess that 25% of the stalks in my garden are lying on the ground. And I am starting to have regular visits from the deer. They got to my soy bean, green beans and corn. And today I found what appeared to be a tomato that a deer had taken a bite from. I am considering asking Santa for an electric fence set up for Xmas this year. I went to the trouble of planting some green beans outside the fenced area of the garden this year, just as a way to satisfy the deer so they wouldn't bother the garden. No such luck!
On the 4th I picked a bucket of tomatoes and some green peppers and made up 16 1/2 pints of salsa. That will just about get me through football season this winter. Most of my recipes for canning come from 'The Ball Complete Book of Home Preserving', or the instruction manual that came with my canner. One has to use caution when canning stuff. The method and recipe must be just so, to prevent spoilage and ruining your product and endangering your health.
Tonight I am making 4 quarts of spaghetti sauce. It is quite time consuming, but the end result of having a nice dinner made with things you grew in your own garden is worth it. The taste of homemade spaghetti sauce, made from garden fresh ingredients is something everyone should experience.
We are starting to get fresh corn from the garden. I grew an heirloom variety named Stowell's evergreen this year. The yield on this variety is not what you will get from hybrids, but the corn is quite tasty, with fair sized ears. We have had more than our share of thunderstorms this summer and they have done a number on the corn. I would guess that 25% of the stalks in my garden are lying on the ground. And I am starting to have regular visits from the deer. They got to my soy bean, green beans and corn. And today I found what appeared to be a tomato that a deer had taken a bite from. I am considering asking Santa for an electric fence set up for Xmas this year. I went to the trouble of planting some green beans outside the fenced area of the garden this year, just as a way to satisfy the deer so they wouldn't bother the garden. No such luck!
Friday, July 1, 2011
Carrot harvest
Well, it's the start of the holiday weekend and I thought I would have been done with the carrots by now. But as it happens, today was the final harvest of the carrot crop. I decided to pull up the last two rows, about a half a bucket's worth, for two reasons. First, I didn't want to leave them in there too much longer and have them start to get pithy and bitter. And second, I am ready to till that area of the garden and plant a cover crop before it gets too late. I need time for the cover crop, in this case cowpeas, to put on some growth before I turn it under for fall planting. I am going to be putting some onions and garlic in this area around mid September so that leaves a month for the cowpeas to grow, after which I will turn them under and wait at least two weeks before planting the onions and garlic.
My chickens are happy about the harvest. They just love the carrot greens. And my dogs love carrots, so I give them any that may be too small to bother with canning or have any damage on them.
The DW and I were out in the garden this evening and she spotted a couple ears of the corn that are ready for picking. We'll be having those for dinner tomorrow night.
My chickens are happy about the harvest. They just love the carrot greens. And my dogs love carrots, so I give them any that may be too small to bother with canning or have any damage on them.
The DW and I were out in the garden this evening and she spotted a couple ears of the corn that are ready for picking. We'll be having those for dinner tomorrow night.
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