Friday, December 19, 2008

Lettuce Table


I built this lettuce bed out of nice redwood. It has 1x4s for sides, including handy beer rest shelves, and 4x4 legs. The bottom is made of hardware cloth covered in layers of burlap. Then I filled the whole thing with sterile potting mix.

The planting area is about 2 by 3 feet. I divided it into 6 zones, using white gravel pebbles. Then I planted each square with a different green on 10-27-08. Going from the top left corner, they are:
1. Arugula, organic. Park 5891.
2. Master chef blend lettuces. Royal Oak Leaf, Simpson Elite, Green Ice, Buttercrunch, Red Sails, 20% each. Park 5184.
3. Green Towers lettuce. Romaine type, 60 day. Park 5182.
4. Salad bowl mix lettuces, organic. 50 day. Park 5842.
5. Loose Leaf, Green Ice. Park 5158.
6. Broccoli Rabe, from Karen.

This is what it looks like on 12-19-08. I have good sprouting
but not a lot of growth yet. I expect it to take off in the spring.









Winter 2008

It's midwinter, and cold. It's been getting down below freezing the last few days, and only warming to 40s or 50s during the day. It's been particularly dry, although it rained last Sunday.

Last weekend we bought 3 new fruit trees: a satsuma mandarin, a marsh grapefruit, and a granny smith apple. They aren't planted yet, but they will go along the fence line.

The chickens are thriving and we get 2 to 3 eggs a day. This is the perfect number of chickens, and the pen, although far too heavy, works well enough. I'm using the chickens to clear the garden area. I put their pen on a site for about a week, move it off, till it up, then put them back to clear anything that survived. By spring I should have it all cleared.

The vines have died back from the gourds, so you can see them along the fences now. I have more gourds than I'll ever need! Huge ones!


The lettuce bed is doing fine, although not growing much. Come spring, it should take off. I'm sure there are fine roots. The cabbage and broccoli were planted WAY too late. I should have started them in mid summer. This time of year, they should be finished and holding in the garden. As it is, they are about transplant size, and not really growing. The mustard has been producing well though, and is a good addition to sandwiches and salads.

The peas in the back bed are full grown, and even flowering. Again, come the first hint of spring, they should take off. The tatsoi in front of them is actually growing well. It seems to like the cold weather. The chard I had originally planted there got pretty decimated by the snails, but the few that survived are doing ok.

The lemon has a huge crop this year, and I'm making Limoncella from the harvest. I had been eating several a day, but that was too much for my allergy. I should stick below one per day, and even that might be too much. I need other things to make out of the juice. And give away more! The lime has rebounded too, although this week's cold weather has wilted some new growth. I think with the willow gone, both will do much better.




Winter Review




Peppers did really well, all kinds. Plant more, plant earlier. Simply can't have too much salsa and hot sauce.

Beans. This year I will plant pole beans, and I'll stagger them more. The beans were delicious, but we had too many at once. Even I couldn't eat the pounds and pounds of dilly beans.

Tomatoes. Disappointing year. It was so smokey early in the season that they didn't get a good start. I planted too late, and RickC's were in too much shade.

Squash. Basically, I don't much care for it. I won't be growing any this year. The exception was the trombetta, but even then, it wasn't that great. I'll use the space for more delicious things.

Greens. This will be a good area for better production. I have big hopes for the lettuce table, plus chard and the various asian greens such as bok choi and tatsoi,
Tomatillos: These did well but I think RickC is right that they should be pruned and trained tall.

Things to plant next year:

Onions: I'd like to do more onions, both scallions and bulb onions.

Garlic: Can't have too much garlic.

Carrots. I didn't grow any last year, but I have all that sandy soil where the pool used to be. I will try several varieties, and pull them small.

Radishes. Delicious in spring.

Beans: Pole types, in succession. I think I'll grow towers or teepees, possibly even make a shaded spot with them. Shelling beans worked well too, but I need to plant a lot more to make it worthwhile. Could put those along the north fenceline, behind the orchard.
Tomatoes. I'll go with mostly roma type, and a few slicers.

Potatoes. I think I'll try the above ground method (using layers of mulch) around the orchard area.

Greens. Obviously I'll have the lettuce table, plus some chard. My thought is to have a few sturdy chard plants, and harvest them heavily while the leaves are still small.
Tomatillos. I liked the purple ones for ease of finding the ripe ones. Train them on vines.

Friday, June 27, 2008

Early harvests


Rick ate fresh corn yesterday, and I ate beans. Eggplants are ripe, basil is going crazy. Lots of peppers are set on. A few tomatillos are done. We plan to make salsa next tues.

Air quality sucks due to numerous fires. Hasn't been super hot, in the 80-90s.

All the starts that we put in--watermelon, pumpkin, and cuke--are thriving.

Tuesday, June 17, 2008

Garden day again

It's garden day again, and I'll be bringing the last of the starts over to RickC's house. I have cukes, watermelons, and sugar pumpkins for him. I got my pumpkins in the ground last week. My tomatillos are producing like mad, with some of the first fruits feeling about marble size. I have tomatoes setting up, but none even close to ripe yet. RickC has eaten cherry tomatoes already. There's lots of basil, and I've made a bunch of pesto. I'm making a pesto bread treat for today, with homemade bread, pesto, tomatoes, and fresh mozzeralla cheese over the top.

Chicken pen is working even better than expected, and back patio area is done. My gourds are climbing all over the fence, and the beans are up to the rafters on the shed, and flowering profusely. I finally got a soaker hose on them, but they were getting daily water anyway.

I'll take and post some pics today.

Wednesday, May 28, 2008

Etsy site

Here is the url for that fun crafters' website:

http://www.etsy.com/index.php

Garden notes:

It did rain, on Saturday, but not much. It's been windy and cool though, with night temps getting to low 50s or high 40s.

I started watermelon, cuke, basil, cilantro, and pumpkins in peat pots, just to give them a head start.

Thursday, May 22, 2008

Garden day progress



Last Tues., 5-20, we weeded at the community garden. Tomatoes are setting, there's already one zuchinni, and the basil was high enough for a first harvest of it. The trombetta squash (supposedly grows like zuchinni, tastes like artichoke hearts) finally came up because of the hot spell. Corn is knee high. Tomatillos are sprawling and need to be tied up a lil. There were lots of weeds and we really need to mulch.

Weather note: Got really hot (over 100) last week, but cooled over the weekend and now is windy and cooler. No rain yet but the fair just started.

We made pesto from the basil and ate it up! We only had olive oil, garlic, and salt to put in it, but it was still delicious.

The squash and tomatillos were from Renee's Seeds. I started the tomatillos in the greenhouse in March, and we set them out in early May. The tomatoes, eggplant, and peppers were from starts that RickC got. Corn is an ordinary hybrid. RickC also planted potatoes from some he had around that were sprouting.

I've taken home more seeds to start in the mini greenhouse. Here we are weeding and drinking beer: