Wednesday, September 20, 2017

The 2017 Garden

I have to start by admitting that I didn’t really do as much as I should have with the garden this summer. Perhaps since this is the third year, the novelty has worn off some for me. Or perhaps I’m just more generally lazy this year. I did put in the full garden but I neglected it some and my husband ended up doing a lot of the work that I usually do. With all that being said, it was a fairly successful season, even if my enthusiasm was lacking.

My last post here was in May, so there is a lot of catching up to do. Here’s how things went this summer.

May

The perennial plants in the garden came back quite well after the winter. I was picking thyme, marjoram, and chives in April. The horseradish came back strong and the rhubarb grew well enough to put some in the freezer. The asparagus was pretty good this year as well. The strawberries came back better than ever. I plan on doing a whole post just on them.

Thyme, marjoram, and chives
I planted the cool-weather seeds – carrots, beets, chard, pak choi, turnip greens, and peas on May 13th. They all sprouted within a week. The beets were a bit spotty, however. That could have been because I got a mix of different types of seeds to try this year or maybe because of the steady rains we had this spring and early summer. The beets we did get were very good, though.

The garden on May 13th after planting cool-weather seeds
Peas two weeks after planting
I planted the rest of the garden on May 29th. Much of the garden space was given to old standards – green beans, zucchini, yellow squash, tomatoes, and peppers. We didn’t bother with corn and potatoes this year but added soy into the mix. We also tried out some different vegetables including parsnips, silver line melons, and okra. I also decided to try growing European cucumbers rather than the pickling ones I usually grew. I ended up being disappointed by that decision. The cucumbers had large seeds and didn’t produce that well. I’ll be going back to the smaller ones next year.

The garden on May 29th after everything was planted
All the plants that I transplanted into the garden at the end of May were ones that I had started earlier in the season. I started eggplant, Poblano pepper, Juliet tomato, and beefsteak tomato seeds. I transplanted the seedlings into peat pots at the end of March and then transplanted them again into larger pots in late April. I probably started them a little earlier than I need to but I was anxious to get things going in the depths of winter. The tomatoes, in particular, were a bit spindly when I finally got them into the garden but they adjusted well once in their permanent homes.

Thinned seedlings in early March
Lovely, strong tomato seedling at end of March
Tomato, eggplant and pepper seedlings transplanted into peat pots
Hardening off plants on the back porch in mid-May
June

It was a fairly wet start to the season but the garden didn’t seem to mind. By June, everything was coming along. At least a little bit of everything planted was growing. There was only one buttercup squash plant and that was attacked by stem borers before it got a chance to do much but otherwise things were going well. The pak choi was harvested and the few remaining plants were going to seed. The peppers and eggplants were setting fruit and I was taking fresh snap peas with me to work for lunch. I was pleasantly surprised by the turnip greens. They were a new addition to the garden. They grew fast and despite being quite prickly when picked, made for a very nice cooked green.

The garden on June 25th
July

In July, the garden really filled out. The peas were finishing up their run but everything else was going strong. The green beans were starting to produce as were the yellow squash and zucchini. Both the beefsteak and Juliets were covered in green tomatoes just waiting for some hot, sunny days to turn them red. 
Bright lights chard
Yellow Squash
Juliet tomato
Zucchini
As a special bonus, several plants sprouted from the composter. An abundance of Roma tomatoes and a strong acorn squash vine filled in around the base of the barrel.
 
"Wild" compost vegetables
The garden on July 29th
August

Harvest season was full upon us by August. The tomatoes had turned red and we almost had more than I knew what to do with. A week of rain made a lot of them split, however, and some of the large beefsteaks started to rot on the vine but another round of drier weather helped put a stop to that. The silver line melons ripened as did the cantaloupes. Both seemed watery and not as flavorful as we would have liked. Perhaps the soil wasn’t that good for melons.

Basket of produce
Beefsteak tomatoes
Silver line melon
Okra blossom
September

That finally brings us up to now, mid-September. The soy has grown well, despite the fact that a couple of young woodchucks managed to get into the garden and eat a good portion of the leaves. My husband just picked and processed it the other day and got almost two quart-size zip-lock bags of shelled beans.

Soybeans
There are still a lot of veggies in the garden that are ready and waiting to be picked – beets, carrots, chard, and turnip greens – and more still ripening – tomatoes, peppers, zucchini, onions, parsnips, cucumbers, and green beans. There is still plenty to do in the garden and lots of produce to harvested and put away for the winter.
The garden on September 10th

Sunday, May 7, 2017

Pre-Garden Experiment

Last year, I let a couple pak choi plants go to seed. In the fall, I collected the seeds for use in this year’s garden. I was a bit surprised that there were so many seeds in the dried little pods. I got probably five times more seeds than what I had gotten in the packet I originally purchased. That made me wonder if there was perhaps something special about the store-bought seeds. There must have been some reason for them to cost what they did. What if the ones I had collected didn’t grow?

Pak choi seed pods
Pak choi seeds – such lovely colors!
 So, I decided to run a little experiment to test the viability of my collected seeds. In late February, I planted a handful of seed in my starter tray. I had so many of them. It wouldn’t hurt if I “wasted” some to see if they would grow. In just two days, little seedlings were pushing their way up through the starter. Success!

Perfect little pak choi seedlings
The seeds were proven viable so, why not keep them going? Two weeks later, I transplanted a dozen of the seedlings into a couple of low, disposable tin baking trays. I used four trays for the improvised plantings. I took two trays and put a layer of river stones in the bottom. I poked holes in the bottoms of the other two and filled them with potting soil. Then, I put the trays filled with soil on top of the trays with the stones so that my two mini-gardens would have good drainage.

Seedlings in the tray gardens
Pak choi in the garden took just a little over a month to go from seed to harvest. A month after putting the experimental seedling into the trays, they were still on the small side. That was not much of a surprise. There really wasn’t much space for roots. The plants did look quite nice, though, with perfect miniature leaves. I feel, when planted in the garden, the seeds will do just fine.

Mini-toy choy
I gave the experiment another week or so then decided it was time to eat the test subjects. The twelve plants provided enough tiny pak choi leaves to add to a stir fry with fresh asparagus from the garden. While the plants never reached their full potential size, I am calling it a success and will confidently plant the saved seeds in this year’s garden.

Pak choi right after a watering

Sunday, February 5, 2017

Looking Back and Forward

Winter is very much upon us now. The day after New Year’s, the seed catalogues started arriving in the mail. I set them aside as I felt that was still a bit early to start planning. A month later, I’m ready to think about the garden again. Before I know it, it will be time to start some seeds indoors, even as the garden lies blanketed in snow.


I never did a final report here on the garden. I would call it a successful year, overall. The tomatoes produced quite well. I actually got enough to make pasta sauce. I found a Ball flavoring mix that made wonderful sauce. I fired up the canner and put away nine quarts of sauce to enjoy all winter.

So many tomatoes!

In late September, I went through and harvested the rest of the vegetables. The corn did not produce very well. The potatoes did not either. It’s always been less expensive and less of an effort to just buy corn and potatoes but I still like growing them myself. I’m about ready to give up on the corn entirely but I really like fresh-dug potatoes. We had a few meals from the Yukon Golds so it was not a total waste of time and space. Next year, maybe we’ll try something more exotic like purples or fingerlings that aren’t available at local stores.

So, it was not a bumper crop.
The garden did produce enough acorn squash and pumpkin to put in storage for the winter. We’ve gone through all the squash now but two pumpkins are still waiting to be used.


I was a bit disappointed that the Rattlesnake beans did not produce as well as they did last year. I did plant them in a different part of the garden that had a tendency to be a bit wetter so that might have had something to do with it. We did get a few that will make some nice bean soup on one of these cold days.

At least there were some beans to shell.
The herbs did very well this season. In October, I cut thyme, marjoram, and fennel seeds to dry. I also brought the parsley plant inside but it didn’t care for the transition, apparently. It went back out into the compost bin last month. I loved being able to step out my back door with a pair of scissors and get fresh herbs and I was actually able to do so well into late fall.

Thyme and marjoram hanging to dry.
Similarly, the chard just kept growing late into the season. Chard has got to be one of my favorite leafy greens (leafy rainbows?) to grow. It comes up quickly and just keeps going. I finally cut the last of it in early November. It probably would have kept going if I had let it but I was ready to get the beds ready for the winter.




The giant maple tree out in front of our house provides wonderful cover material for the garden. My husband processed the fallen leaves through the choppy leaf vacuum thing he bought for the purpose and spread it over the raised beds. In the spring with turn it under with other soil additives and be ready for another growing season.

The garden set for a long winter's nap.
And what shall we plant next season?