Over the weekend (we were away) the rest of the soybeans
ripened and had to be pulled in as soon as we got home. This variety of
soybean was quite a bit fuzzier. I'm not sure what variety it was. We
just planted the generic organic soy beans we order for our homemade soy
milk. The dirt was a bit tenacious, which made them quite a bit harder
to clean. I ended up filling up one of our 10-gallon buckets with hot
water and stirring 1/3 of the beans at a time and pulling them out, not
100% clean, but good enough. I'm making a note on the freezer bags to
give them a really good wash before cooking and eating them. Better to
get them into the freezer as quickly as possible. The total yield from
these plants? 18 pounds, 7 ounces. That gives a soybean total of about
20 pounds (the distoy soybeans were a little more than I thought) from
28 square feet. I put in a couple of tomato plants, okra, and more
peppers in one third of the bean bed. The other two thirds is waiting
for cover crop seed. Better get that ordered!
Meanwhile,
several of the corn stalks have toppled over because of the weight of
the ears. The last measuring showed that they had reached 12 feet, 6
inches (!). Tall! We tried some of the corn three weeks ago, but the
kernels weren't fully developed. Not too tasty. Now, the kernels are
fully developed but the corn is not particularly sweet. Now I have to
research what we could have done to improve the flavor, if anything. Or
maybe it needs another week? Stay tuned!
The sakata
melons have a few big ones (maybe 8 inches long with a 3 inch diameter).
Right now it's green like a zucchini, but I think it will turn a light
yellow before it is ready. Supposedly it goes from underripe to overripe
in just a day, so you have to really keep on eye on them.
There
are a few orange-ish tomatoes coming along. Some have burst already.
This is usually caused by uneven watering. We've been watering in
between rainstorms, but there have been a few short periods where
they've gone a little longer than usual without water. Hoping they all
come out okay.
Plenty of cucumbers are coming our way. I
really need to make time for pickles and relish. The cucumbers are
delicious and my favorites are the Israeli cucumbers.
Salad
greens I wasn't too pleased with. They've been superb for feeding the
chickens though! I love arugula. The spinach completely failed, probably
because it got too warm before it had a chance. The mesclun mix I got
wasn't a good balance of sweet and bitter. I prefer sweet lettuce mix
with bitter accents. I got some free lettuce seeds (Simpson) - BLEAH!
That variety didn't work at all. Romaine was so-so. That will take more
experimenting to find the right variety for us.
The carrots and the beets have been pretty good. Tonight I roasted the carrots without peeling them and they were delicious.
The
zucchini bed in front is sizzling. I think we must not have gotten all
the vine borers. The other squash bed (winter squash) is doing GREAT, so
I think we beat it there. I bought a few zucchini seedlings to put in
there in the hopes that the vine borer moth is all done laying eggs and
these will escape unharmed. We'll see. Hopefully they'll have enough
time to mature before the summer sizzle.
That's all for now!
Thursday, May 31, 2012
Wednesday, May 16, 2012
Yield Report: Soybeans
I pulled in the distoy soybeans (Territorial Seed Company). The package of seeds I got was only enough for about maybe 8 square feet. I got an amount in the shell similar to the volume of the shelled pinto beans. Probably around a pound or so. The other ±20 square feet of soy beans is still developing (different variety), so we'll have to see how that did. I just threw these soy bean pods in the freezer for now to be had for snacks later. That bed is getting emptier! We're thinking of just throwing in a cover crop, like buckwheat, to get it ready for fall planting... We'll see!
Monday, May 14, 2012
Food
The food is beginning to roll in now. Tonight, we had zucchini quiche (the eggs were so bright, the quiche was chartreuse!), roasted beets/white carrots, and roasted zucchini/eggplant/jalapeño/onion/garlic/preserved lemon. The only purchased thing was the flour and butter for the crust and the jalapeño (ours aren't there yet). So you could say this meal cost $1.75 and includes lunch for everyone tomorrow. We'll ignore all the startup costs for the garden, of course... :)
Yield Report: Pinto Beans
The nearly-official tally: 1 lb, 9.75 oz of pinto beans from 24 square feet of plants. Nearly-official, because the beans haven't thoroughly dried out yet so our yield will probably be under that. I'll put them on the drier tomorrow. Right now the drier is occupied with some shiso that I am preparing for making a shiso/sesame/salt condiment. I hope it's delicious! I'm very curious to try dried shiso as an herb. I love the fresh with sushi. Fun to try out new ideas.
Vine Borers
The aliens have descended. Those horrible vine borers. My arch-nemesis from last summer. It decimated all of my zucchini plants before I knew what was happening. This year, I've been ready for them, inspecting plants every time I water. Well, they have arrived! And they have been removed wherever they've been found. I look for little holes along the bases of stems, slice it open (or cut off the occupied stem) and get rid of the horrid creatures. Death by stabbing, or food for the chickens. I feel somewhat triumphant in that I have at least already picked two zucchini from the plants and promptly grated them into a quiche. This pest was never seen on the west coast, so there were always jokes about what to do about all that zucchini! There was always way too much, and one plant was enough for a family of twenty. Well, maybe an exaggeration but not by much! This year I planted about ten zucchini, yellow squash, and lemon squash plants. In the Pacific NW this would have been incredibly ridiculous. Next year? Row covers, my friend. Until the end of May. Nice lovely row covers over my zucchini plants and all of their relations.
Thursday, May 10, 2012
Pinto Beans
We have had a lot of rain this week, which really freed me up to do other chores around the garden since I didn't have to water it. I gave the chicken coop a good rake and put out a fresh layer of wood shavings. I cleaned out the condo where they sleep at night. I trellised the cucumbers that were toppling over into the paths. We had posts in the ground already, and had started to trellis them with twine. They had become a bit to unruly for the twine, so I did the next level with bamboo poles (cut from my mother-in-law's yard last year) and used duct tape to attach them to the posts. Worked pretty well. I also pulled out all the peas since they had reached the end of their productive lives.
Then I drained the above-ground pool. Our pump broke and brought our crystal clear water to a screeching halt (AKA green!). Very sad. We don't want to buy a new pump because we're hoping to get a larger pool soon. We already have a pump for that pool. We'll be switching to a saltwater system when we get the new pool. We don't want to buy another pump, but it's so sad not to have the pool up and running since we really use it two times a day this time of year.
My next job was to clear away a big pile of bricks from when we knocked out a low brick wall that divided the back yard from the side yard. We used many of the bricks to outline the crop and tree circles in the front yard, but the rest were just sitting in a great big pile. I moved the great big pile to a place behind the shed so we didn't have to look at them and trip over them any more. I also used a sledgehammer to remove the last bit of brick wall that was sitting at ground level and was also a bit of a tripping hazard.
Then my last job was to remove the pinto beans. They're in their drying stage right now, and with all that rain I was afraid they might rot. Of course, now rain is out of the forecast until Sunday. We uprooted all the beans and threw the plants on top of the chicken coop to dry some more. This weekend we hope to shell them, let them dry out some more indoors, then freeze them to make sure nothing grows inside of them! After that, we can store them in jars.
We also pulled an onion tonight only to discover it was remarkably puny. Not sure what that means. We planted them in late September/early October. They really should be nearly ready I would think. It may need more time or we may have flunked Onions 101. 75% of the foliage is supposed to die back when the onions are ready; I'd say it's at 25% right now. Maybe the onions take much longer here. We'll see!
There's never a dull day here!
Then I drained the above-ground pool. Our pump broke and brought our crystal clear water to a screeching halt (AKA green!). Very sad. We don't want to buy a new pump because we're hoping to get a larger pool soon. We already have a pump for that pool. We'll be switching to a saltwater system when we get the new pool. We don't want to buy another pump, but it's so sad not to have the pool up and running since we really use it two times a day this time of year.
My next job was to clear away a big pile of bricks from when we knocked out a low brick wall that divided the back yard from the side yard. We used many of the bricks to outline the crop and tree circles in the front yard, but the rest were just sitting in a great big pile. I moved the great big pile to a place behind the shed so we didn't have to look at them and trip over them any more. I also used a sledgehammer to remove the last bit of brick wall that was sitting at ground level and was also a bit of a tripping hazard.
Then my last job was to remove the pinto beans. They're in their drying stage right now, and with all that rain I was afraid they might rot. Of course, now rain is out of the forecast until Sunday. We uprooted all the beans and threw the plants on top of the chicken coop to dry some more. This weekend we hope to shell them, let them dry out some more indoors, then freeze them to make sure nothing grows inside of them! After that, we can store them in jars.
We also pulled an onion tonight only to discover it was remarkably puny. Not sure what that means. We planted them in late September/early October. They really should be nearly ready I would think. It may need more time or we may have flunked Onions 101. 75% of the foliage is supposed to die back when the onions are ready; I'd say it's at 25% right now. Maybe the onions take much longer here. We'll see!
There's never a dull day here!
Sunday, May 6, 2012
Sunday Photos
So sad - the sugar snap and snow peas are all done. |
Some creature has been poisoning the parsley... |
the kiwis have many new tendrils forming |
One tromboncino squash didn't make it, but we don't lack for plants! |
amaranth growing quite a bit taller |
watermelons spreading out |
zucchini coming (and watchful eyes are out looking for vine borers) |
winter squash |
uh oh - powdery mildew on the zucchini leaves; I'll try some baking soda treatment and hope it's not too late... |
eating bolted arugula |
melon flowers |
lots of edamame |
the pinto beans; at first I was afraid that something was going terribly wrong, but I'm pretty sure they just reached their maturity a couple of weeks sooner than expected and are now drying out |
the pinto beans getting beautiful red streaks as they dry out |
more zucchini flowers |
first eggplants are coming |
Under the leaves... |
... are lots of cucumber flowers! |
weird fungus, stage 1 - any guesses??? |
weird fungus - stage 2 |
an explosion of tomato blossoms, and a few green tomatoes! |
first green pepper |
first tomatillo |
ready for the basil onslaught! |
no broccoli yet - I'm not so sure it's going to make it before the really hot weather hits |
tassels ready to pollinate the silks |
corn claws |
the 9-foot-tall corn |
the new play yard for rabbits, chickens, humans, and puppy |
the corn is peeking over |
Wednesday, May 2, 2012
Transplants
Until this year I didn't really fully appreciate all the advantages of starting seedlings indoors and transplanting them outdoors when the soil is ready for them. I thought the only real advantage was to get a bit of a head start on the season.
Now, however, I realize there are many, many advantages to starting seedlings NOT in the main growing bed. Among these advantages are:
Things that I wish I had started from seed indoors before transplanting outside:
Now, however, I realize there are many, many advantages to starting seedlings NOT in the main growing bed. Among these advantages are:
- It takes much less water to water seedlings when they are not surrounded by the many, many square feet of empty soil they will eventually occupy.
- It is much easier to keep seedlings evenly moist when they take up a small amount of space. Most seedlings don't grow well if they alternate between wet and dry soil.
- You can protect the seedlings from insect and disease damage and from birds and other seed-eating creatures and put them out when they are able to withstand most of these.
- They are protected from sudden plunges in temperature (or from the cover on the hooped bed blowing off on the very night the temperature sinks to 22 degrees).
Things that I wish I had started from seed indoors before transplanting outside:
- Broccoli and cauliflower, because I fear that by the time they are ready to produce the scorching heat will have arrived and we won't be getting much.
- Basil. I think the alternating wet/dry is slowing it down and causing pretty uneven growth throughout the various basil areas. They would be doing fine, I think, if they got watered daily without fail. Sometimes I fail!
- Melons. I think these would have done great over a heated germination pad. The little sakata melon seedlings are just now finally starting to take off after having sat with nothing but their first set of true leaves (after the cotyledons) for quite some time, probably because our weather is now consistently above 85 during the day. I hope they'll continue to flourish and bring us melons!
- Eggplant. Ditto.
- Peppers. Ditto.
Tuesday, May 1, 2012
Great Book
I have been rather absorbed in this book, taking many mental notes as I go. So much to learn! And so many wonderful things to glean from reading about life on a farm. His farm is a real one, much larger then my garden, and he lives in Illinois with very different timings for things, but how fun it is to read a week-by-week account of what needs to be done. Everything from marketing the vegetables, to having bees, the best way to cook what they grow (recipes included!), the relative cash value of their crops, the bone-chilling labor during the Illinois winter, and the slaughter of animals.
Already, just 2-1/2 months into our real growing season (post-frost) there are so many, many things I plan to do differently next time. I love that part about gardening, and I know it will take us 3–5 years to really hit our stride. What a marvelous time we're having along the way!
CAVEAT EMPTOR: I was disappointed, upon finishing the book, to see that two of the chapters include rather inappropriate material which really dampened my enthusiasm for this otherwise wonderful book. I don't know if this is the new "style" of writing, but I found the same thing in reading what would have been a very fun around-the-world history of fruit. I find this terribly disappointing and disturbing and plan to write to the publishers and authors.
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