Showing posts with label lettuce. Show all posts
Showing posts with label lettuce. Show all posts

Sunday, May 2, 2010

General notes

1) We started our seedlings a little later than last year, they are looking good. Probably transplanting tomatoes outside in the next week.

2) Bed of lettuce and peas has been out for three weeks. We had them covered by a cold frame, which saved them for last week's late frost. But now they are free and exposed.

3) Yesterday (May 1) we planted peas and sweet peas near the trellises on the side of the house; radishes, kale, carrots and beets in the regular garden; and turnips in the new raised bed (filled with compost) we can't get turnips to grow in the regular garden, so we're hoping the raised bed is the trick. Last night it rained steadily for several hours, so if it is warm this week, those seeds will be popping!

Tuesday, July 14, 2009

Full garden views

Here's the garden, freshly weeded, from the west looking east: Here's the lettuce bed:
Here's a close-up of our new little tomatoes starting. They are about the size of grapes, but I think this variety is one that gets to be about the size of a tennis ball.
Garden looking west from the deck. Note fresh straw between the rows:

Saturday, December 27, 2008

December Salad Days

This is a photo of our final garden harvest, taken on DECEMBER 14! We just finished eating the lettuce pictured above, on DECEMBER 27! And we live in WISCONSIN! How is this possible?
See below:
Here is a picture of our lettuce, taken just before our final harvest on December 14.

And here is the secret: our cold frame that protected the lettuce, even through temperatures around 0 degrees F. There was a lot of snow and cold between November 28 and December 14, and we were sure that the lettuce had died. But it hadn't! Cold frames really work, and they work in cold, snowy climates. We recommend them.