Tuesday, May 26, 2009
Growing and Warmth
Tuesday, May 19, 2009
Tomato plant count
Here are the tomatoes we planted, and the number of each variety:
Australian Oxheart (3)
Black Cherry (3)
Black Krim (3)
Brandywine Yellow (5)
Cherokee Chocolate (4)
Green Zebra (3)
Kellogg's Breakfast tomato (4)
Principe Borghese (4)
Yellow pear (5)
The only new one is the Black Krim. They all have different uses, which I will chronicle as we harvest them.
Australian Oxheart (3)
Black Cherry (3)
Black Krim (3)
Brandywine Yellow (5)
Cherokee Chocolate (4)
Green Zebra (3)
Kellogg's Breakfast tomato (4)
Principe Borghese (4)
Yellow pear (5)
The only new one is the Black Krim. They all have different uses, which I will chronicle as we harvest them.
Sunday, May 10, 2009
A Day of Mothering--plants.
Mother's Day, and I'm busily trying to get plants to produce offspring. We put in the entire garden today, planting:
- Leeks
- Summer squash
- Cucumbers
- popcorn
- sunflowers
- other flowers and herbs
- two avocado pits in pots (since we had guacamole for dinner)
transplanting:
- Fennel
- peppers
- herbs
- tomatoes (34 plants in the ground and in pots)
Also discovered the joy of stewed rhubarb this weekend. SO GOOD.
In comparing notes with other midwesterners, we are lucky to be close to the lake, and west of it. It has a moderating effect on the weather--it is supposed to get to 38 degrees tonight, but it is freezing elesewhere. We've been harvesting kale for two weeks. The Rhubarb is hearty and producing well. The tomatoes we transplanted earlier this week are thriving. Will be interesting to see what this does over the years, if it changes, etc.
At any rate, a good day of gardening.
Monday, April 27, 2009
Turnip sprouts!
I have no photographic proof of this, so you'll have to take my word for it, but there are tiny turnip sprouts coming up as of today!
Saturday, April 25, 2009
Our seedling set-up
Last weekend (April 18 and 19) we put in the first of our outdoor seeds: Peas, beets, carrots, turnips. We were also delighted to discover that Kale is a perennial--we have Kale coming up in a row in the garden and a few clumps in the front of the house. In a week or two we can harvest and add all those healthy vitamins to our frozen soups.
We had one spring day on Thursday (about 60 degrees) and up to about 75 on Friday. But today it has been raining and the temperature has been dropping so now it is 40 degrees. We hope it doesn't go much lower--the forecast says no. The seeds got a good 5 days of soaking, two warm days, and now they got soaked again. If warmth comes again next weekend, we should see sprouts.
Labels:
beets,
carrots,
first planting,
grow light,
peas,
seedlings,
turnips
Monday, March 9, 2009
Kitty Assistant
This got edited out by blogger yesterday, and rather than re-post the entire entry, I will give you here a solo photo of our curious kitty, ready to help with the planting.
He's the best kitty in the world, and he loves gardening. He hangs out in the garden when we are out there, loves to sidle up and rub against us when we're working. I'd grow a whole garden full of cats if I could be guaranteed that they'd all be so perfect!
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