New Beginnings

January.  Synonymous with cold, snow, frigid temperatures, and dark days.

And yet there are the little things that brighten our days and get us through this long month as we wait for seed-starting season.

Take this tomato plant, for example.

A gift from the Minnesota gardeners, this is a dwarf tomato which seems very happy to be in my care.  Rumor is that it will produce tomatoes for me before I can even think about working in the dirt this spring.  I’m very excited to see how it does.  It grew a lot last week, despite the fact that it was grey and gloomy out all week long.  Yesterday and today we’ve had some sunshine, and it’s really looking good.

I also have started just one round of seeds.  I was also gifted with some Ghost Pepper seeds this Christmas.  I gave these super-hot seeds an eight hour soak in warm water and then put them in a pot of seed starting mix.  I have seven seeds in this pot.

They could take a good three weeks before emerging, but I’m hopeful that the soak in water gave them a bit of a jumpstart.  I have the pot in front of the fireplace for now- it’s keeping them toasty without being too toasty.   These can take a full 160 days to harvest, and since the can be so slow to germinate, I wanted to give them a good head start. One of these Ghost Chilies has a date with the salsa pot.  Just one.  The rest?  Gosh, they scare me just thinking about them, but I’ve recently become obsessed with finding out what kind of flavor these super-hots actually have.  One of THE hottest in the world with scoville units off the charts, I may be insane for even thinking about trying them.

I can’t wait.  🙂

Still Harvesting

Not bad.  Yesterday I went out to the greenhouse and harvested a few chard leaves to add to a stir fry.  I found both the chard and the kale to be a bit weepy, which tells me that it has indeed frozen in the greenhouse overnight.  But, the greenhouse is acting as a giant coldframe and the greens perked up a bit.  They’re still good enough to eat, and were a delicious addition to last night’s dinner.

The seeds that I planted way back when have sprouted, but they’ve been stuck in sprout mode ever since.  It just doesn’t get warm enough I guess.  They’re not dead though, so we’ll see what happens.  I truly have no clue how greenhouse gardening actually works, so every bit of observation is helpful.

If you would have told me, though, that I could still be harvesting Swiss Chard on December 6th, I’d have thought you were nuts.  It does make me wonder if having the chard in the greenhouse will get it to behave like the biannual it actually is.  I would love to be able to harvest fresh greens in the early spring, and maybe gather my own seed at the other end of it.

In The Doghouse. Er, I Mean, The Greenhouse

Oh yes.  We went there.

This week Andy had some extra time off and he really needed a project.  I asked him to make a simple plant stand for my rosemary plant, and somehow over the three days he didn’t work, that turned into a greenhouse for Garden Bed Number One.  Here’s some pictures.

There is still kale and swiss chard thriving in this bed, and a few carrots that need more time to mature.  In addition, one lone Lemon Drop cherry tomato plant is still plugging along.

Today Andy put the door on and then put a thermometer inside.  When the sun was bright and shiny it was 76 degrees, despite the 45 degree exterior!  So that got me thinking, and it didn’t take me long to decide I needed to play around and see just what a greenhouse could do.

Of course I planted something!  I planted three varieties of radish, a bit of broccoli raab and then a bit of spinach.  I guess I’m not sure what to expect of any of them- I suppose that will depend on how the temperatures go for the next while.

To be completely honest, I’m not sure what to expect.  I’ve read quite a bit about growing in a greenhouse, but never actually expected to give it a shot, so we’ll see what happens.  I’m thinking that I’ll be able to use it to extend the season by about  a month on either end of the growing season.  I’m really not expecting much out of the seeds I planted, but I guess you never really know until you try.

October Planting

Planting in October?  You bet!  A few weeks ago Andy finished assembling a small raised bed for my garlic.   I think that ideally, I should have planted the garlic three weeks ago, but I don’t think the bed was ready at that time, and I also really haven’t had two seconds to myself to do so.  But today I did.  I had purchased a huge sack of garlic at the Minneapolis Farmer’s Market back at Labor Day that has just been waiting for planting.  I’ve used a good deal of it, but happened to save the perfect amount of cloves to fit into the bed.

Of course, you can’t see anything but the bed and dirt, but the cloves are in there.  It’s a Siberian variety- delicious and crispy- the bulbs are compact and on the small side- most have only between 4-6 cloves of garlic.  I’m looking forward to seeing how the next generation turns out!  I topped my freshly planted cloves with a nice layer of homemade compost, and here’s to hoping that next fall I am busily braiding my own string of garlic!

I also took a minute today and dug up my Tarragon and my Rosemary plants.  I transplanted them into pots with some compost, and I’m hoping I can keep them alive in the house over the winter.  We’ll see, I don’t have very much sun in the windows, but I’m hopeful.   I need a small plant stand or two to set in this corner window for them.

I expect the Sage, Lemon Thyme and Thyme to survive the winter intact.  The Lovage I think I’ll be harvesting and drying.  But maybe if I find another pot with a bottom I’ll dig it up and add it to the indoor collection.  My Summer Savory died quite a few weeks back- even before it got cooler out,  so I’m not sure what happened there.   If I get a chance I would like to make a batch of pesto out of the basil, but I’m not sure when and if I’ll have time.

The rest of the garden is still hanging out, though I have some clean-up to start focusing on.  I have beets and carrots all over the place that I will think about harvesting soon.  The kale is looking gorgeous, as is the chard, so I’ll just leave those and pluck them as I desire.  I still pick a few handfuls of green beans here and there- plenty for the kids to snack on, so they’re happy.  And I’m also still harvesting tomatoes- and quite a few at that!

They’re not the prettiest- they’re pretty much all cracked, but once you cut the cracks off, they’re perfect for adding to soups or stews.   The Lemon Drop cherries and the Black Cherries are still going, so we’re still delighting in snacking on those as well.  Today my Woodle Orange plant surprised me with a cluster of four ripe and orange tomatoes.  Those ones are not cracked- so we’ll have a few slicers out of those ones.

My leeks are continuing to struggle, and I’m unsure if I should harvest them and use them as babies, or let them winter over and see if the come back in the spring.  It just wasn’t a good year for them, I guess.

While the gardening season is meandering to a close, my thoughts are already turning to next year.  What to plant, what to plant, that is the question.  I’m researching the possibility of joining a CSA when we get our tax return in the spring.  Then, we will utilize the CSA veggies for everyday eating, and then I can use the garden to focus on what I would like to preserve.  Like planting onions, peppers and tomatoes for salsa, cucumbers and dill for pickles, and cucumbers and tomatoes for eating fresh out of hand.  We’ll see.  I have to find out more about the CSA that has a drop off just a few blocks from our house.

Variety Notes

Off the top of my head this morning, I have to make some notes about some keepers from the garden, and some that I will never grow again.

Tomatoes: Black Cherry and Lemon Drops will be garden staples.  They are both prolific and tasty. I knew the BC were good, but the Lemon Drops surprised me.

I will not grow Purple Calabash or Romas again.  Blech.  The Purple Calabash are just plain awful.  I have some sitting on the counter that I don’t know what to do with.  They have a sour, almost fermented flavor that is really unpleasant.  The romas taste like styrofoam.

Purple Cherokee is on my waffle list.  Mine have had a sweetness that I don’t care for.  There are enough other good tomatoes, that this one probably won’t make the list.

Aunt Ruby’s German Green is a keeper!  This ranks right up there with the Malakite tomato.  The flavor is spectacular, and the plants have put out great effort.

Hot Peppers: Aji Crystal is awesome!  It has this amazing crisp texture, and it definitely added a fruitiness to the salsa I made with it.  The heat level is up there, but it’s not the hottest I’ve grown this year.  Definitely a keeper.

I don’t think I’ll grow the Bulgarian Carrot Pepper again.  They are stunning to look at, and the flavor profile is good, but they’re tough.  It is difficult to chop them up for cooking with.  The only thing I could really see doing with them is making a fermented hot sauce, where you need to grind them up and let them sit and do their thing.   I would consider growing them if I was doing market gardening, because they are gorgeous in color and unique.  But for home use, not so much.

Greens: Arugula has to be one of the worst tasting things ever.  Escarole is close to that, though I may give the escarole another chance in some cool spring weather next year.  I’m annoyed that I bought all these seed packets for unusual greens, because most of them are simply awful.

Mizuna, though is a gem of a green.  It’s got a slight peppery-ness to it, but none of the bitterness that the other greens have.  It made a fabulous addition to sandwiches and salads, and the plants never bolted.  It’s cousin, the Ruby Streaks was also tasty, though that variety bolted once it got hot out.

And no more Salad Mix.  I must hunt down more romain varieties, because tha’s our preference.  These floppy greens are not desireable for a tossed green salad.

That’s the beginning of my list for the year.   Every time I walk out to the garden, these things roll through my head.  I decided to get them down in the notes so that I can focus my attentions elsewhere and make other discoveries.   There is still plenty chugging in from the garden!

The Unscientific Tomato Experiment

Unscientific because there are way too many variables at stake with these two tomato plants.  However, the results of this experiment are definitely enough to make me pause and give some thought to next year’s garden.

Far and away, THE healthiest tomato plant in my garden is the one that’s not in the garden.  It’s my Valiant.  The one that was extremely anemic, so it didn’t even merit planting in the garden.  On a lark, I planted it, along with several others in the side garden bed, just to see what would happen.  They were summarily snapped or nibbled off by rabbits.  The Valiant was the lone survivor- but even he was snapped off at the soil line.  There was no plant- just a stub of stem.  I wrote it off, but then a few days later discovered that this little plant was struggling to sustain life- it had a new branch and teeny-tiny leaves.

And now?

It’s absolutely beautiful.  It is the healthiest plant in my yard, and it is loaded with large clusters of good-sized tomatoes.  The soil here has been worked two years in a row with composted manure, but it still has a long way to go.  And yet, this tomato plant is just thriving!  It is loaded with large, tennis-to-softball sized fruit.

My Valiant plant in the garden, however is anemic and struggling.   It’s put out very little fruit, and what is still on the plant is small- no bigger than a baseball, but probably closer to a golf ball.

Same yard, same composted manure, same fertilizer schedule going on here.  But there is one majorly big difference.  The awesome Valiant plant is planted directly in the ground.  The wimpy Valiant plant is in a raised bed.   I’ve long known that tomatoes prefer to be in the ground versus in pots, but in-ground versus raised beds isn’t that different.  Especially when the beds are like mine- directly on the soil.

I don’t have a die-hard conclusion here, just observation.  On the one hand, the awesome plant experienced major trauma- supposedly tomato plants thrive with a bit of trauma in their lives.  That alone could explain the vibrancy of the plant.

And yet I cannot dismiss the idea that maybe my struggling tomato plants simply don’t like the raised beds.

But on the other hand, last year my plants were in the ground and produced practically nothing.  Though the soil was dismal at best last year.

So we’ll see.  Maybe next year will be a hybrid of some tomatoes in raised beds, and some directly in the ground.  But that means this must be given serious thought now- as I have several bulbs of garlic to plant this fall, and I’m unsure where those will grow best.

A Pepper Parade

This is my favorite time of year- and for the first time, I have a bumper crop of heirloom hot peppers! But first, a few other pictures.

This is my little tomato plant that could.  It had been completely snapped off by rabbits- and I mean completely.  The stem was snapped at the soil line- and had completely vanished.  I wrote it off, but a few days later saw a tiny bit of new growth and decided to see what it could do.  This thing has about a dozen tomatoes growing on it now, and also plenty of blossoms.

These are my scarlet runner beans.  It took a little bit of a cool snap for them to really take off, but now they’re growing like crazy and looking beautiful.   (That’s the neighbors corn patch behind the fence.)

This amused me.  It’s a little late for a melon to actually grow and become ripe before it frosts, but it’s the first one to do so.  These melon plants have really taken over the bed…note to self: give melons their own bed if you really want to grow them.

And now for some peppers.  So far, I am beyond pleased with the peppers I got  from Seed Savers Exchange.  Their flavors have been good, and they definitely have a bit of heat to them.  This first picture is of the Bulgarian Carrot pepper.  I haven’t tried this one yet, as they’ve just begun the process of turning orange this week.

This next one is the Maule’s Red Hot.  These definitely have some heat, and made some spectacular first batches of salsa.  SSE recommends them for drying or for making hot pepper sauce.  I’m thinking about that- I certainly have enough peppers to do so with this year.

We haven’t tried this one yet either.  This is Joe’s Round, and these peppers are surprisingly tiny!  They are literally less than an inch round.  SSE says these are very hot, so I’m not sure what I’ll do with them.  There’s enough here I could probably pickle a jar, but we’ll see.

Next is the Hinkelhatz.  This one resembles an habanero in shape, but not heat.  SSE lists it as simply hot- we haven’t tried this one yet either.

I didn’t take pictures of my Aji Crystal as I picked the biggest ones for salsa making already.  I picked them at their yellow stage- and they were AMAZING.  They had great flavor, quite a bit of heat, and the salsa made with them is really fruity and wonderful.

The Georgia Flames are just beginning to turn red, and the Cascabellas really want to be used or pickled too.   My jalapeno is doing well, as are the serranos.  The plant we’ve been affectionately calling “Mutant Pepper” I think I’ve determined to be an Anaheim pepper.  My peppers started blushing orange in the middles, and looked more like Anaheims than Banana Peppers.  The only heat in my peppers were in the seeds and membranes- once removed they were like sweet peppers, and made a nice mild salsa for the kids.

How The Garden Grows!

I’m about due for another update!

We’ve been enjoying bits of this and bits of that out of the garden.  We’ve had salad a few times, plenty of lettuce on sandwiches, and we’ve all had at least one of the Sweet 100 cherry tomatoes.

I just spent the last few hours weeding and tending to the tomatoes, and thought it would be a great time to snap a few pictures.

We have cucumbers!  I am hopeful that the yellow tint of this guy means he’s my Poona Kheera- because there are definitely a few of them.  This is my favorite cucumber, sweet, crispy, and delightful!  There are a few other cucumbers ripening up as well.  Can’t wait for the first taste!

My Purple Russians gave me a scare when I discovered some Blossom End Rot the other day.  So far though, it seems to be limited to just two of the fruit, and as they grow, the spots are not, so I think it’s just a fluke.  One of these tomatoes is massive- you can kind of see it in the back.

Here’s a Lemon Drop getting ready to fully ripen.  I have two of these plants in the garden- I hope they are tasty!

And here’s the mutant pepper plant.  I’ve already decided I want to save seed- and I haven’t even tasted the peppers yet.  This little plant is just quite abundant, and that makes me happy.

The next two pictures are of my Maule’s Red Hot pepper plants.  The curling of the peppers are unique to me- I can’t wait until they turn red- they are going to be very pretty to look at.

I have plenty of serranos- and in fact, I have no shortage of hot peppers at all.  Salsa making is going to be wonderful this year with all these delicious specimens to add to salsa!

And then a few more tomatoes.  Some Green Zebras because I love them.  I know a lot of people just don’t like them, but I love the grassy/citrus flavor they have, I love the way they look, and I love how they always, always produce tomatoes- even under the harshest conditions.

And finally, just because Minnesota has already been eating his, here is a picture of my very green Black Cherry tomatoes.  There are quite a few on the plant, so I can’t wait for them to ripen!

Overall, the garden is doing well.  I think we’ve learned a lesson though about using the free compost from our city… namely, that it’s not so great.  The city makes the compost from yard waste that people drop off- and apparently, they don’t get it hot enough, because we have so many weeds!  I am certain the abundance of quack grass and purslane and dozens of other weeds is from this compost.  The quantity of weeds is directly proportionate to how much compost went in each bed.  So the bed that has a ton of compost has a ton of weeds.  The bed that got very little compost has very little weeds.

Fortunately, we have our own compost going, and it’s looking fabulous already.  We’re also NOT putting the weeds into the compost bin- those will get taken to the city waste site for their compost.

Another lesson learned or remembered: I don’t really like Mesclun salad mixes.  Every year I plant them, and then every year I’m disappointed.  I don’t care for a lot of the bitter greens that are mixed in, and it just isn’t my go-to for salad.  Also, because they grow so close together, as they grow, the underneath becomes prime real estate for slugs, so I think I’m just not going there anymore.  I’ll just plant regular old romaine type lettuces and be happy.

Also, no arugula.  Ever. Oh my, all this time I’ve felt like I’ve really been missing out on this wonderful green that all the chefs use and everyone raves about.  Yuck! I did not like it at all, so I will not be growing it again.  It may be that if it’s grown in cooler weather it’s more tasty, but I happily ripped this bitter invader out of the garden today.

Mizuna is a winner though.  This lighter mustard green is delicious and seemingly doesn’t ever plan on bolting.

Glimpses

I took my camera out to the garden today to snap a few pictures.  We’re in a happy place with the garden- I feel so much better now with the fences up around them.  Every day I would go out and dread finding something else missing or decimated- now, I know the critters are not in them, so it’s a real pleasure going out to the beds.

This first picture is of cucumber blossoms.  I have quite a few blossoms, and have just learned how to hand pollinate, so I will be keeping an eye out for female blossoms in need of pollination.

Next, I have a new picture of the mystery pepper.  The peppers are getting quite big, which means they are not the tabasco I first thought they might be.  Nor are they any variety of bird chile- they’re simply too big.  If they weren’t growing pointed up, I would say hot wax, so I am now thinking that we have a cross-breed here.  Sure would be nice to know what it is though.

These next peppers are fascinating me.  These are the Bulgarian Carrot Pepper that I got from Seed Saver’s Exchange. Woops! So I totally lied there! I just consulted my map and it would appear that these are my Cascabella peppers, not the Bulgarian Carrots, which are on the opposite side of that bed.  I’m confused though, because I grew Cascabellas last year (from the same seed packet!) and they were definitely a round pepper- not a pointy pepper.  The plants themselves are a much lighter yellow-green than any other pepper plants- and the peppers are this pale creamy shade of yellow.  And they are abundant, so I’m very happy and very excited to watch these little guys grow!

And then we have some tomato action!  First up are a few Roma tomatoes.

Next we have a Cherokee Purple.

And a Green Zebra.

And Purple Russians!

There are quite a few other tomatoes growing, and blossoms as well.  The hot peppers are the most impressive to me-  I don’t think I’ve ever seen so many baby peppers and blossoms on my hot pepper plants before.  They’re happy here!  It’s going to be a scorcher here the next week, and I expect my tomatoes and peppers will thrive in the heat.  I went out today and fertilized, and a little later on I’ll give everything a good watering if it looks like it’s not going to rain at all.

All of the beans I replanted have sprouted and are growing great- broccoli has come up, and many of the lettuces have sprouted as well.  The garden grows well, and I’m looking forward to tasting.

Just a Few Hours Changes Everything

I posted on Friday about my garden observations and plans.  A short while later- no more than 2 hours- I went out to harvest my greens for dinner.  I stopped in horror when I realized that there was a rabbit IN my garden that had the bird netting.  He dashed out the back, getting caught in the netting before sprinting away.  All I could do was sit there and stare- what the heck! I mean, I knew the rabbits were getting on the garden beds- they ate the beans.  But this was a whole new level- he had to work at getting underneath that bird netting.

And in those 2 hours he ate all my broccoli, my dinosaur kale, and several lettuce patches.   I was livid.  Further exploration of the garden showed me that two of my hot pepper plants have also been nibbled on. They’re still alive, and should bear fruit, but that was the last straw.  I spent the rest of Friday going out to the yard about every 30 minutes or so to scare away any rabbits that came near.

That meant that Saturday was toast.  We were to spend all day Saturday in the yard building and installing fences, and I had replanting to do as well.   I replanted all of the beans, plus added a few squares where peas had originally been planted.  I replanted the eaten lettuce patches, as well as the dinosaur kale and broccoli.  I’m not sure there’s enough time now for broccoli, but since it is a smaller variety, there’s a shot.

So here’s what the gardens look like now:

They actually look really nice all fenced in and freshly weeded.  The mulch in between the beds is actually making them look a bit classy!

This is an updated picture of bed number one.   All the naked spots have been replanted with seed.  I am thankful that the rabbits had the timing they had to decimate the gardens.  Just a few more weeks and I wouldn’t have been able to replant.

As we attached fence panels yesterday I did find a few new surprises as well.

There are two good sized bell peppers on this plant! I think this is my ACE pepper square.  Always reliable for me- I was super excited to see how big these are!

Moving over to the hot pepper bed brought a whole new mystery to the table.  Meaning, these peppers on these plants are supposed to be habaneros.

They’re not, and we have no idea what they are.They’re a lighter yellowish green, and who knows.  They’re also strangely growing pointed up- there are only a small handful of peppers that do that.   Hopefully as they grow we’ll get more clues.  Right now I’m leaning towards a Bird Chili- whether African or Asian, who knows.  And it could also be a mutant cross I suppose.  We got these peppers from a vendor at the farmer’s market, so there’s really no way to find out what the possibilities actually are.

Gardening.  It’s a never-ending adventure.

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