Monday, May 7, 2012

Lett Us Discuss Lettuce

We've got tons of lettuce! Sounds familiar, kind of like this time last year. We have been giving lettuce to neighbors, coworkers, and Facebook friends. A few lettuce plants have started going to flower, and have already gotten the associated bitter taste. The spinach is on its way to reproduction mode as well. Our collard greens are doing amazing. We've got some leaves that would make any grocery produce manager proud. It is strawberry harvest time. It's started slow, but with a lot of potential energy. The last few days have yielded two berries each day.  There are hundreds of unripe berries sitting under the canopy. I've got a feeling we are going to be eating strawberries with every meal in about a week. The blueberries are slowly swelling, but they are still a shade of green. The asparagus harvest was less productive than we hoped. We had a few bites of spears, but there simply wasn't enough energy in their roots to fill our bellies.  Most plants are  doing very well. We should get a big tomato harvest this year. We have some new plants we are trying this year including: tomatillos, leeks, sunchokes, zuchino rampicante, and wonderberry. For the first time, it looks like we are going to get a grape harvest this year.  The grape vines are over 6' high.

Did you know that you can cut the tops off carrots, and the bottoms off celery, leeks and onions and they'll grow into new plants? We've been growing some plants from these veggie scraps and they are doing very well! This method grows a full size productive plant faster than any seed will.

I've noticed some powdery mildew lurking in the Bee Balm. I was hoping we would get most of the way through the Summer before that awful fungus showed up. The Bee Balm is near the house, and is in the shade for a good part of the morning letting the morning dew stay for a while.

Tuesday, February 7, 2012

2012 growing season begins now.

The greenhouse is in full swing. We've got tons of greens growing. We have as much Bok Choi as we can possibly eat. This week we moved some seedlings into pots in the greenhouse. The seedlings were tomatoes, tomatillos, peppers, squash, basil, wonderberry, eggplant and collards. We had started them in early January. We planned on planting them directly into the greenhouse soil, however, we heard some bad news. My aunt (Who is letting us use her property for the greenhouse) has decided she wants to start getting her house ready for sale. She wants her yard back to grass sometime this year. We decided to put the seedlings into pots so we can move them to our back yard/raised bed garden in late April. By then, the plants will surely be full sized patio plants. The squash plants won't be movable, since they are viners.  That's ok, we'll probably have some hand-pollinated fruits by then.

I've jotted down a list of some of the supplies Deb and I have already purchased this year:

Drip irrigation system
     irrigation timer
     Limestone
     Dr Earth
     bacillus thuringiensis
     organic fertilizer spikes(on sale)
     yellow sticky traps
     ladybugs (for gh)
     azomite
     cocoa coir
     heat mat
     plastic labels
     useless metal labels
     rootrainers seed starter

Today I decided to put a second layer of plastic over the greenhouse. It made a noticeable difference while I was there. The temperature started rising fast. We have some cold nights ahead of us in the 10 day forecast. It should drop into the mid 20s. I'm sure the 900 watt space heater could keep the frost away with a single layer of polyethylene, however, the temperature should stay about 50 at night for the young tender seedlings. We have a min/max thermometer. Last night the temperature got down to 45 degrees inside the greenhouse with an outside temperature of 31. I'll check it tomorrow to see what the double plastic does.