Uncategorized

...now browsing by category

 

Rogue plants

Sunday, May 17th, 2015

This is the third or fourth year we’ve planted in most of our beds. As such, we often have odd rogue plants come up from previous year’s ungerminated seeds. I always hate to pull these up, and so our beds sometimes end up to be an odd mix of things.

Last year, we had several random garlics coming up all over, and so I transplanted them all into one “rogue garlic” bed. We’ve been harvesting our regular garlic this week and so I decided to dig up a few of the rogue ones to see how they were. The greens didn’t look very robust, but the garlics looks great. We will have a bigger store of garlic this year thanks to these.

Lettuce

Sunday, March 29th, 2015

I don’t often grow head lettuce, but this is so beautiful.

Spring has fully arrived here, and everything is growing like wild.

 

Maintenance

Thursday, March 12th, 2015

The weather is harsh here, and it really tears apart things that are outside for extended periods. This results in lots of maintenance work, such as thing week’s project of reconstructing the platform that our water tower sits on.

DSC_1409

Brad noticed a couple weeks ago that the wood planks that sit on the metal frame and hold up the tank were looking pretty bad.

So we started by investigating possible materials to use. I at first thought plastic beams like the ones used for decking, but apparently they aren’t structurally suitable. We then thought about steel plating, but it is very expensive and there were concerns about rust. In the end, we just decided to stay with wood, but to use treated lumber and to coat it first with roofing sealer. (The 2×6’s that were used previously were raw, untreated wood.)

DSC_1415

boards painted

After we got the boards and got them painted, Brad figured out a process to replace the boards without removing the tank. Basically, it involved first emptying the tank as much as possible. Then he tilted the tank a bit, slid out each old board, and slid in new ones. It was lots of trips up and down two levels of ladders.
DSC_1422

DSC_1426

halfway done

At first, I wasn’t sure this really needed to be done, but once we started on it, I could see how bad the old wood really was. It was probably just a matter of time before the whole thing collapsed, and what a mess that would have been.

DSC_1423

warped, cracked, and breaking wood

DSC_1431

scraps of wood after removal

And here’s the final result:

DSC_1433

PS If you’re wondering if all this moving of the tank affected any of the plumbing, it did. Small crack in a pipe meant we had to turn off all the water, drain the tank and fix it. It’s always something!

Feb. 26 – First asparagus

Sunday, March 1st, 2015

Last Thursday, the year’s first asparagus came up, and this post is to document that.

asparagus

It won’t be long before strawberries and artichokes are here. And then everything else. Yay for spring!

linen closet

Wednesday, February 25th, 2015

The linen closet is finished and I took some pictures as it progressed.

linen-closet-00s

First the inside fit as best we could into the existing space.

linen-closet-01s

Then we added the facing on the edges and the shelves

linen-closet-02s

More facing on the shelves

Fitting the doors

Fitting the doors

linen-closet-05s

Ready to finish

 

Installing the finished doors

Installing the finished doors

Done

Done

linen-closet-finished2s

The big view

 

Garden plan for 2015

Monday, February 9th, 2015

It’s finally starting to warm up here, which has prompted me to get serious about planning this year’s garden. Here’s the preliminary plan:

garden map 2015

Not dramatically different from what we’ve grown in the past with a few exceptions. Peppers are new. (I’ve tried them in the past with no luck.) Same with eggplant. The leeks are new, but are already in the ground. (I got some from a neighbor.) Ground cherries are also a new addition. If you’re not familiar with them, they are are nightshades, and the fruit resembles cherry tomatoes but they grow in a husk likeĀ  tomatillos. The ones I got are the poba, and they taste like pineapple.

I’m mostly planning to grow lettuce and greens in our cold frames, but I may sneak some into some other beds as well. Same with radishes.

We’re looking forward to spring asparagus soon!

Microgreens

Sunday, February 8th, 2015

Here is the progression of my microgreens over approximately 14 days. This week we eat some.

microgreens

A new project

Friday, January 23rd, 2015

I’m attempting to grow microgreens. (This idea came after a very lovely bed of lettuce outside got munched down. I’ve replanted, but can’t do without greens for 6 weeks. The weather here is well below freezing at night, and things outside grow slowly in the cold.) Microgreens are supposed to grow as fast as two weeks.) We visited a farm that grew large amounts of this, and I’ve had it in the back of my mind ever since.

We adapted an old piece of roofing to make a tray to grow these in. I’m starting with varieties that are supposed to be easy and fast-growing like arugula, cress, and broccoli. The seeds sprouted within two days.

Stay tuned for more on how this goes.

tray

Beans

Saturday, January 3rd, 2015

This week I finally finished shelling all the dry beans from the garden this year.

20150103-212807.jpg

The two bags on the right are white cannelini beans, my favorites. The others are Bisbee black cow peas. As you can see, a few beds of these seem to be going back to regular light brown cow peas. (All of these beans were seed saved and are on their 2nd or 3rd year.)

These are big gallon ziploc bags. I’m not sure we can eat this much beans in one year, but one of their attributes is that they last.

The sky is falling!

Friday, January 2nd, 2015

Two days ago a big storm system swept through the southwest. We were supposed to get a couple inches of snow. We got a little rain and barely a dusting of snow. Not very exciting.

Yesterday, there was no precipitation forecast. Then I woke up to this.

Currently, we have about 4 inches of snow. This is the most we’ve had in the 6 years we’ve lived here. And it’s still snowing! (The weather forecasters seem to have no clue. The forecast is getting updated every hour or so for the snow we’ve received so far. This doesn’t exactly seem like a “forecast.”)

One of the interesting things is all the wildlife I saw while I was walking around in the snow this morning. In particular, there were tons of rabbits. We often see a couple, but nothing like this. I’m not sure if they were drawn closer to shelter or if it was just easier to see them against the snow. All the tracks were pretty fascinating too.

It has been very cold this week so I don’t expect this to melt soon. It would be nice to see the sun again though.

More pictures here.