Posts Tagged ‘garden’

Eggplants and Tomatoes

September 2nd, 2009

Hansel Eggplants

Last week I had what I would consider a great harvest of the Hansel variety of eggplant.  Unfortunately through my inexperience it looks like I have let a lot of my plants get to dry and several of the eggplants for this week have been affected.  Hopefully by the time I harvest them there will be a little rebound, just over half of the plants right now are still good, the other half may not make it.  I’m not sure why that is it must have something to do with where they are placed in the garden since they have all been getting the same amount of moisture.

green tomatoes

I know I and a few other people have been waiting a while to pick some ripe tomatoes.  The only thing about all the green tomatoes is it sounds like I’m not the only one that is struggling with field ripening this year.

Where Is Time

July 22nd, 2009

Between weeding, harvesting, washing, packaging, my other job and other commitments there seems to be very little extra time in the days.  And yet things progress in the garden.  Several of the crops are now starting to flower or fruit and if everything continues to grow it could be a bountiful August.  In fact harvesting may become an issue and I’m already thinking of ways to harvest and sell produce on another day of the week (my other day job prevents me from going to the other markets during the week).

eggplants flowering

Eggplants have started to flower and some plants even have small fruits forming.  I’ve got three different varieties on the go; the classic Dusky and the new varieties Hansel and Gretel.  Gretel’s are supposed to be white egg looking fruits, I’ll be interested in seeing them.

great uncle george

Although he wasn’t a huge fan of me taking pictures this is my great Uncle George who came out and helped do some weeding last week (which as you can see I could use).  The row of beans he weeded is the cleanest section in the entire garden, and remains so since he picked out all the purslane and dug up and pulled all the quack grass roots.

Trial by Fire

June 9th, 2009

 hail and onions

 This week made me wonder how anybody managed to survive growing their own sustenance.  Here is a little rant about what I am trying to overcome: 

After a good weekend (a week ago) of planting and garden maintenance… 

Monday night started things off with a frost that froze over 50 percent of the tomatoe plants I had set out (even after I had raced out and covered them all). 

The lettuce I planted basically failed to germinate (not exactly sure why; maybe to cold).   I’ll be planting more again soon.

The spinach came up in patches but I don’t have enough to take to market (plus something is eating parts of the leave, I think it’s the ants?)

The kale I planted had come up but got decimated by flea beetles and there are now no signs of growth.

The broad beans that were looking very healthy got struck down by cutworms.  The worms ate right through most of the plant stems just below the surface.  I’m not sure how many will survive even after I spent a full day digging in the soil and “removing” every cutworm I could find.

The bees have been attacked by ants and are under serious stress right now.  When I get a chance I’ll try and move them somewhere else.

Average night time temperatures are around 3-5 degrees with daytime highs barely reaching the 20′s making for slow growth and what appears to be poor germination (for me at least).

And to finish all that off it hailed; twice; yesterday; the first real moisture to come from the sky in about a month (and even that wasn’t very much).

That was the bad and ugly.  The good is I took one more step up the learning curve. 

That is farming.