This is a journal of my vegetable gardens. Skippy was my first dog and he thought the garden was his, even though I did all the work. Now Suzie and Charley follow in his footsteps. We're located near Boston (USDA zone 6A). I have a community plot, a backyard vegetable garden, fruit trees, berry bushes, chickens, and bees. I use sustainable organic methods and do my best to grow all of my family's vegetables myself.
peas planted!
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Sunday, September 30, 2007
an eggplant that was
My Mom saw this eggplant in my garden this evening and asked if she could pick it for our dinner. Sometimes I think things look too nice to pick. But what can you say to your mother? It was very nice grilled.
topic: eggplant
Saturday, September 29, 2007
lettuce and radish are growing
I haven't picked lettuce from my garden in months. But finally its growing. Our nights have cooled off. Days too. I planted 6 or 8 varieties a week or so ago. My garden looks like spring with all the little lettuce sprouts. Even my radish have sprouted. I also have a few rows of greens (escarole and arugula) that I planted mid summer and never really grew, until now. My garden will be filling the lettuce bowl soon - I hope.
just another pretty weed
A little daisy fleabane (Erigeron annuus) has volunteered in my garden between the broccolis and kale. Its a pretty wildflower that's native to our area.
wildflowers, weeds, invasives and natives
Friday, September 28, 2007
fall broccoli
Thursday, September 27, 2007
first kale harvest
I'm so pleased to get a good harvest of kale. Midsummer, my kale leaves were filled with holes from the green caterpillars of the white cabbage butterfly. To holey for me to eat. I've had the plants covered with garden fabric since them. Now the leaves are very nice. I sauteed them with garlic, then added water and blanched about 5 minutes. Very tasty. I've read they are sweeter after a frost so I'm looking forward to eating the rest of the leaves this winter.
The variety is called Dinosaur Kale. Seeds were from Seeds of Change.
Brassicaceae
harvests from my vegetable gardens
Kale (Brassica oleracea, Acephala Group)
Wednesday, September 26, 2007
full harvest moon
Tuesday, September 25, 2007
dahlia
Sunday, September 23, 2007
first day of autumn
Saturday, September 22, 2007
oxheart carrots
Friday, September 21, 2007
fall sowing
My fall seeds are all in the ground now. I guess these are the last seeds I'll plant this year (except for the garlic). Sad.
I planted Sparkler and Round Black Spanish radish seeds. Also, shell peas and snap peas (probably too late for these). And lettuce (Bibb, Black-Seeded Simpson, Merveille de Four Seasons, Quattro Stagione, and Prizehead) and escarole (Natacha, Blonda, and Full Heart Batavian).
S&P
Thursday, September 20, 2007
autumnal equinox
I thought fall would begin on September 21 this year, but I was wrong. I've corrected my sidebar count down meter. The equinox is at about 9:30 am on September 23. That means an extra 2 days of summer that I didn't know about. Three cheers!
Wednesday, September 19, 2007
fall lettuce bed
bigger not always better
Here's an article I found at Kitchen Gardener's about high yield commercial vegetable varieties that are getting bigger and less healthy.
A recent study they cite found that "the more a tomato weighs, the lower its concentration of lycopene, a natural anti-cancer chemical that makes tomatoes red. There is also less vitamin C and beta carotene, a nutrient linked to vitamin A." Also, "higher-yield crops decrease the concentrations of cancer-fighting chemicals and anti-toxins -- known as phytonutrients or phytochemicals."
Well, I'm growing some really tiny veggies: carrots, garlic, etc. But I still would like to grow a BIG pumpkin.
Pumpkin -- Cucurbita spp.
A recent study they cite found that "the more a tomato weighs, the lower its concentration of lycopene, a natural anti-cancer chemical that makes tomatoes red. There is also less vitamin C and beta carotene, a nutrient linked to vitamin A." Also, "higher-yield crops decrease the concentrations of cancer-fighting chemicals and anti-toxins -- known as phytonutrients or phytochemicals."
Well, I'm growing some really tiny veggies: carrots, garlic, etc. But I still would like to grow a BIG pumpkin.
Pumpkin -- Cucurbita spp.
Tuesday, September 18, 2007
end of the summer
With only two days left to summer, here's a late afternoon shot of my garden from the upstairs window.
Today I removed the row covers from the broccoli and kale since I haven't seen any white butterflies around in a while. The plants look pretty good. The extra broccoli seedlings that I didn't cover were eaten almost to nothing. I'll eventually post photos of these two.
Also today, I got out my hoe and prepared some soil for my fall lettuce. I have some seedlings I planted several weeks ago. Tomorrow I hope to plant these and my last seeds of the year.
A full size version of this aerial photo is here. You can see all the plants close up.
aerial views of my home vegetable garden
Monday, September 17, 2007
dill seeds
Time for seed collecting. I have some little plastic baggies I'm saving them in. So far I've collected: morning glories, watermelon, Capucijner peas, three types of beans, garlic cloves and several types of wildflowers seeds. I have a few rows of lettuce that are starting to bloom now and I'll see if I can find their seeds later.
S&P
culinary herbs
Saturday, September 15, 2007
Dad's pumpkin
My parents have a beautiful pumpkin ripening in their garden. A real nice one! The vine is crawling out across the lawn and my dad carefully mows around it. It looks like they will be able to make a nice jack-o-lantern for Halloween. Or a pumpkin pie.
I have bad news about my pumpkin flower - it did not set. Oh well. :(
(My little Olympus Stylus 720SW camera has a lot of trouble with the combination of orange and green - pumpkin and grass. It does great with the blues of water scenery. I've tried hard to adjust the colors to look natural. Here's the original. Aaargg.)
Pumpkin -- Cucurbitaceae spp.
my dad's garden
Friday, September 14, 2007
tgif
Thursday, September 13, 2007
chile peppers
Wednesday, September 12, 2007
a female pumpkin blossom!
Finally a female pumpkin flower has opened on my giant pumpkin vines! I'm sooo excited. But am keeping my fingers crossed that the fruit sets. This flower bloomed three days ago - on Sunday. There were lots of bumble bees around, so I am hoping they pollinated this flower. Yesterday the flower had closed and the pumpkin still looked good. We'll see.
I was surprised to see how different the female flower looks from all the male ones (the plants have many of these). Very fancy!
"The female flower contains an ovary that is inferior, usually with a single locule with 1 to 3 placentas. Ovules and seeds vary from one to many in each fruit. The male flower has 1 to 5 stamens with 3 being average. Botanically, the fruit is a pepo, a fruit type in which the ovary wall is fused with the receptacle tissue to form a hard rind." from UGA Hort Dept.
pumpkin vine
Pumpkin -- Cucurbitaceae spp.
Tuesday, September 11, 2007
juicy sweet watermelon
This melon was grown by Belmont CSA. A beautiful dark green round fruit that I bought last week at the Farmer's Market. It tastes as good as it looks. Sweet and juicy. I didn't ask the variety, but it looks like an heirloom Sugar Baby Watermelon. I saved all of the seeds and am looking forward to a nice patch of these in my garden next year!
Watermelon (Citrullus lanatus (Thunb.) Matsum & Nakai, family Cucurbitaceae)
CSA (Community Supported Agriculture)
Monday, September 10, 2007
fading summer
It looks like summer is winding down. The seed heads are drying on my zinnias. Summer crops are fading. Even though the fall crops are perking up, the garden has a different feel to it now. Its time to gather the harvest and save seeds for next year.
"summer's lease hath all too short a date" Shakespeare
I haven't been doing much in the garden this week. I picked lots of tomatoes, cucumbers and chile peppers of course. And this weekend I planted some radish seeds in the sunniest spot in my garden - an heirloom variety called Black Round Spanish. I'm hoping I can get the roots to grow properly this time, even though my last two plantings failed. I'm carefully tending four varieties of lettuce seedlings that I planted indoors two weeks ago. Once it cools down, I'll transplant them into the garden. My fall pinto beans and peas are growing well without my help. But I've been spraying my pumpkin and squash leaves for powdery mildew with a Safers sulphate spray. The squashes continue to produce fruit, but the leaves are heavily mildewed. I've read that mildew is because of too much shade, a constant challenge in my yard. I also continue to water the garden, all the while checking the skies for signs of rain clouds. We are having very dry weather in the Boston area that is close to being a serious drought.
Sunday, September 09, 2007
winner of the too-tall-tomato vine contest!!!
I was really impressed with The Tiniest Tomato of the Year at May Dreams Gardens and at The Gardeners Anonymous Blog. Wow! I've always wanted to win a contest, so I'm entering myself in the Tallest Tomatoes Vines contest and am officially declaring myself the winner! It seems there has never been a contest before for tall tomato vines, but nevertheless, there is one now.
What clued me in to my unusually tall vines was when my neighbor stopped by. He looked over the garden fence and said "What's with the tomato plants?" I hadn't noticed how tall they were getting.
So on September 3 (Labor Day) I got out the ladder and measured my tomatoes. I recorded a full 9 feet! 112 inches! If you have tall tomato vines too, please send in your heights. Of course to win this contest, you will need to have measurements recorded on September 3rd. Yes, it's a rigged contest. But I would still love to hear that others have outrageously tall vines too.
My winning vine is a New Girl tomato plant. I think the trick to growing tall plants is to plant them too close together. I have squeezed 20 plants into a space of about 7 x 5 feet. That's 1.75 sq ft per plant. I faithfully remove all suckers until the plants are about 5 feet tall. They have very good soil with lots of compost and fertilizer and are watered regularly. The location has sun from about 10:30 am on.
My tomatoes usually continue to grow into October, so this plant may grow another foot or two taller.
(As a footnote, I notice that Wikipedia cites the following tomato information: The heaviest tomato ever was one of 3.51 kg (7 lb 12 oz), of the cultivar 'Delicious', grown by Gordon Graham of Edmond, Oklahoma in 1986. The largest tomato plant grown was of the cultivar 'Sungold' and reached 19.8 m (65 ft) length, grown by Nutriculture Ltd (UK) of Mawdesley, Lancashire, UK, in 2000. These don't count for my contest, so I still win.)
I think I'll make a little button for my sidebar to say I have won this esteemed honor.
Solanum lycopersicum
photos of Kathy
garden web
A black and yellow garden spider has spun a nice web across my eggplant leaves. In the autumn, I often see these large female garden spiders on their webs waiting for flies. There's another one with a nice web in my tomatoes. I carefully reach around it when picking tomatoes. Spiders give me the willies, so I stay away from them and let them do their job of eating garden pests.
Saturday, September 08, 2007
Skippy pictures
The garden plants are so big and tall that Skippy and I can just hang out under the leaves on the stone path. Its like our own private jungle. We can watch the bees and spiders, listen to the sparrows and Skippy can watch the sidewalk for passing dogs and mailmen.
more pictures of skip
posts about Skippy
pizza with tomato sauce
We have a convenient tomato processor that separates the skins and seeds from tomato juice and pulp. We add quartered tomatoes to the hopper and crank them through. The skin and seeds come out one side and the pulp comes out the other.
We ran about 25 big tomatoes through the tomato machine and make a nice batch of puree, which we simmered about an hour to make a nice sauce for pizza. We used a bit of this and froze the rest in baggies.
Almost everything is better grilled - pizza too! I cheat on the dough and pick up premade from Bertucci's. Then layer on fresh garlic, olive oil, tomato sauce, basil leaves, sliced tomatoes, onions and some salt. Add mozzarella and goat cheese. Grill over a hot hardwood charcoal fire on pizza stones.
Aaahh! Delicious!
Solanum lycopersicum
Skippy's vegetable recipes