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Saturday, December 18, 2010

I think the gardening year is officially over.



I picked some radishes about a week ago and had some radicchio surviving. But since then we've hit zero degrees and has consistently been very cold, so I think that's it till spring. I didn't have time to cover my spinach and garlic with leaves, however we have about six inches of snow and ice which will serve perfectly well to protect them. It is when they are exposed and not covered that they suffer. With the bad weather I've focused some creativity on some art projects. i made and installed this wall fountain. It will have a switch, a little light and a circulating pump. I used  Moroccan Tadelakt plaster.

Sunday, December 5, 2010

My new seeds are here.

I ordered Corno di Toro Rosso (Red bulls horn) seeds from
Ohio Heirloom Seeds, and they sent me two free packets. The same pepper in yellow and one called Quadrato Giallo D'Asti, which I suspect is a yellow bell pepper. For tomatoes, I'm going with Big Zac ( current worlds largest tomato record holder),Radiator Charlies Mortgage lifter,Beefsteak, and Aunt Gerties Gold. I have a friend who has a greenhouse and he said he'd start the seeds for me. the Italian peppers are supposed to be very prolific. I'm tired of peppers that produce 3-4 nice ones about September 1st. I'm going to try to plant the peppers in a block 10 inches apart. I think maybe with the plants too far apart there is a pollination problem.
Corno di Toro Rosso
This Italian pepper goes by the common name “Red Bull’s Horn”. Fruit turn a stunning red when ripe and have a long, curved, tapered shape. Fruit are 6-10 inches long x 1 ½ inches wide at shoulder. Please be aware that these peppers can have a mild spiciness, though they are still regarded as sweet peppers. A traditional favorite of Italy. 75 seeds minimum.
Open-Pollinated, 72 days from transplant.


Click on Image to Orde

Monday, November 22, 2010

Purple Broccoli

Bloomsdale Winter Spinach

World class Lettuce

Hoop Tunnels

Thursday, October 21, 2010

Swiss Chard

Green Onions- Scallions

Digging in leaves.

Here is a picture of my fall garden October 20th.

Saturday, October 9, 2010

End of the year produce

It was supposed to frost last week, (which it didn't) so I picked the most vulnerable produce. Its been in the 80's since. I picked the last of the Purple Majesty Green Beans . They did really well for me. As the weather turned cooler the Blue lake quality seemed to increase and the purple decreased. Also I dug my purple potatoes, which were a fingerling variety.

Double dug beds

I have about 110 feet of three foot wide raised beds, all double dug, composted and ready for the spring.This is where I grew my corn.I located some Griselle Grey French Shallots, and a Garlic called Red Janice. I intend to plant them in this area  this week.
Griselle Grey Shallots

Blackberry Plants

A friend gave me five little Blackberry plants  last spring. This is what they did the first year. They are expensive to buy, so don't think you need lots of plants. I planted them about three feet apart. You really need to trellis them and stay on top of them or they would grow everywhere.

Composting Facility Davenport, Iowa

Compost facility

Wednesday, September 22, 2010

A good illustration of French Intensive Gardening.

I am experimenting with intensive planting  of Cabbage. I would rather have smaller heads but more in number. Next year I might only plant the mini size cabbage. They have a great taste and are much better sized for small family's. They are delicious steamed with a little butter on top. To the right is a bed of Mesclun lettuce. I try to have as little bare soil as possible showing. It's nice to always have some plants or seed to put in any available space.

Rabbits defeated? Pvc pipe and garden netting.

I think rabbits have been eating my Radicchio.I have cut off some 1/2 inch PVC pipe about twelve inches long. I drive these stakes in the ground, and then take five foot sections of 3/8 PVC pipe, which I insert in the stakes. It makes a nice hoop support.Then I covered it with garden mesh netting. this should keep the cabbage butterfly's out and the rabbits at bay. It seems the rabbits and ground hogs especially like the following: Radicchio, Red Beets, Romaine lettuce, and Brussels Sprouts. I think I planted 12 Brussels sprouts and one has survived. I think I know how to fend them off next year.

Monday, September 20, 2010

My 1st Cucurbitis maximus- 45 pound pumpkin

I was hoping for something a little larger. But still this is the largest pumpkin I've ever grown. The variety said it was Cucurbitis Maximus.We picked it yesterday.http://www.guy-sports.com/humor/stories/strange_pumpkin.htm

Thursday, September 16, 2010

Starting to double dig a new row with compost.

In the red wheelbarrow is the dirt I removed from the raised bed. You can see the trench. In the other wheelbarrow is the compost that I will fill in the trench with.As I go along I throw compost in and on the dirt in the row. I'm going to later on  re-double dig and fill the trench next time with leaves. They have just started to fall here. Last year the city was  baling them with a hay baler into 600 pound bales. I'm hoping to get several next month.

Mustard Greens and Evergreen bunching onions.

Yesterday I scattered some Mustard green seeds ans some Evergreen bunching onion seed. I think if it rains there is still time for the Mustard. I also want to see if the Evergreen onions will over winter here. The note on the package from Burpee refers to them as being perennials. Well see what they do.

These are the corn pancakes (Cachapas) from my corn

Venezuelan Cachapas grown in the U.S.Venezuelan Cachapas grown in the U.S.
This pancake is made of ground fresh corn,sugar,oil and a little salt. The Cachapa is the real story behind Venezuelan oil. In Venezuela they have restaurants called Cachaperas. They specialize in the pancakes, delicious white cheese, open pit barbecued grass fed beef, and Batidas-iced tropical fruit drinks. This is my last untill next year. I haven't found any American corn that works and tastes the same.

Wednesday, September 15, 2010

Double Digging my raised beds with compost.

I have started preparing my raised beds for next spring. I might yet try to plant some mustard greens. This is where my corn was grown. I found out that in about three hours I can double dig a twenty by 3 foot raised bed. I dig a trench and then fill it  pretty much to the top with compost. Then you move over about twelve inches and dig a new trench and throw the dirt on top of the compost. So the whole bed is sort of floating on twelve inches of compost. At the bottom of the trench, before you add the compost, you take a potato fork and push it all the way. Then rock it back and forth to break up the subsoil. I also had to use a mattock/hoe. The subsoil is almost pure clay, and hasn't been broken up in several thousand years. The French Market gardeners who invented the intensive gardening system used to use horse manure and bedding. They would fill the trench and tromp it down every time they would work there beds. The horse manure heats up, providing bottom heat, and allowing the gardener to start his garden earlier in the spring and continue into early winter. They also used wooden frame sides and windows on top to have miniature green houses. This way in their intensive French gardening system they could have high plant populations and maximum production . In the 17 and 1800's near Paris they had a highly developed production system.

Turnips- Purple Top

I planted these July 30th. They are in a double dug bed with lots of compost. I think I am going to have some really nice Purple TopTurnips. They are about as big as a quarter. They will really grow the next five or six weeks. They love sunny days and cool nights.They are much easier to grow in the fall and taste much better too. They are at there best in November.To eat them we peel the skin off with a knife, slice, and sprinkle a little salt. They are a delicious snack.

Giant Pumpkin Cucurbita Maxima

This  pumpkin is only about ten days old. It is still growing. I have one other pumpkin that turned out nice. We'll weigh it later. I guess the trick is to dig a very big hole and fill it with compost. Your supposed to do it in the fall and then plant your seeds or plants there in the spring. This variety has been very insect resistant, and is still sending out new growth It sends out new roots as shoots and has traveled ten feet from where it started 
originally.

These are some of the roots left over from my Venezuelan corn.

The plants grew to be thirteen feet tall, and none of them blew over and lodged. They have these incredible root systems. I need a spade to dig them out, they are almost like tree roots. The corn is really kind of primitive with some of the tassels growing out of the end of the cobs.

Sunday, September 12, 2010

Possum

I caught a little baby possum in the live trap. He looked pathetic so I just turned him loose there on the spot. I don't think they do any damage to the plants. I've been sending 7 bundles of Basil to the farmers market each week.

Thursday, September 9, 2010

Venezuelan Corn

I was cutting down my corn plants and found another 30 ears of corn. I thought I had it all picked. I'll try to get a picture of the Cachapa pancakes I'm going to make with them.

Wednesday, September 8, 2010

All the basic tools you need to garden.

A rake, a potato fork, a spade ( I like a tile rounded spade.) and a sprinkling can. I probably should have added a scoop shovel.

September 8th. I planted green onions/scallions today.

They used to call them winter onions (Winterheckenzweibel). It used to be you could plant them in the fall and they would be ready to go in the spring. With some varieties they have bred this ability out of them We'll see what happens with these. On September 15 I'm planning on planting Bloomsdale Winter Spinach. This variety should get a good start and then take off early in the spring. I broadcast ( randomly scattered)  the seeds, raked them in, patted them down with my hands ( for capillary action and better germination). Then covered them with burlap, and watered them with my sprinkler can. You can buy the burlap at home centers and sewing stores. I use it over and over.
The onions are Cipollotto Da Mazzi, I purchased them from Seeds of Italy.

A wind storm this weekend wiped out my pole beans.

We had winds of more than 30 mph. Next year I'll have to anchor them better. It's a shame they were really starting to produce. They were Kentucky Wonder, which is a Roma style bean. Fatter and meatier than bush beans.

Cilantro

I think I planted this Cilantro/Chinese Parsley July 30th.
It's pretty easy to grow just broadcast it and rake it about 1/4 of an inch deep. You can plant it all spring and summer long. look for any available space in the garden and do succession plantings.

Friday, September 3, 2010

Imperator carrots

I think they did pretty good for a first year garden. We won a first place ribbon with them at the fair. I think the secret to carrots is to have a seed bed dug really deep.

Black Beauty Eggplant

Purple Potatoes

Basil september 3rd.

A visitor I had last night.

I don't treat all of the visitors to the garden this poorly. One less raccoon to dump over the garbage bin, and eat plants.

Tuesday, August 31, 2010

Chinese Cabbage, and Radicchio.

I have some Chinese cabbage coming along.These were planted July 1st, You can see the Radicchio next to them that the groundhogs ate to the ground. It looks like they are recovering.

Some scallions I'm experimenting with.

I planted these scallions July 1st, variety Cipollotto do Mazzi. I don't know if they'll get big enough to eat this fall or not. I've never grown them before. I suspect they are best planted in the spring, and then picked in the fall in October and November. Some varieties survive the winter till spring, and some don't. I've never grown these before, so we'll see what happens. You can see the cracks in the soil. It's not really because the soil is dry, but because I have high clay content and not enough organic matter content.

Some Mesculin I started about ten days ago.

Mesculin is a mixture of Endive, leaf lettuces, Arrugula, Frisee, and maybe some Radicchio. It should make some nice salads in October and November.

The finished bed. Planted with Mesculin Salad Greens. Covered with Burlap.

This is the bed I dug up and planted with Mesculin salad greens the 29th of August. The package says ready in 45 days. I sprinkled the seeds on top and raked them lightly with a leaf rake, patted them in with my hands. They are covered with Burlap until they sprout to give them better germination.

Start a new trench and move the soil over the top of the compost.

Start a second trench and throw the soil on top of the compost. After the bed is dug in this manner, I dig several inches of compost into the first 12 inches of soil. Fluff it up with a potato fork, rake it and plant it.

Filling the trench with compost.

Loosen the soil at the bottom of the trench.

Break up the bottom of the trench with a potato fork. Then leave this layer undisturbed. Try not to step on top of your bed because you will compact it. You can place a piece of plywood to step on, on top of your bed.

Double digging