A more text based companion blog to my more photo based garden blog at growlettucegrow.wordpress.com. Thanks for visiting.
Tuesday, September 3, 2013
i'm being taken over by okra.
Did you know that once okra starts to come in, if you don't harvest it every day, the fruit will get huge and it will take over your life and your kitchen table.
a new blog, a new look, a new start
Head on over to Grow Lettuce Grow on WordPress to see a more visual based blog regarding life here at Chubby Chicks Farm.
More of the text based info will continue to be posted here.
Lots of links to lead you back and forth no matter where you start.
That's how I am doing it now. A little complicated, but heck, it's my blog and I'll do what I wanna.
Thanks for stopping in.....
More of the text based info will continue to be posted here.
Lots of links to lead you back and forth no matter where you start.
That's how I am doing it now. A little complicated, but heck, it's my blog and I'll do what I wanna.
Thanks for stopping in.....
Sunday, September 1, 2013
Dear Blog, I miss you.......
Dear Blog,
I miss you.
Shall we rekindle the flame and have fun with each other again?
Shall I charge up the digital camera battery?
Shall I dust off my dearest friend film camera and get down to it?
I think I shall.........
I miss you.
Shall we rekindle the flame and have fun with each other again?
Shall I charge up the digital camera battery?
Shall I dust off my dearest friend film camera and get down to it?
I think I shall.........
Monday, January 14, 2013
A few changes.....
with the new year comes new plans for the new house and backyard, and a new direction for this here tiny blog. this morning i changed the web address causing google to think i have deleted my blog, which of course i did not. (with only 8 followers (all of which are totally awesome) i don't see that as a huge problem.) and it deleted a few of my side bar items, which again is ok since i am changing the direction of the blog a little bit. no more 3G project start and stops, and no more weird recipes with no real measurements. instead i will be giving you a peek into my tiny urban yard as i attempt to transform it into a little sustainable farmlette that i christened Chubby Chick Farms, complete with the following....
* CHICKENS!!!!
* worms
* organic veggie and herb gardens
* some edible landscaping in the front yard
* compost for yard waste and chicken manure
* cold frames and mini greenhouses
* a few craft projects thrown in here and there
* and whatever else i can think of........
first on the list is to build a brooder box for the baby chicks i hope to get in the next month or two.
and not to worry, there will be plenty of dog pictures as well. especially when we try to cohabitate the muddy paws gang with the chickens. now that alone is worth staying tuned folks!
* CHICKENS!!!!
* worms
* organic veggie and herb gardens
* some edible landscaping in the front yard
* compost for yard waste and chicken manure
* cold frames and mini greenhouses
* a few craft projects thrown in here and there
* and whatever else i can think of........
first on the list is to build a brooder box for the baby chicks i hope to get in the next month or two.
not my chicken
Friday, December 7, 2012
Still here......
I know, I know. It has been a really loooooong time since I posted anything. But I'm still here. Slowly working on the garden, and still planning on getting chickens in the spring. So for now, I'll quickly post some pictures as to what is happening in the two garden plots.
At the community plot down the street I am trying out a few new items in my first ever over wintering project. Here we have two rows of fava beans, some garlic starting to sprout up, left over scallions still hanging on from the spring/summer season, and in the bottom corner two swiss chard plants.
I had planned build a hoop house over the plot this winter, but time just slipped by me. However, I needed to do something to protect the favas and garlic through the winter, so I went and got some straw to mulch the bed. Of course, I choose the windiest day of the year to lay down the straw, so I placed a few pieces of lattice over the bed to hopefully keep most of the straw in place till it rained a bit.
As to the garden in the backyard, it's doing ok. I planted some turnips which are doing really well. Turnips are pretty much my go to veggie at the moment. They are easy to grow and always seems to work out for me in both the early spring and fall. I also planted mustard greens and collard greens, which grew a bit, but then stopped growing all together. I still plan on harvesting a bit of those two in the coming weeks. I put out some cabbage, fennel, and kohrobi seeds that failed to really get going, so I'll try those again in the early spring.
Well, that's it for now. Time to walk down to the community garden plot and see how the straw is fairing.
At the community plot down the street I am trying out a few new items in my first ever over wintering project. Here we have two rows of fava beans, some garlic starting to sprout up, left over scallions still hanging on from the spring/summer season, and in the bottom corner two swiss chard plants.
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| community garden plot december 2012 |
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| community garden plot december 2012 |
As to the garden in the backyard, it's doing ok. I planted some turnips which are doing really well. Turnips are pretty much my go to veggie at the moment. They are easy to grow and always seems to work out for me in both the early spring and fall. I also planted mustard greens and collard greens, which grew a bit, but then stopped growing all together. I still plan on harvesting a bit of those two in the coming weeks. I put out some cabbage, fennel, and kohrobi seeds that failed to really get going, so I'll try those again in the early spring.
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| backyard garden plot december 2012 |
Well, that's it for now. Time to walk down to the community garden plot and see how the straw is fairing.
Wednesday, July 25, 2012
hey little garden, why you so sad?????
my poor little garden. it's so sad. the hubby, champion for all things underdog, said it's never gonna improve if i don't stop talking crap about it and to give it a chance. i, of course, am ready to yank it all out and get ready for fall. but then he screams that it is only july and i should stop being so negative. so, i gave the little bugger some fish emulsion yesterday to see if it could bounce back from the terrible soil i planted it in and the retched heatwave we're having. only time will tell. i give it to mid august before i tear it up.
third round of the littlest harvest.
the two cherokee purple tomatoes that we ate were awesome!!!!
the two cherokee purple tomatoes that we ate were awesome!!!!
the tomato and pepper plot.
peppers on the right.... soooo small and only two tiny peppers so far.
thank goodness the juliet tomatoes are doing something.
waiting for the third cherokee purple to ripen.
very small green zebra.... waiting, waiting, waiting for them to also ripen.
plot #2: squash, one pepper, two eggplants.
one tiny little eggplant is a coming!!!!!!
hey, here's another one!!!!!!
Labels:
backyard garden 2012,
garden photos,
harvest,
tomatoes,
veggie garden
Saturday, July 21, 2012
the littlest harvest
like i said before, this year's backyard garden it a bit of a bust. but it's trying. it really is. as not to get to depressed about the situation, i am not weighing the produce this year (except that from the community garden plot, cause we are supposed to record it in the notebook down there). so here is the evidence from what i like to call the littlest harvest......
i should note here, that this is my first year doing eggplant. the hubby loves them, i find them barely tolerable, although the plants are pretty. which explains why i unknowingly took to long to harvest them and the bottoms started to turn yellow. i read that they may be to mature to eat at that point and very bitter. and boy they were right.... yuck!! so folks, take my word for it. if your white eggplant has started to turn yellow on the bottom, toss it into the compost. as for the cherokee purple tomato, i really wanted to let it ripen further on the vine, but it was my ONLY sizable tomato out there, and i was terribly concerned that the squirrels would get it. so, after standing in front of the tomato plant for about 10 minutes, rocking back and forth, debating should i pick it or shouldn't i, i went for it. i'll slice it later and let you know how it tasted. assuming that the neighbors haven't called the law in regards to the crazy lady outside in her rob hovering nervously over a tomato plant.
a few days later.......
today i harvested a handful of juliet tomatoes an another cherokee purple. there is also a one more small eggplant (along with one turning yellow.... sad face), a zucchini, and a yellow squash getting ready to be plucked sometime tomorrow (picture to follow soon). i'm thinking i will try to make some veggie chips with a yogurt or white bean dip..... we'll see.
2 overly mature eggplants, 1 juliet tomato, 1 cherokee purple tomato.
i should note here, that this is my first year doing eggplant. the hubby loves them, i find them barely tolerable, although the plants are pretty. which explains why i unknowingly took to long to harvest them and the bottoms started to turn yellow. i read that they may be to mature to eat at that point and very bitter. and boy they were right.... yuck!! so folks, take my word for it. if your white eggplant has started to turn yellow on the bottom, toss it into the compost. as for the cherokee purple tomato, i really wanted to let it ripen further on the vine, but it was my ONLY sizable tomato out there, and i was terribly concerned that the squirrels would get it. so, after standing in front of the tomato plant for about 10 minutes, rocking back and forth, debating should i pick it or shouldn't i, i went for it. i'll slice it later and let you know how it tasted. assuming that the neighbors haven't called the law in regards to the crazy lady outside in her rob hovering nervously over a tomato plant.
a few days later.......
two, yes two, actual zucchini!!!!! and one small white eggplant.
all delicious!!!!!
today i harvested a handful of juliet tomatoes an another cherokee purple. there is also a one more small eggplant (along with one turning yellow.... sad face), a zucchini, and a yellow squash getting ready to be plucked sometime tomorrow (picture to follow soon). i'm thinking i will try to make some veggie chips with a yogurt or white bean dip..... we'll see.
Labels:
backyard garden 2012,
garden photos,
harvest,
tomatoes,
veggie garden
Thursday, July 12, 2012
ok you aphids, time to dance
well this year, even though i have been wanting to post more often, the backyard garden just isn't all that interesting. the most exciting thing so far, are all the plans for the garden swirling around in my head. this season i got such a late start on everything and was in such a rush, not a whole lot of planing was done, so it all just kind of fizzled. although there are some things out there growing, i just see all the great veggie everyone else is harvesting, and i get a little sad and extremely jealous. oh well, boo hoo me.
anyway, this is a post, once again, about my complete failure in growing summer squash. you know when you overhear how folk's squash just grow like crazy, and you get in you car or come out your front door, and there lies a basket of perfect and bountiful summer squash in all their yellow and green glory. well, i can tell assure you of one thing. i wasn't me who left it there. and here's the thing, i don't even like summer squash all the much. i am doing it for the hubby. (remember when he pouted, "oh, so you're only growing what YOU like.")
since last year i had an extremely bad time with squash vine borders, this year i took the proper precautions.... row cover.
then came the debate of whether or not to pull up the squash and use that area to plant something else, since they really didn't look like much was gonna come of them anyway. but in the end i decided to just leave them where they were for a few reasons. for one, i am really curious to see, that now that they are uncovered, if i do in fact get squash vine border. two, the aphids seem to be just concentrating on the squash and leaving almost everything else alone. and three, maybe if i am patient enough, i just might get a squash or two.
the silver lining to all this is i learned something completely new that explained all the crazy ants running around the squash...... ants and aphids love each other. or at least ants love their little aphid friends. as it turns out, aphids, after sucking on my plants, poop out some delicious sweet stuff that ants just think is marvelous. some ants even go to the lengths of overwintering aphid larva in there nest, and then bring the newly hatched buggers to the plants in the spring. they also can milk the buggers for the sweet honeydew, and some will even fight off predators. so if it's not one dang thing, it's the other.
the aphids also attacked the borage leaves as well. which is fine, cause i wasn't really eating it anyway. and since the two borage plants were fairly close to the eggplant and one pepper plant, i left them in as well as decoys to hopefully protect the other plants. in the end that could be a horrible mistake. there is probably a gigantor underground aphid incubator being built by the ants as we speak. just waiting to attack me next year.
anyway, this is a post, once again, about my complete failure in growing summer squash. you know when you overhear how folk's squash just grow like crazy, and you get in you car or come out your front door, and there lies a basket of perfect and bountiful summer squash in all their yellow and green glory. well, i can tell assure you of one thing. i wasn't me who left it there. and here's the thing, i don't even like summer squash all the much. i am doing it for the hubby. (remember when he pouted, "oh, so you're only growing what YOU like.")
since last year i had an extremely bad time with squash vine borders, this year i took the proper precautions.... row cover.
here are the little squash babies.....
and here they are all covered.
of course, since i didn't have any support in the middle of the cover,
i had to try a few different ways of trying to keep the row cover up.
it was a pain to deal with. hard to get under to work on and check the squash.
but, it was covered.
the plan was to keep the row cover over the squash the whole time,
even though most of the information i researched said to uncover the plants once flowers appeared.
even though most of the information i researched said to uncover the plants once flowers appeared.
i assume that is so the bees and such could do there work and pollinate the fruit.
however, i figured that since i was such an expert in squash love,
i could hand pollinate myself and avoid the squash vine boarder all season long.
which seemed to be working..... for awhile at least.
i started to get a few male flowers. so i just sat back,
left things as they were, and waited of the females to appear.
little did i know that under all that cover, all nice a cozy and protected from predators,
were those icky little aphids just loving the underneath of all my squash leaves.... gross.
see the little black dots on the out of focus squash blossoms in the center
and the little green blossoms to be in the upper right corner.... APHIDS!!!!!!!
you'll have to take my word for it that they were everywhere since the follow picture was taken after i knocked quite a bit of them off the plants. since in my research, it didn't appear that all that much damage was being done to my particular plants, even though they can completely destroy a plant, i choose the route of just knocking them off with a few gently rubs to the leaves and a little bit of water from the hose. once the little buggers hit the ground, that's supposed to be enough to kill them.
then came the debate of whether or not to pull up the squash and use that area to plant something else, since they really didn't look like much was gonna come of them anyway. but in the end i decided to just leave them where they were for a few reasons. for one, i am really curious to see, that now that they are uncovered, if i do in fact get squash vine border. two, the aphids seem to be just concentrating on the squash and leaving almost everything else alone. and three, maybe if i am patient enough, i just might get a squash or two.
the silver lining to all this is i learned something completely new that explained all the crazy ants running around the squash...... ants and aphids love each other. or at least ants love their little aphid friends. as it turns out, aphids, after sucking on my plants, poop out some delicious sweet stuff that ants just think is marvelous. some ants even go to the lengths of overwintering aphid larva in there nest, and then bring the newly hatched buggers to the plants in the spring. they also can milk the buggers for the sweet honeydew, and some will even fight off predators. so if it's not one dang thing, it's the other.
the aphids also attacked the borage leaves as well. which is fine, cause i wasn't really eating it anyway. and since the two borage plants were fairly close to the eggplant and one pepper plant, i left them in as well as decoys to hopefully protect the other plants. in the end that could be a horrible mistake. there is probably a gigantor underground aphid incubator being built by the ants as we speak. just waiting to attack me next year.
see the ant attacking me!!!!!!!
"get away from my little aphid buddies, you giant amazon!!!!!"
but for now, that's the plan. well see what happens.
Friday, May 18, 2012
community plot update
since the new backyard garden beds are coming along very slowly, let's go check in on my community garden plot. since it's a true raised bed, it seems to dry out a lot and needs a ton of water. also, my plants just don't seem to be growing as well, and as fast, as i think they should. i'll need to come up with a plan for feeding the soil and perhaps some sort of mulching. maybe later today i'll go hunt down some burlap coffee sacks again. anyhoo, let's see how she is doing.
ok, so not to shabby. the peas i planted were a total bust. they didn't germinate as well as in the past, which could be due to the new type and brand i used, or the fact that i have a tendency to forget about my community plot and neglect it more than i should. also, i did not use any kind of inoculate, but then again, i never have. the few peas shoots that did start to grow were then promptly eaten by some sort of critter, so, that was that for the peas.
the onions seems to be fairing ok, but not great. they're not dead, but not really growing either.
i had high hopes of enjoying some nice kohlrabi. but then again,
some critter has decided that the young tender leaves make for a nice night time snack.
the crowder peas that i planted last week seem to be off to a good start.
the lemon cukes are popping up as well,
and the turnips are hanging in there.
soon i'll have some pictures of the new backyard garden.
in the plans are:
4 types of tomatoes, 3 different peppers, 2 eggplants, various herbs,
a few sunflowers with green beans climbing them, 2 kinds of summer squash,
and a couple of potato sacks getting started way to late.
in the future i would like to add:
a lettuce table, a herb and flower garden, some fruit bushes,
a very small table top greenhouse, and cold frames.
it all makes my head spin a little, so i just keep telling myself....
one thing at a time, one thing at a time.
(garden note to self: crowder peas and lemon cukes: direct sowed seeds: second week of may. tomatoes, peppers, and eggplants: from starts: second week of may. )
Friday, May 11, 2012
patience is a virtue
hello there!!
(boy that was a busy busy two months.)
patience is a virtue, but i am no good at it. no good at all. but today i am taking a cue from mr. keebs and trying to not get to anxious that it is nearly the middle of may and not a single thing is planted in the new backyard garden.
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| i'll just wait here till your ready mamma. |
plus, my raised beds did not turn out as pretty as i hoped they would. therefore, i have revised the goal for this year to simply be.... get the plants in the ground!! i'll work on the aesthetics this winter.
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| so much to do in that little back yard. |
i just gotta keep reminding myself that we have some fairly awesome farmer's markets here, so it will all be alright. no one is gonna starve. now i'm off to do a little unpacking in the new house!!!!!
Thursday, March 15, 2012
here we go again...
it's garden season again folks. while i have been away for these last weeks much has happened. me and the hubby bought a new house and renovations are under way, although there really isn't too much that needs to be done before we can move everything over. just a new kitchen floor, refinish the hardwoods on the main level, and paint the front two rooms and hallway. but mostly this moves means starting from scratch again with the backyard garden. while i have big big plans swirling around in my head, i need to be patient and think small for this first year. so for now i am concentration on getting two 4x10 raised beds set up and will build from there in the future. step #1: get my soil tested for lead and other heavy metals to determine the height and structure of said garden beds. i'm dropping off the soil sample this afternoon and will post the results as soon as i get them back. being in an urban setting, i suspect that the results will not be great, but i'm crossing my fingers nonetheless. so bye bye little rental backyard, and hello even smaller new house backyard. can't wait to get to know ya!!!!
with so much work to do inside the new house, the outside is going to have to wait a few weeks before i can get any kind of veggies going. fortunately i can still get to producing some food at my new community garden site down the street. our group installed the beds last saturday and since then i have put up a trellis and direct sowed two rows of peas. in the next few days i also hope to start some turnips, kohlrabi, and celery.
rental backyard garden plots all cleaned out and awaiting... yuck.... grass seed.
new house backyard garden area!!!!!!!!
i see raised beds, hoop houses, mini green house and cold frames.
i see vertical gardening, sunflowers, and a few small fruit trees.
unfortunately, due to space issues and the need for play areas for the puppernutz,
i don't see an orchard, honey bees, or.... sniff sniff..... chickens.
with so much work to do inside the new house, the outside is going to have to wait a few weeks before i can get any kind of veggies going. fortunately i can still get to producing some food at my new community garden site down the street. our group installed the beds last saturday and since then i have put up a trellis and direct sowed two rows of peas. in the next few days i also hope to start some turnips, kohlrabi, and celery.
isn't she pretty.
i hope to add some sort of vertical structure to the back of the bed to maximize my space.
i'm thinking something similar to the raised bed that i wrote about here.
Friday, February 10, 2012
ray thinks it's his radio, but......
i'm gonna steal it for the new kitchen.
it's going right on the yellow formica table i rescued from the alley.
especially since it was really nice to have the radio going while i was cooking our "out of the garden" dinner last night. just look at those fresh mustard greens. they're doing really well out there under the double layer of frost cover, with little to no attention being paid to them. the turnips are doing ok. their growth seems a bit stunted with the colder weather, (it's gonna get down to 11 degrees tomorrow night ya'll!!!!!) but the ones that are full size are keeping nicely in the ground.
i can't wait to get into the new house, get settled, and start the new garden. i have big big plans for my little space. it's gonna be a lot of trial and error as i try to grow things up instead of out, and to be productive and harvest through all four seasons. i have a message into the sellers to see if i can grab some soil samples to send off for lead testing. once i get the results i will know which kind of garden plan/raised beds i am going to do.
i'm leaning towards a little something like this....
(photo snagged from "the year round veggie gardener")
so nice and neat and pretty.
i think the hubby would approve.
also the cool thing about these raised beds is, you can use outside of the bed and the space in between to grow veggies up, like this.......
(photo snagged from veggiegardener.com)
this will be great for my lemon cucumbers. they did really well this year and didn't suffer at the hands of the squash vine borders or the squirrels. however, for my winter squash i will need to find a way to grow upward and still keep them under a row cover of sorts for protection. dang you squash vine border!!!!!!!
Wednesday, January 4, 2012
getting some produce love from the garden in january!!!
it's been a little dry here lately, so i though i'd go out, check under the row cover, and water the fall garden. i really didn't expect to find much new going on. i knew the swiss chard had taken a hit the other night after the row cover had gotten blown off and a light snow fell on the exposed leaves. and i knew the the mustard greens were doing pretty good after i quickly reached under the covers two nights ago and picked some for our soup. but i really had no idea as to what was happening with the beets and turnips. well surprise, surprise!!!!!
the rest of the turnips i'll leave in the ground for awhile and harvest as needed. if we get more frost or a big freeze, in the end, that will just make them sweeter as the plant sends all it's sugars down to the roots for survival. and the row cover is proving to be useful at keeping the frost from damaging the green leaves. as for the beets, well, they were a failure. but if i remember correctly, i did not give them as much love as i did the turnips in the beginning, so i may only have myself to blame. i pulled up all the beets, which were growing in the middle, and that made it easier to water both the mustard greens and turnips, so c'est la vie. the swiss chard was looking a little sad under it's tent, so either the snow did it's deadly deed, or the soil was simply a little dry. i gave them some water, and with the temperatures rising a bit this week, we'll have to wait and see if they perk up over the next few days. stay turned!!
look at that little garden grow!!!!!
it looks good from up here, let's take a closer look.
what the heck!!!!
there are some turnips growing in there!!!
who knew?? not me. i wasn't expecting that at all.
i was just gonna do a little watering.
see the little bit of purple top peeking out.... that's me turnips!!
there was quite a few of them out there in various stages,
so i just pulled out a few to see what they looked like.
aren't they pretty!!??!!
the rest of the turnips i'll leave in the ground for awhile and harvest as needed. if we get more frost or a big freeze, in the end, that will just make them sweeter as the plant sends all it's sugars down to the roots for survival. and the row cover is proving to be useful at keeping the frost from damaging the green leaves. as for the beets, well, they were a failure. but if i remember correctly, i did not give them as much love as i did the turnips in the beginning, so i may only have myself to blame. i pulled up all the beets, which were growing in the middle, and that made it easier to water both the mustard greens and turnips, so c'est la vie. the swiss chard was looking a little sad under it's tent, so either the snow did it's deadly deed, or the soil was simply a little dry. i gave them some water, and with the temperatures rising a bit this week, we'll have to wait and see if they perk up over the next few days. stay turned!!
now just image what i can do once i get around to building cold frames and proper row cover!!!!
Tuesday, January 3, 2012
the dirty dozen for 2012
call them goals, call them resolutions, call them what you want, here are a few things i wish to work on for 2012....
1. eat better, exercise more, drop20, 25, 30 pounds, blah, blah, blah....
2. be a nicer person and don't gossip. do what i wanna do, and don't tell others how to behave.
3. learn to knit.
4. sew a complete outfit.
5. work more on my bloggy blog.
6. spend more time in the kitchen learning new things, especially cheese making.
7. brush my dogs' teeth at least every other day.
8. read 1 book a month.
9. keep up and organize the bill pile, along with organizing and downsizing the house.
10. create a 4 season garden that will hopefully, one day, provide all our produce.
11. enter at least 5 juried contests and take pictures, take pictures, take pictures........
12. spend more time, getting to where i'm going, by foot, bike, bus, or train.
and for our baker's dozen bonus....
13. GET CHICKENS!!!!!!!!!!!!
1. eat better, exercise more, drop
2. be a nicer person and don't gossip. do what i wanna do, and don't tell others how to behave.
3. learn to knit.
4. sew a complete outfit.
5. work more on my bloggy blog.
6. spend more time in the kitchen learning new things, especially cheese making.
7. brush my dogs' teeth at least every other day.
8. read 1 book a month.
9. keep up and organize the bill pile, along with organizing and downsizing the house.
10. create a 4 season garden that will hopefully, one day, provide all our produce.
11. enter at least 5 juried contests and take pictures, take pictures, take pictures........
12. spend more time, getting to where i'm going, by foot, bike, bus, or train.
and for our baker's dozen bonus....
13. GET CHICKENS!!!!!!!!!!!!
happy new year.
my best to you and yours.
Thursday, December 22, 2011
fall garden covered
a little garden update... not much of a fall garden happening here. i did manage to plant some turnips, beets, and mustard greens along with the swiss chard from earlier this season that is still going pretty strong. with the temps getting pretty low in the evening, i decided to put some row cover over the plants. since i didn't really build anything or plan for this, my little jacked up system consisted of a few poles with either wine or beer bottles placed over them so the poles wouldn't poke through the fabric, four sheets of row cover, and some landscaping staple thingys to secure down the cover. next year i hope to have a nicer looking system, but till then this seems to be working pretty well.
before cover.
after cover.
after this picture was taken i also made a little tent like home
out of row cover for the swiss chard as well.
hey man, it's cozy in here.
Wednesday, December 21, 2011
goal for 2012: tomato crafts
dang, i wanna learn to knit/crochet my own little veggie patch.
along with scarves, gloves, booties, and more....
tomato by: locoMOmomma
Tuesday, December 13, 2011
one of many goals for 2012
not only to do more photographing, but to look this stylish while doing so.
photo of and by: Vivian Maier
lifted from: http://www.vivianmaier.com/
Wednesday, November 23, 2011
garden break = photo work and better plans for next year
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| portland chickens |
now that the little fall garden is pretty much set, it becomes a beet and turnip waiting game. time to move the activities inside and spend the winter organizing the house for an upcoming move, working on bigger and better plans for next years garden (well, as much as i can plan not knowing where said garden will be), and taking more time to work on my photos. once again, it's time to dust off the little green camera and get to it man!!
Monday, November 21, 2011
swiss chard says, "cold, what cold?"
fall is here, but the swiss chard is handling the low overnight temps nicely.
which is a good thing for the christmas lima bean soup i'm making this evening.
Tuesday, November 15, 2011
last summer harvest
while i may not have a lot of time to write full posts these days, i will fill you in on a few updates via photos and quick comments. hopefully, life will start to fall into order soon..... hopefully.
last of the summer loot.
harvested as we were cleaning out the garden the other day.
lots of swiss chard, zebra tomatoes, lots of green tomatoes for pickling and frying, just a small bit of basil that survived the two nights of light frost, some sage rescued from under neath the mass of tomato plants, a few handful of hot fish peppers for drying, and 3 small volunteer potatoes.
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