Friday, 20 May 2016
Plants for Sale
Hi, see prices section for list of plants for sale here, starting May 21, 2016 - thanks.
Wednesday, 18 May 2016
trying to get everything done this week and next
Okay, let’s talk about birds.
First, last year I saw evidence of tomato hornworms (i.e.
their huge poop on some tomato plant leaves).
Then there were the robins - every time I looked out there was a robin
or two on the jute woven around the tomato plants. I never actually saw a tomato hornworm the
rest of the summer nor any evidence of one.
In the past week, I’ve been seeing little sparrow couples
and chickadee couples in the greenhouse close to the base of the celery
plants. A few weeks ago, I discovered
mealybugs on the plants and had written them off, pulled some out and sprayed
real hard with the water hose to blast those bugs off. After seeing the little
birds there, the bugs are pretty much gone.
Birds are always a welcome addition to a garden. They take care of business for you. If you spray chemicals on your lawn for weeds
or spray your plants for bugs or buy plants which have been raised with spray and
“cides” – you are killing the birds which will do all of this work for
you. Please think before you buy or spray. What’s a bad bug to you may well be a
delicious bug for your bird friends. Not
to mention, it’s so wonderful to hear their songs and enjoy the beauty of their
colours, isn’t it.
The big push is on now to plant, plant, plant. This is what we’re doing every minute, aside
from picking Salad Greens which we can only do in the cool morning hours before
the lettuces begin to wilt from heat in the Greenhouse. The one plant which grows like stink here is
my red orach (spinach). Check out the
size of the leaves. The small leaves are
what goes into the Salad Greens. The big
leaves are as nutritious and add such lovely colour to any dish. I’ve been using the large leaves by stacking
them on top of one another and just making slices to throw into salads. Flowers are become more plentiful now. It’s always a delight to add them to the
Salad Greens, so much variety of colours.
It’s now late in the day Wednesday and I do want to get the
menu to you for the weeks so here you go:
Herbs: Chives, Citrus Thyme, Mint,
Oregano, Tarragon $2 bunch
Kale $3 bag (this is the new kale, it quite tender)
Red Orach $3 bag
Salad Greens (washed and table-ready) $5 bag
Sorrel $2 bag the little
bugs have found it so it has holes, but if you’re looking to use it for soup,
it’s great
Granola, with fruit $8 500mL jar
Granola, with nuts and fruit $10 500mL jar
Sprouts: $3 bag
Ancient Eastern Blend (fenugreek,
lentils, kamut & adzuki)
Crunchy Bean Mix (peas, lentils
and garbanzos)
Sandwich Booster (clover, alfalfa, radish and
mustard)
Spring Salad Mix (broccoli, radish,
alfalfa & clover)
Perhaps you might like to be added to our Weekly Delivery List. I send my email out every Wednesday, collect orders Thursdays and deliver Fridays (or another day convenient to us and you if you're not too close to home). See Contact information and email or call me. Thanks.
Until next post, have a great every day.
Jo
Wednesday, 4 May 2016
Catching up with you
Been busy prepping gardens, planting, up-potting and watering.
We had an excellent Sunday, April 17th at the Sustainability
Fair. People stopped by to say “Hi”,
some who regularly pick up our produce at Heather’s and some to whom I’ve been
delivering for years now. And we have
many new additions to our Weekly Delivery List – I’m excited to have you on
board. We sold all pea shoots and
sunflower shoots which we brought and most of the Sprouts I had prepared for
the Fair.
A couple of weeks ago now, I fertilized the hundreds of two and
three month old peppers and will be starting the hardening off process this week. The tomatoes are doing quite
nicely in the Greenhouse and we’ll be up-potting yet again and again to let them create
stronger roots for the up-coming transplant goings-on during those first days
of June. It used to be planting day here
was the long weekend in May, but I find there’s still that last risk of frost
so I plant out first week of June.
If you’re interested in buying some of our vegetable
plants for your own garden, please let me know and I’ll put your name on them. If you have the means to harden them off,
you’re welcome to take them about mid-May.
Otherwise, I’m happy to do that for you and keep them until end of May
or first of June. I’ll post a list of
the varieties I have here on the blog once we’ve established our inventory (meaning once we can count all the
survivors and ditch the weak ones).
There will be herbs, tomatoes, eggplant, sweet peppers, and some edible
flowers. I’ll start some cukes.
I bought some non-GMO Canadian
corn seeds at TSC and will be starting some indoors tomorrow – I like a challenge.
I’m also happy to put together some mixed
herb pots and salad pots for you if you order them. Again, I’ll post a list with prices on the
blog in due course.
I drove to Toronto and back this
weekend and listened to several podcasts each way. I didn’t know what a podcast was a few months
ago, nor did I know I could save them on my Ipod to listen and learn while doing stuff
like making granola, cleaning the house, driving from town to town, etc. I picked up some earplugs so I can listen
while outside too.
There’s one called The Urban Farm and
another called Farm to Table Talk. There are more but I’ve only reached this
stage in my new technical world. Some great discussions and interviews take
place and anyone driving beside me might have wondered with whom I was chatting
or nodding wholeheartedly or laughing out loud.
So, bottom line, I’m a little smarter
today than I was last week.
Whilst picking Salad Greens I got to
thinking there might be two particular things of interest to you:
1. What exactly goes into our Salad
Greens mix?
Our Salad Greens are different every
time: starting with seeds from a lovely mesclun
mix which I purchase and grow, then we add more - mizuna, pepper cress and
curly cress, spinach, lamb's quarters, dandelion leaves, baby celery leaves, baby
carrot tops, more baby kale, lettuce varieties soft and crunchy, arugula,
mache, mustards, red orach, parsley, batavian endive, sorrel, frisee, baby chard,
tatsoi, various herbs such as lovage, thyme, basil, parsley, chervil, tarragon
- pretty much everything green which is edible and which we grow on the
property plus edible flowers when ready such as pansies, sundrops, yarrow,
bachelor buttons, malva, daisy petals, edible chrysanthemum and flowers of many
herbs - and probably more that I’m not remembering right now.
2. When I say “washed and
table-ready” I mean it.
During these lovely months of picking in the Greenhouse and cool days,
there are no bugs. Well, there’s the odd
earthworm which comes up to see what’s going on in its domain. It just moves along watching us cut until it
gets bored and returns under the soil. Earthworms
are very curious.
We wash your Greens in a two-sink system. We rinse back and forth from sink to sink until
the water is totally clean while examining every leaf for blemishes, yellowing
or limpness. Bugs will be entering our
lives soon and leaves with holes in them tell us that those are the plants with
the most goodness. After all, if bugs
are eating them they’ve got to be good, right?
We try to remove every teeny tiny little bug that may have chosen to
stay on a leaf or two, even through all of our picking. Sometimes this is twice, thrice or after a
rain while growing outside this might be up to five times. When we’re satisfied all of the greens are
clean, we put them in mesh bags and spin them dry in the brand new washing
machine which I purchased (on a really good sale) specifically for this
reason. Nothing but greens have been in
this machine. We then bag the greens up
for you, again looking for any unpleasant looking leaves we may have missed the
first few times, and then they are table-ready.
You don’t need to wash them, seriously, we’ve done this for you. Just drop a tiny bit of oil, or dressing of
choice, a little pepper maybe, or nothing at all, just enjoy. Or you can make a complete meal out of the
Salad Greens by adding something from each food group: toasted nuts and/or
seeds, cheese, croutons, hard boiled eggs, meat, tomatoes, cukes, onion –
endless possibilities.
This is a remarkable week.
Yesterday I removed all of the heat mats from under the trays of
seedlings and the extension cords are put away.
So, I’m calling it – no more cold nights allowed, okay?
Also, the peppers are coming out of the house this weekend. They are touching the lights on the shelves
above them so they’ve got to go.
The hot
peppers will go into the Greenhouse raised beds and the sweet peppers will wait
out there for a few more weeks to go into the ground. Of course, that said, the rows in the new
Nightshades Gardens will need to be prepped for that reason. I’m planning on plunking the peppers and
tomatoes into their spots the first weekend in June. It seems like f o r e v e r away but I’m sure
it’ll be like a few days.
Speaking of vegetables which have to go, I`m selling the lovely Heirloom
Romaine lettuce. Usually I would let it
grow bigger but I need the space in the Greenhouse for the Peppers and it`s
just too hot for lettuce in there, it`ll go to seed if it stays. I`ll start new lettuces next week and they
will grow to full size over the next month.
If you can believe it, this Kale was picked bare two weeks ago. It`s also being evicted before it bolts.
The brassicas (cabbages, kales, cauliflower, etc.) will be transplanted
over the next couple of weeks to join the onions we planted last week. We pushed some pea and snow pea seeds into
rows last week and hope to see those coming up soon. Those in the greenhouse are doing great.
We’re starting corn seeds indoors tomorrow to be transplanted in two
weeks – experimenting is the thought here.
So, that's what we've been up to here in the last couple of weeks.
Perhaps you might like to be added to our Weekly Delivery List. I send my email out every Wednesday, collect orders Thursdays and deliver Fridays (or another day convenient to us and you if you're not too close to home). See Contact information and email or call me. Thanks.
Until next post, have a great every day.
Jo
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