Vintage WW2 poster |
Sunday, December 31, 2023
January 2023 Edible Garden Planner
Saturday, December 30, 2023
Southern New Year's good luck meal
Black eyed peas and collard greens |
Try some good luck food for your New Year's!
Friday, December 29, 2023
Quick tip 3 for green thumbs in winter-organize your seeds
Snippet of seed spreadsheet |
Friday, December 29, 2023 |
Winter can be a downer time of year for those of us that love to garden, but it doesn't have to be! There are many "gardener" things you can do during the cold months of the year. I'm going to share an idea each week for the rest of the winter on gardening activities that help satisfy the itch and prepare us better for the upcoming spring season. Here we go with Winter Quick Tip 3-organize and catalog your seeds.
If you are anything like me, you have lots of seeds stored. A productive and cost saving thing to do during these cold days is to get out all your seeds, organize them, catalog them and store them so that you extend their viability for as long as possible.
This will save you tons of time having to sort through packets when you start your seeds here in a couple of months as well as money in not buying seeds you already have.
I keep mine on an excel spreadsheet. This way, I can easily keep them in alphabetically order. Plus, I have columns with pertinent information like sunlight required and when you can start the seeds so I can sort by these fields if I want to. After putting your "catalog" together, you only have to add any new purchases to keep it current.
While you have your seeds out, go ahead and organize them and store them for longevity. I store mine in quart freezer bags in the refrigerator. I have seeds that are over 10 years old and are still sprouting. To start, put each crop type in a pile. Then put each pile in groups for when you sow the seeds. So you'd have spring, summer and winter seeds together. I put the packets together in one quart bag that will fit and are similar. For instance, I have all the root vegetables in one quart bag with the like ones grouped together in the bag to make them each to find. I have enough bean seeds that they are in their own bag. Same for tomatoes and herbs. Pepper and eggplant seeds are in the same bag. Flowers are in 2 bags. Summer greens in a bag, spring and fall greens in a bag and winter hardy greens in their own bag.
Then, when it is time to order seeds, I look back at my garden plan for the year, see what I need to order from my spreadsheet, then get the seeds I already have pulled. As the new seeds come in, I add them to the spreadsheet. I have a gallon freezer bag that I label as "Spring 2024" that I put all the seeds I am going to sow for spring in the bag and keep them in the refrigerator until I am ready to start sowing. I'll do the same for "Summer 2024" and "Fall/Winter 2024" as the time comes to plan for the next season of gardening.
Sunday, December 24, 2023
Edibles I am growing indoors
Kumquat in sunroom |
Sunday, December 24, 2023
Saturday, December 23, 2023
What we're harvesting in the December garden
Winter hardy greens |
Saturday, December 23, 2023 |
The harvest in December is varied. Many cold crops are doing well with no cover. Peppers are hanging on in the walk in greenhouse.
It is surprising what survives out in the garden bed with no protection. Right now, lettuce, carrots, cultivated dandelion greens, shallots, onions, broccoli, kale and perennial herbs are doing just fine. Annual dill and celery are happy as well.
I'm not growing them this winter, but spinach, cabbage, cauliflower, fennel, beets, turnips and Brussels sprouts all do well this time of year in the garden.
All the cold crops are sweeter, too, when the temperatures dip below freezing. The cold causes the plants to concentrate their sugars like antifreeze in cars to protect them from dying from freezing. A neat trick for the plants and tasty for the gardener!
I also have greens under cover. The chard, Giant Blue Feather lettuce, tat so and cultivated dandelions are a good size. I started my lettuce seedlings late so they are growing slowly under cover. It will likely be a few more weeks before I'll start harvesting from them.
In the pop up, walk-in greenhouse, the potted eggplants have pretty much given up. The potted peppers are still hanging in there.
I also have a few hot pepper plants that I brought indoors and put in a sunny window. "Jigsaw" pepper has white, green and lavender variegated leaves with purple fruits. I planted it indoors this summer. It has produced a few fruits. The other pepper plants are "Chiltepin" wild pepper. It an ancient variety and produces very hot, small red peppers. I have been bringing the large plant in for the last several years for overwintering. Both the large and small plants have peppers on them.
Of course, I also brought in the 5 citrus trees I have. The kumquat is just covered in fruits. Kumquats produce almost year round and do well indoors and outdoors. Keep them in a sunny window for optimum health and production.
I have 2 different kinds of dwarf tomatoes I am trying indoors, too. I started "Orange Hat" over the summer and was given Tumbling Tom from a neighbor over Thanksgiving week. Orange Hat has been producing tiny orange tomatoes for a couple of months now. Tumbling Tom has flowers, but no fruits yet.
If you don't want to garden outdoors or bring plants indoors, you can grow sprouts to keep yourself in fresh produce during the winter months.
Monday, December 18, 2023
Quick tip 2 for green thumbs in winter-decorate with nature
My mother's handmade winter wreath |
Monday, December 18, 2023 |
Winter can be a downer time of year for those of us that love to garden, but it doesn't have to be! There are many "gardener" things you can do during the cold months of the year. I'm going to share an idea each week for the rest of the winter on gardening activities that help satisfy the itch and prepare us better for the upcoming spring season. Here we go with Winter Quick Tip 2.
I love a refreshing walk on crisp winter days. Sure the shades of green have narrowed to just the evergreens, but there is beauty in the textures of waves of brown grasses, seed heads of faded flowers, and the glisten of snow and ice after a winter storm. It's good for the body and the soul to get outside and experience winter nature.
As you walk, hike and explore, look for ways to bring nature home with you to decorate inside. You can collect branches, grasses, seed pods to make striking arrangements. Or look for pine, cedar, fir, holly, magnolia and other evergreens to make wreaths and other Christmas decorations. Accent with pine cones, seed pods, dried apples or oranges, feathers and grasses for an all natural approach or add ornaments and ribbons for a splash of color to coordinate with your tree.
Sunday, December 17, 2023
Jazz up the Christmas feast with herbs from the garden
Quick herb almond bread
Growing “exotic” figs
Lowest toxic options for canning
If you have a large pot, you can can!
Quick tip-”peeling” garlic
Quick tip-make dried garlic into garlic powder
Time to plant garlic! With growing tips......
21 no tech storage crops
Fall and winter greens
Homegrown, organic salads in a Midwest winter
Homemade salad dressing recipes with garden herbs
With this warm winter, straight from the garden herbs are an easy way to have dishes bursting with fresh flavor.
Start a kitchen herb garden!
Tuesday, December 12, 2023
Quick tip 1 for green thumbs during winter-learn
Tuesday, December 12, 2023 |
Winter can be a downer time of year for those of us that love to garden, but it doesn't have to be! There are many "gardener" things you can do during the cold months of the year. I'm going to share an idea each week for the rest of the winter on gardening activities that help satisfy the itch and prepare us better for the upcoming spring season. Here we go with Winter Quick Tip 1.
A top priority for me every winter is to research what I want to learn more about in gardening and including my newfound knowledge in my next year's garden plan.
There are lots of ways to learn. You can subscribe to gardening magazines like Mother Earth News, Farmer's Almanac, Fine Gardening, and many others. You can buy books on a subject you are interested in learning more. You can browse books and magazines at your neighborhood library, too. You can get free videos through your state's agricultural extension office. Here is a link to ours in Kentucky https://kentuckyhortnews.com/horticulture-webinar-wednesdays/season-one/. It started during Covid so there are currently 4 years of videos. And there are thousands of videos on YouTube.
I have a little book I got years ago that covers the four seasons of kitchen gardening "In the French Garden: The Joys of Cultivating a Potager" by Georgeann Brennan. I start re-reading this book every spring. It isn't a thick book so it's nice to have a refresher that has easy recipes for what's in season.
There are some really great information in seed catalogs too. Territorial Seed as one that I learned so much from when I first started gardening. They have general growing information for just about every type of common vegetable. I still get their catalog and reference their growing information each growing season. A few years ago, I discovered Baker Creek Heirloom Seed Company. Their huge seed catalog that ships in January has in-depth history and growing information on a variety of highlighted vegetables.
If you are going someplace warm, you can go search for display or historical edible gardens to visit. If you are interested in growing in greenhouses or under cover, you can see if there are any display gardens in your area or ask one of the year round CSA's in your area if you can come by for a visit. Or check with your local agricultural extension office to see if there are opportunities they know about. Many extension offices give gardening classes, too.
Of course, you can just google what you are interested in knowing more about and scan the million results that are brought up!
I jot notes to myself in my garden notebook on what I want to learn more about over the winter so I have a list that I can work off over the winter to have a more productive garden come spring. Keeping a journal is a very helpful tool.
Sunday, December 10, 2023
Planting schedule for edibles in an unheated portable greenhouse
Unheated, portable greenhouse Sunday, December 10, 2023 |
My new edible gardening tool is a walk-in greenhouse. I have had portable greenhouses since 2008. I have grown salad fixings in them over the winter to keep having fresh salads and they have worked incredibly well at this. With a walk-in greenhouse, I am looking to expand the growing season for other edibles. This is what I have researched so far.
The impetus for getting a walk-in greenhouse was to be able to keep my tropicals outside for as long as possible, to overwinter the natives I dug, separated and put in quart pots, and to extend the season in the fall and spring for the summer lovers like tomatoes, peppers and eggplant.
For the tropicals, I was able to keep them outdoors for an additional month, bringing them inside yesterday. I believe they would have been fine for another couple of weeks, but they were forecasting a low of 24 tomorrow night. They already survived down to 22, but that was earlier in the fall when the ground was warmer. I have left the potted peppers and eggplants in the walk-in greenhouse. If they survive the hard freeze, then I’ll know the tropicals would have survived.
The potted peppers and eggplant did get damaged from the 22F freeze, but I had not velro’ed the windows of the greenhouse shut. I had rolled the windows down, but should have used the Velcro closure to seal out more of the freezing air. It will be interesting to see how long the summer lovers will survive in the walk-in greenhouse this winter.
For me, gardening requires research and experimentation. I read up on what I want to learn more about and then go try it in the garden to see what works or what adjustments I need to make for my garden conditions.
One thing I do know about summer lovers is to be sure that you are keeping their stems and leaves off of the plastic. Any part touching the plastic will get killed when there is a hard freeze. You can also add mass inside or outside of a greenhouse to help moderate the temperature inside the greenhouse. Mass absorbs the heat during the day and then releases it back at night. The best exchange is when the mass is inside the greenhouse. If you don’t have room, putting it outside the greenhouse up against the walls will help.
I was going to put a layer of straw bales around the outside of the walk-in greenhouse, but didn’t get around to buying the bales. For the portable greenhouse, I have room to put gallon jugs around 3 of the 4 sides. I spray paint the jugs black to protect them from the sun’s harmful rays. Sun will break down the plastic, causing the jugs to become brittle and crack. If you leave them in place with holes in them, they still work but come summer, you have created a mosquito breeding farm!
For the walk-in greenhouse, I left the potted eggplants and peppers around the walls and replaced the tropicals with the quart pots of transplanted natives in the center. I left enough room to be able to walk into the very center of the greenhouse so I can water as needed easily. My smaller greenhouses only need to be watered a couple of times during the winter after being closed up. This winter, I will learn if that is the case with the walk-in greenhouse. For the smaller greenhouses, the moisture from the pots evaporates, rises to the plastic and then condensates back onto the plants; kind of like a terrarium. Hopefully, the walk-in greenhouse will be at least as close in water efficiency.
As it warms up in the spring, I plan on adding shelves around the perimeter of the greenhouse to be sable to start seedlings sooner in the spring. I have been looking back in Eliot Coleman books on gardening year round utilizing unheated greenhouses. I have 2 of his books “The Winter Harvest Handbook” and “Four Season Harvest”. Since he lives in Maine, I am going to adjust his spring dates by 6 weeks and his fall planting dates by 5 weeks since this is the difference between the frost dates in his area versus the frost dates in my garden. It may not be that simple since I’m using a tiny greenhouse and he uses huge greenhouses, but it gives me a place to start. My last frost in the spring is April 2 and my first frost is November 3. You can adjust your planting dates by taking the difference between my dates and those in your garden.
For spring, here are my adjusted dates for starting the seedlings in the greenhouse:
Mid-February-beets, greens, carrots
Mid-March-zucchini, peppers and beans
Early April-tomatoes, cucumbers, squash, watermelon and eggplant