Archive for the ‘Gardening’ Category

Dandelion Digging Day

2 April 2010

The boys and I dug dandelions in the garden today. We got about a 5-gallon bucket packed full of them. Later, I cut off the leaves and ended up with about 2/3 of a bucket of leaves.

Rinsed them twice with water from the hose, then again inside, and had some for a salad for lunch — very good. M cooked some for dinner as well, but they were kind of bitter, don’t know why. The ones I had in my salad weren’t bitter. Put a bagfull in the fridge so I can eat them for a few days. This qualifies as the first fresh garden produce of the year.

It’s a great year for daffodils (which I think means that early last summer was great for daffodils).

We’re supposed to get some rain this evening through tomorrow am — sure hope we do, we had a very dry and warm March.

Also mixed up some potting soil for the garden vegetable seeds we’ll be planting this weekend. Mixed the commercial potting mix I bought a month or two ago with worm castings from the basement worm bin. It should be excellent stuff.

Getting Ready for Growing

28 March 2010

Another Sunday work day.

  • Watered hazelnuts I planted last fall.
  • Dug up area where collars and kale were last year, since it didn’t get dug last fall. Dug in a couple of gallons of coffee grounds. Pulled up the remaining collard roots and stalks and put them in the compost pile. Found lots of worms.
  • Several of the kale plants I planted last July made it through the winter (without any shelter other than the snow) and are growing new leaves. I watered those. I wonder if they’ll try to go to seed right away. If they do, I will let them and harvest the seed.
  • Dug a trench around upper edge of new west beds and dumped in contents of char/urine/fish emulsion bucket. Looked like not so much char and a lot of small pieces of uncharred wood. Sigh.
  • Dug up some clumps of sod in what last year was the new potato ground, and a few potatoes with it. I never got around to digging all the potatoes last fall. It was just so labor intensive and I was getting barely more potatoes out of it than I had planted. It was discouraging and put me off the idea of surviving on potatoes, although it would have been easier to dig them up if the ground had been worked properly. Corn. Corn is the answer.
  • Put a plastic tarp over some of the grassy area north of the fence, near the hazelnuts. I want to kill that grass over the next two months and plant some corn there.
  • Found a big piece of black plastic folded over next to the foundation of the garage. I started to unfold it and realized there was a nest of carpenter ants inside. I quickly dragged it to the back fence and threw it over, then went around and opened it up, hoping the birds would eat them. I hate carpenter ants. At least they weren’t inside the garage or house, although having them that close to it is kind of a bad sign.
  • Turned over the soil in the three raised beds. It’s in very good shape, and is ready for planting as soon as we dare.
  • Did the composting.
  • Removed the plastic trash can from under the SW drainspout, as it was cracked and not holding water. Extended the downspout a couple of feet to keep the water away from the foundation. I need to get serious about rainwater collection this year.
  • Untaped the two inside house windows I had taped last fall to keep out the wind.

And in a sure sign of a warm, dry spring, the little brown ants have re-invaded the kitchen.

But we’re only gardeners. If we don’t have animals, we’re not farmers. It’s pathetic, but I want to be a farmer, even though I am clueless about animal husbandry and haven’t the heart to do what needs to be done.

Kale

20 March 2010

I saw that more kale were up today, after last night’s 2″ of snow melted off of them. The forecast is for a low of 25°F tonight, which probably means 20°F in our neck of the woods, so I covered them. They are a remarkable plant.

Gardening

19 March 2010

Kale’s up! Just in time for our first-day-of-Spring snow.

I’m Calling it Spring

7 March 2010

The geese have been flying around in pairs and small Vs honking for the last couple of weeks. We’re down to 80-90% snow cover. The compost was up to 81°F a couple of days ago. I heard a sandhill crane. I’m calling it Spring.

So today I planted a 7′ row of kale in the bed just outside the back door. I just dropped the seeds on top of the mud and sprinkled some potting soil on top. Nothing ventured, nothing gained. I also pounded in a couple of stakes at either end of the row and screwed a piece of scrap 1×2 between them, about 18″ off the ground, so I can drape plastic when we get hard freezes after they come up.

March can be such a wonderful and horrible month. I’m desperately longing for sun and warmth, and when the March sun shines on the snow and the wind dies for a moment, it’s almost there. But you know it won’t last and one more big snow is almost inevitable.

Also spread about 10 gallons of wood ashes and charcoal on the gardens. I’m using a 10-gallon metal trash can for getting the ashes out of the wood stove, which lets me do it while there are still coals in there. Those coals become charcoal. That then goes in the garden, slowly building up my terra preta. I’m only slightly concerned that it seems like an awful lot of ash this year — I hope I don’t make the soil too alkaline. On the other hand, this leaves me free to use more acidic organic matter in the garden, such as pine needles.

Got up on the roof today and swept the chimney. The screen at the top was completely blocked with dried creosote — the only way for the smoke to get out was a half-inch gap on top of the screen. There didn’t seem to be that much creosote in the chimney itself, except for the top inch or so (there were 2-3 cups of the stuff down in the stove after I got done).

That screen was quite disgusting — I had to knock the stuff out with the handle of my screwdriver, that’s how thick and hard it was. It’s difficult to believe we have been using the stove right along without major problems, although we certainly noticed that the draft was not what it should have been.

Anyway, if we’re burning a lot of wood, the mid-winter cleaning is not optional, and more frequently would be better. Pretty much whenever it’s warm and dry enough, I should get up there and do it. Maybe I should just take out that screen in the winter and put it back in in the Spring.

And yes, it takes all three extension rods to get the full length of the chimney.