Beginning of Fall

15 September 2010

Today I dug 5 gallons of coffee grounds and maybe five gallons of grass clippings into the bed along the east fence where the meal corn was. That’s very sandy, gravelly soil, and it will be interesting to see how good I can make it.

I also chopped down all the sweet corn stalks in the west bed and gave that a rough digging. If you go in there with a sharp machete, you can chop up the stalks as you chop them down quite easily, as long as they haven’t fully dried yet.

Harvested some self-seeded amaranth from the west bed. I didn’t get any amaranth grain from last year — couldn’t figure out how to separate the grain from the plant. We’ll see if I can figure it out this year.

Spread about 10 gallons of grass clippings on top of the dug-up area in the west bed. Dug a trench near the top of the bed, where the soil is most gravelly, and buried 5 gallons of kitchen scraps.

More on Water

14 September 2010

No, not moron water, I mean another post on water. Specifically, winter drinking water.

Okay, so I put a rain barrel in the basement. I run some of that flexible plastic hose, maybe 1″ diameter, from its watertight connection near the top of the rain barrel to a spot in the pit, ending in an upward-pointing funnel. Into that funnel, but with an air gap, I direct one of the downspouts.

The trick would be to get the height of the top of that funnel to be slightly less than the height of the top edge of the rain barrel in the basement, and to mount it in position securely and permanently. Then, whenever it was above freezing and the downspout was running and the basement barrel was not full, water would flow from the funnel to the barrel. When the barrel filled up, water would back up in the hose and the funnel would overflow. You’d have to make sure that no point in the hose was higher than the top edge of the barrel.

Sunflowers

12 September 2010

I cut off four big, heavy sunflower seed heads today and put them in the greenhouse to dry. Those four had tipped over and were a foot or less from the ground, so I figured it was only a matter of time before something ate them. At any rate, they were done. I don’t have a specific plan for the sunflower seeds yet. We can eat them, or we can save them for bird seed. I wonder if there’s a hand-cranked sunflower seed sheller? I quick Google search turns up little for small-scale use.

I chopped the corn stalks from the meal corn in the row along the east fence, then dug in the stalks, weeds, grass, and old grass clipping mulch. The corn stalks chopped up much more easily (with a machete) when they were still a little bit green. It’s time to start digging coffee grounds any other organic matter into the soil wherever I can. That place right next to the fence is probably the worst soil we’ve got. It’s very sandy and without much organic matter — I see that spot as a challenge to see how good I can make bad soil.

I’m going to have to chop and dig in all the sweet corn stalks as soon as possible also.

Where are we? Part Three

11 September 2010

More detail on the garden.

About two weeks ago, I harvested all the meal corn. It was a pretty disappointing quantity, less than one ear per stalk, but it wasn’t planted in the best soil we have. I’m looking forward to getting it dry and grinding it into meal.

The sweet corn was good, although not as good as last year — quite a few unfilled and small  ears. I blame its location as much as anything. We had a couple of ears eaten by raccoons, I think only a couple of ears because they didn’t discover it until late in the season.

The popcorn is looks great, it’s still green so I haven’t harvested yet. I read the seed packet later, and it takes 112 days to maturity, so that’s why it’s still green after all this time. In a short year, we might not have 112 days.

Tomatoes were late, probably because of the heavy, early mulch. The blight-resistant variety we used does not make the best-flavored tomatoes…but we don’t have blight.

Collards and kale have been very good, given the competition from weeds. Swiss chard exists but I don’t think we’ve eaten any all summer.

The echinacea I started from seed in 2009 bloomed beautifully this year. Will harvest and chop up before frost for tea.

M harvested onions a few days ago, about one third the yield of 2009.

Carrots look good, still in the ground.

Purslane was a little disappointing, but I wasn’t paying much attention to the garden when it was at its peak.

Got a few kidney beans. Man, you’d have to plant a lot of those to get enough to amount to anything.

The beets are giant. M picked a couple of those a few days ago, and I cooked them today. I sliced them into about 1 1/4″ slices, then boiled them for about half an hour, and they tasted just like beets! Not the best beets I’ve ever had, but definitely passable. After cooking them, I diced them and made Borscht (recipe modified from Joy of Cooking), and it came out great. Topped with some Greek yogurt at serving, it was excellent.

Looks like we’ll get a few mature butternut from those planted in the new part of the east garden. They started very slowly, but are doing okay now, spreading over the fence and out into the lawn. There are some large fruit in there, but probably less than we got last year.

We had some great, tall, big sunflowers with huge seed heads. I’m going to cut and hang those soon either for snacking or bird food.

Where are we? Part Two

10 September 2010

Next, on to some generalities about the garden.

I spent very little time in the garden over the summer, and with the heat and rain, you can guess what happened to it. Entering the east garden space is like walking into a jungle. There are some vegetables in there, but the weeds outgrew them like crazy — another year where the weeds won. One of these years, I’m going to get make sure they don’t win. In a few weeks I’m going to mow the whole thing and then rototill.

The west garden space is much better. I mulched heavily between the tomatoes, and the corn does a pretty good job of competing with the weeds if you give it half a chance.

The west garden is right outside the back door, and that is so excellent. I feel like I should use the east garden for growing staples (corn, potatoes, whatever’s going to keep us alive through the winter) and the west garden for growing the stuff that needs more attention. It’s great to be able to step outside the back door and snip a few leaves of kale or pick some tomatoes.