Showing posts with label harvest. Show all posts
Showing posts with label harvest. Show all posts

Tuesday, November 1, 2011

A little finality

We've been having some frosty nights from the storm system that dumped an October snow on the Northeast. Before the frosts came, we picked half a bushel of tomatoes. At least, I know that it filled our half-bushel peach basket. The tomatoes ripened quickly in the warm kitchen, and tonight, I made a huge batch of marinara sauce in the 8-quart stockpot. Delicious- even better than home-canned marinara, is the fresh sauce made from freshly-ripe tomatoes.

Looking back at the varieties of tomatoes that we planted, I have to say that I would love to see more heirloom "Mountain Pride" in our garden next year. We got beautiful fruit from that vine, when most of the "Better Boys" gave us split skins and rotten spots. Granted, we should have supplemented the soil with more lime, but the "Mountain Pride" didn't seem to mind the deficiency at all. This discovery alone justifies this blog- to look back on what we did, to figure out what works for next time!

We realized that all of the cherry tomato plants were "too much of a good thing." We were overrun with them all summer. Even after our fall gathering-spree, the vines are still full of fruit. Two vines, maximum, will provide all of the fruit this family can reasonably consume.

I'm still pondering the squash borer conundrum. We lost our squash and zucchini plants early in the season, which left a hole between our tomato rows. This gave Rosie ample opportunity to do what Great Pyrenees do well: dig holes. Since then, the chickens have spent a good bit of time in the garden, scratching up cardboard and eating pests. Did they get the borers? At least we know better than to plant the squash in that spot next year.

And watermelons. We won't be wasting our time on those for the third year in a row. We are not watermelon-growing people. Watermelon-eating, yes. But not -growing. End of that discussion.

Friday, July 15, 2011

Garden + puppy

We had some significant rain last night, and the morning has been drizzly and cool. I took the gorgeous weather as a sign that I should pick beans that were desperately needing harvesting.


The thing that made this all so fun, though, besides the mystic cloudiness, was that I had our new pup bounding along with me, chewing on cardboard, pepper stems (she even picked a bell pepper for me!), and the discarded beans that I should have picked weeks ago. Having my canine companion along made this morning's garden work that much more enjoyable.

And I came in with a very full, 2-gallon bowl of beans.


Pictures of the garden on my Picasa

Friday, July 1, 2011

The 100-Tomato Kitchen

The countertop is telling me that it's time to make marinara sauce... not to mention the windowsill...

Friday, May 27, 2011

Bringing it in

After last night's much-needed rains, my lazy-gardener self finally went out and picked kale. And while I was out there, I found our first zucchini! The tomatoes have tons of whiteflies, and I'm putting out a trap soon. I hope it works.

Another recent garden event is that New Daddy has installed drip-irrigation on a timer for the hanging strawberries, herbs, and elderberry bushes. All of these plants are much happier, now! We put the spinach container under the strawberries, since the strawberries tend to drip a good bit when they get watered. There... no waste!



A sink-full, plus!




The lone zucchini. There will be more!

Tuesday, June 29, 2010

Look what we're bringing in!

We got home from vacation last week. Yesterday, Precious and I picked twenty ripe tomatoes, that didn't include the ten green ones that I had bagged with apples to ripen before we left. And that's not to mention all of the yellow squash, spaghetti squash, acorn squash and green beans we've been getting. My CSA is my garden this year, and it's wonderful.

Time to can some spaghetti sauce!