Posts Tagged ‘chard’

Start Your Vegetable Garden on New Year Day

Friday, January 1st, 2010

It’s New Year’s day, which means there’s a lot of football on the tv and not a lot happening in our household. I like my first day of the year to start slow.

Closed Hoop House Keeps Brassicas Growing in Cool Weather

Closed Hoop House Keeps Brassicas Growing in Cool Weather

On a lazy, indoor day like this, when rain is flying in 25+mph winds and our hoop houses threaten to fly away, I can get lost for hours reading through seed catalogs, reviewing past year’s plans, successes and failures, and fine-tuning my future edible garden programs. And, that’s exactly what I did today. And I’m glad I did. Monday, I’ll call in my seed orders, and by the time I return from an early January visit with family on the East coast, my 2010 seed should be here just in time for my first indoor seed date of January 25, 2010. Yep — that’s when the brassica (and other seeds) first get sown indoors under lights with a bit of supplemental bottom heat. I have to wonder – are you ready?

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Feed the Hungry from Your Home Garden

Thursday, September 3rd, 2009

In a time when money’s tight, we’re all looking for ways to conserve our resources. In hard times we may not have as much cash readily available to donate to our chosen causes.

A Basket of Food Donated in June

A Basket of Food Donated in June

This year has been one of those times in our household. But, we’ve found other ways to share our wealth by donating household items and food from our garden each week to the local food bank. As I write this, I’m chomping at the bit to get out in the garden for our thirteenth week of donation harvests this year. Growing a row for the hungry has been relatively easy to do, and word from food bank volunteers is that every bagful of food makes a huge difference. I propose that any gardener has the opportunity to give back.

September has been dubbed Hunger Action month. Most edible gardens are in full swing. Bountiful crops often produce more than a single household can consume. Apples, pears, peach and plums are littering the ground daily. Food is going to waste. We may be canning and freezing and gorging ourselves on nature’s bounty. Secretly, we may be dropping bags of extra giant zucchini on neighbors’ porches in the dead of night — whether they want them or not. Cucumbers may be hiding under mountains of leaves, growing fat, seedy and not-so-tasty. And, as summer weather wanes and crops race to finish production ahead of autumn, our opportunity to give is, well, ripe.

Interested in donating crops now or in the future? Read on for information on growing, harvesting and donation programs as well as ideas of generous crops to plant specifically with your food bank donations in mind. (more…)

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Plant a Row for the Hungry from Free Edible Starts

Sunday, May 24th, 2009

Regular readers know that I set a goal earlier this year (actually late last year)  to grow more edibles this year from seed than I have in past. And, so far, I think I’m doing a pretty decent job.

Maturing Cabbage, Cauliflower & More Planted in March

Maturing Cabbage, Cauliflower & More Planted in March

I started planning our expanded edible garden last December. I ordered seed in January. And I began seeding my edibles in early January with mixed results. So far, we’re harvesting buckets full of lettuce, spinach and sorrel each day for enormous salads. We’ve had radishes coming out of the ground since Easter and are now on our third planting of them. Our chard and kales (lacinato and red winter)  are coming in by the bundle every few days. And our cabbages, cauliflower and broccoli are starting to tighten up to form tasty heads.

The hoop houses (now covered only with floating row cover) have made a huge difference with retaining heat, protecting seedlings from freak hail storms, and keeping out worm-laying pests. Sure, I’d love to admire the beautiful plants rather than the white sheeting, but there’s enough beauty elsewhere in the garden that the sheets don’t bother me much — especially when I’m able to pick dinner from under them each day!

So, what hasn’t worked out as I’d hoped?

Well, first I’ve had mixed results seeding. Some plants happily germinated and produced incredibly well. Others completely failed to germinate or had low percentage success rates. For instance, where I ended up with over 100 tomatoes, I only produced one successful Bottlehouse gourd start. Although crookneck squash came through 100%,  Butternut only germinated at about a 20% success rate.

Tomatomania -- Free To a Good Home!

Tomatomania -- Free To a Good Home!

There are a few things that play into these rates. First, when seeding, I tried a few seed tray methods. I found that using egg cartons works fairly well, but they dry out really fast. So my watering was a bit off for those and contributed to some of my failure rates. Too, where I seeded tray after tray of tomatoes, I only seeded about 1/4 of a tray of gourds. There’s the rub — seeding just enough to fit your garden does not guarantee you’ll end up with enough if germination isn’t perfect. So, instead, we seed too much. And now, I can’t give away enough starts!

Yesterday, I invited friends to visit my garden and take away extra edible plants ranging from Amaranthus to Tomatoes. I collected donations that will be passed along to a local foodbank. I figure this is a way I can plant a row for the hungry (and so can the people who took the plants away!). Despite giving away mountains of lettuce, trays of tomatoes, boxes of squash, and lots of other fun items, my back patio is still filled with extras that I need to distribute. These will NOT go back in my greenhouse.

Curbits, Lettuce & Brassica Free to a Good Home!

Curbits, Lettuce & Brassica Free to a Good Home!

It’s time for me to pot up my own plants to grow them on for my own garden, and believe it or not, it is time for me to sow even more seeds. One tomato seed is recommended for a late sowing and late harvest. Apparently, the fruit from it will store into late winter. So, for these crops and the winter crop seeding that begins in July, I need my greenhouse space back.

Today, the remaining plants are going into a public place for free in hopes they find good homes with hungry people who will care for them and enjoy their bounty later this summer. And, perhaps, some of the bounty grown from these starts might even make it to the food bank from your garden?!

If you’re interested in making a donation to the hungry and taking away some great edible starts (or you need some free edible starts to feed your own hungry family) , get in touch here with your contact info. If we have anything available by the time we hear from you, we’ll be in touch.

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Last of the Veggies Are Planted and Clean Up is Underway!

Monday, October 20th, 2008

Here we are on the other side of the middle of October, and I can say that the last of my veggie planting is done for winter. My seed garlic is all tucked into deep, black (heat absorbing) planter tubs. The last of my chard starts replaced fading summer annuals in a bed that gets winter sun. And, that’s about it.

Fava starts have several sets of true leaves and are working away to rejuvenate tired beds, including the parking strip where we grew corn this summer. The corn stalks have been cleared out. Spent Anemone flower stalks are cut down, and a few weedy beds have been cleared and mulched. Tiny hardy cyclamen are beginning to peek out from under a Japanese Laceleaf Maple starting to lose its leaves. The delicate plants were protected by it during the heat of summer and are now revealed in their fall wonder.

Of course, this isn’t the last of the fall work around here. There’s plenty more clean up to do, but nothing is urgent. Trees are still bright with fall color, so their leafy messes will be tasks in a couple of weeks. For now, the rain is gently watering the newest starts in the garden.

I’m enjoying harvesting from my fall/winter veggie container. Last night the container yielded enough chard to feed two adults a wonderful sauted side dish, with a little leftover for today. And the other great thing? the container is designed in a way that we must be harvesting regularly or the chard will shade out other smaller plants and destroy the rhythm of the tiny garden-in-a-pot. For the first time since early summer, I did not purchase lettuce at the farmer’s market. Mine, in the pot and in the garden beds, is about ready for the salad bowl. And, like with the chard, I must start taking it out of the container or risk losing other plants to overcrowding. What a shame, right? ;)

Wondering how to quickly make a great chard side dish? Try this super fast method:

Ingredients:

  • Big Bunch of chard
  • 1 sliced red or white sweet onion
  • 1/2 teaspoon red pepper flakes
  • 2-3 late season tomatoes, cut into wedges
  • salt
  • dash of balsamic vinegar
  • olive oil

Remove chard mid rib and stem. Chop into ~1″ pieces. Tear up remaining leaves into 2-3″ pieces.

Heat olive oil in wok or large saute pan. Add sliced onion and saute until onion becomes limp or golden. Add red pepper flakes and  chopped chard stems and continue to saute until they soften. Add fistfulls of chard leaves and toss with warm onion. As the fistfulls begin to wilt, add more until all is incorporated and nearly limp. Toss in tomatoes and saute lightly for a minute or two. Hit the pan with a dash of balsamic, toss. Serve.

In our house this recipe is a favorite side to go with a savory meat and potatoes meal. Or, add a bit of chopped sausage to the saute and call it a meal in itself!

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Fall Container Plantings with Edibles

Tuesday, October 7th, 2008

Last month I was asked to submit to a horticultural trade magazine some photos of a favorite fall container planting. Sure, this is a tough choice. There are so many combinations to choose from and build going into the fall. I ended up submitting a container filled with edible plants that add interest and food to the fall and winter garden.

Decorative and 100% Edible!

Decorative and 100% Edible!

Shown on the right is the large, freeze-proof, wide-mouth container. Planted in it is a combination of edible flowers, leafy greens and evergreen herbs that will keep interest going even into the coldest Seattle months. As various food items are harvested and removed, others will continue to grow and fill out the container through the winter season. Come spring, many of the herbs will be harvested and moved into larger garden beds. New peas will be added as will spring and summer vegie starts.

Truly, this is a kitchen garden that highlights what’s available during the cool season. It works very well in a sunny location, ideally near the kitchen door, on a condo patio or at the entry to a restaurant or better grocery.

Plants include, but are not limited to the following. When the container is potted up, plants at different stages of growth are added. This ensures a continual harvest:

  • Lettuce
  • Rainbow Chard
  • Purple Cabbage
  • Winter Savory
  • Rosemary
  • Variegated Thyme
  • Winter peas
  • Edible pansies
Freshly Picked Rainbow Chard and Delicata Squash

Freshly Picked Rainbow Chard and Delicata Squash

The container was potted up in mid-September. By early October it was time to start the thinning by removing this large bundle of rainbow chard. As well, the peas were beginning to take off and needed a bit of gentle training on the recycled bamboo prunings on which they are growing. Parsley is in abundance as is the winter savory. I harvested a bundle of the herbs and included those in a pot of Oxtail soup over the weekend. Tonight, something with sauted chard awaits — probably something including late harvest tomatoes and some of the baked delicata squash shown here.

Interested in starting your own edible garden in a pot and need help? Get in touch for a focused garden mentoring session here.

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