Baby Kale
Today we harvested some young kale. Garden is moving slow this year with the lack of consistent sun.
How is your garden? What have you harvested lately? Have you made something delicious with your garden crops? Love to hear from you.
Today we harvested some young kale. Garden is moving slow this year with the lack of consistent sun.
How is your garden? What have you harvested lately? Have you made something delicious with your garden crops? Love to hear from you.
Growing up in Oregon everyone had a garden. My best friend Marcia's family had a big garden that we took the liberty of playing in and eating from. I loved carrots fresh from the garden all warm and still a little dirty. They were so sweet and earthy. But one of my favorite things fresh from the garden is tiny potatoes. Thin skinned and crisp. I can just brush the dirt off them and eat them out of my hand. Of course I also can think of 100 other ways to prepare them.
This year Mr. Ramon and I have our first garden together. I have not grown potatoes since I was a girl and I didn't do any of the planting - mostly the eating. So together we picked out two types to grow. A small white potato and a small red potato. We decided to go with the method that seemed the easiest - potato bags.
Potato Bags are nylon pots that you plant your potatoes in then add dirt continually as they grow until the dirt is to the top. They have handy little openings on the sides so you can harvest potatoes when they are young. We did not know a lot about growing potatoes so the employee at Sky Nursery told us to just us regular soil and not to feed them. Sounds about right if you think about where potatoes flourish - Idaho and Ireland. Lots of dirt. We were excited to see them grow big and bushy.
All of a sudden while Mr. Ramon was out of town one of our plants started to go yellow. I remembered that they were supposed to flower at some point and they had not yet. This could not be good. I was worried and scoured the internet for potato plant disease. I was sure we had failed in some capacity. To much rain, not enough sun......
Well Mr. Ramon came home and I showed him our plant. He quickly said "maybe we have some potatoes?" He shoved his hand into the side pocket, dug around a bit and pulled out a small white potato.
I was so excited!! We have potatoes - we may not have many and I am still unsure of what happened to our plant but we harvested what we had.
We took this little guy inside and washed him off. I then sliced him and sprinkled him with salt. I was in heaven. Crunchy and starchy. So tasty.
So now we put these new potatoes to use - smashed, roasted, potato salad. Looks like there will be potato recipes coming your way!
With spring weather finally here I am in the mood for pretty flowers. The back yard is pretty blah. It is really green with the lawn and trees but some color would be nice.
I think that you can add a touch of color with flowers almost anywhere. An edge of the lawn, in pots on the patio or window sill. If you have not put in some color yet I urge you to run out and do it. It will make our grey days feel much more spring like.
Next to the back patio we have this short cinder block wall with planters at the walkway. They are full of chicks n hens and weeds right now. I think with some great container plants they will look really nice.
Here they are after I cleaned them out and added some fresh dirt and compost.
I chose a lavender and a purple verbena - two of my favorites. The other plants I chose because I liked the way they looked and the tag said they would be good in hanging baskets and containers. I chose purple, white, pink and a pop of yellow. I put the lavender in the center knowing it would be taller than the others.
I placed them all in their spots before taking them out of their pots and planting them.
Here they are finished. They don't look like much yet but I bet when they get a bit bigger they will add a nice pop of color. Easy project only taking me about an hour from start to finish.
A couple of months later we have this result - so pretty and happy!
Wishing I had a truck today. I want to fill it with dirt for our garden. Instead I will fill the little mini cooper with bags and bags of compost and garden soil. Poor little car - she is so overloaded.
This marks the final step in gardern prepardness. We are filling these beds with Sky Nursery's planting mix and lots of local compost. We also picked up some vegetable starts. With these and the few we started in the house we will be on our way to filling up the garden with tasty vegetables!
I wanted to be organized on how we fill up the beds so I marked the first one off with tape in 12"x12" squares. We put in our few plants and some seeds for radishes, carrots and beets.
Over the next couple of weeks we will add in more plants. So far we have carrots, 2 kinds of beets, radishes, pickling cucumbers, fava beans, crookneck squash, bush beans and bell peppers. Now all we need is sun!
With the fence up we now have a dog secure area and can start on the beds. I have seen so many types of beds in my neighborhood and online. I learned a few things about building beds.
- Treated lumber has chemicals that might be bad for you and the earth. It lasts longer in the ground as beds - but are they worth the risk.
- Redwood is preferred by most but is expensive. We are in a rental so we decided on untreated pine.
I used this tutorial on the Sunset website as my guide. We decided to go with 6" high beds knowing we were going to dig into the dirt at the site. I loved that they had instructions on how to put on row cover holders. Row covers are new to me. When I had a garden in Southern California there was never any need to cover the beds. We decided on 3 beds that were 6'x3'. That width allows me to easily reach into the middle of the bed. The guys at Home Depot again cut all our wood for us. I put the three beds together with our screw gun on the porch one night when Mr. Ramon worked late.
Mr. Ramon had the hard part ahead. He had to dig out the beds in the grass to place the beds in. What a job. This resulted in a lot of sod. I had a great solution for that - we had the two large ditches in the front yard from where the junipoers used to be. We did a sod transplant and filled in the ditches with sod and watered heavily to get it started. Hopefully it will take.
Once the beds were dug out we pounded in the bed frames and leveled them. Now we just need dirt and compost to fill them up completely.
We are well on our way to having a garden!