Tag Archives: garden

Summing up March, Harvest Monday 4-1-13

I have been down for the count with a cold. That, and shopping for a vacation cabin in Big Bear, have consumed my time. I found a little 3-bedroom house that I loved, with a nice meadow view, but we got outbid. I am kicking myself for not going the extra $2,000 to get it, but who knows where the bidding would have ended. I was at my max, so had to quit.

 

Prices are rising so quickly up there that I have probably been priced out of the market all together. There is only one left in my price range, but I don’t love it. At least not from what I have seen in photos. However, there is a lot that they aren’t showing in the photos, so it might be even worse than I imagine. I plan to go see it  later today.

Pink jasmine perfumes our patio with a heady scent.

Pink jasmine perfumes our patio with a heady scent.

Meanwhile, spring has sprung off its sprocket here in southern California. My yard is awash in blossoms of all kinds.

Freesias add their sweet aroma to the air.

Freesias add their sweet aroma to the air.

 

The Panamint nectarine and Katy apricot are loaded with blossoms this year. Surely we will be able to salvage some of the fruit from the possums, raccoons, and other raiders of night.

The Panamint nectarine and Katy apricot are loaded with blossoms this year. Surely we will be able to salvage some of the fruit from the possums, raccoons, and other raiders of night.

 

The avocado is loaded with blossoms too. Fruit set is never as impressive as the blossoms would suggest though.

The avocado is loaded with blossoms too. Fruit set is never as impressive as the blossoms would suggest though.

 

Even the Santa Rosa plum is putting on a show this year. We normally get NO plums. The critters always beat me to the 2-3 that set fruit. I am more hopeful this year.

Even the Santa Rosa plum is putting on a show this year. We normally get NO plums. The critters always beat me to the 2-3 that set fruit. I am more hopeful this year.

 

I planted some perennial flowers along the front walkway.

I planted some perennial flowers along the front walkway.

 

The Garden of Infinite Neglect is in full bloom with a freesia border. The veggie garden itself is, well, neglected.

The Garden of Infinite Neglect is in full bloom with a freesia border. The veggie garden itself is, well, neglected.

 

We have had orchids in bloom on the back deck and patio since January. The second batch of blooms is just now opening up.

We have had orchids in bloom on the back deck and patio since January. The second batch of blooms is just now opening up.

 

It is such a joy to have such beautiful flowers.

It is such a joy to have such beautiful flowers.

 

We are being inundated with bok choy. I planted a six-pack of Joi Choi and it is rewarding us with bountiful greens.

We are being inundated with bok choy. I planted a six-pack of Joi Choi and it is rewarding us with bountiful greens.

 

I am down to the last few avocados. Incredibly enough, we are still harvesting a bell pepper or two as well. And the hens are inundating us with eggs, up to 28 a week!

I am down to the last few avocados. Incredibly enough, we are still harvesting a bell pepper or two as well. And the hens are inundating us with eggs, up to 28 a week!

This is Henrietta, our sweet Black Australorp. She is our oldest hen, and is still laying.

This is Henrietta, our sweet Black Australorp. She is our oldest hen, and is still laying.

 

Scrambled eggs with avocado and black beans on a whole wheat flour and corn tortilla. Yum!

Scrambled eggs with avocado and black beans on a whole wheat flour and corn tortilla. Yum!

Or, how about fried cornmeal mush with maple syrup, fried eggs, and oranges right off our tree?

Or, how about fried cornmeal mush with maple syrup, fried eggs, and oranges right off our tree?

Did someone say ORANGES? This is what was left AFTER we took a bag down to our son Scott for Easter.

Did someone say ORANGES? This is what was left AFTER we took a bag down to our son Scott for Easter.

And these are the limes that we have left AFTER taking some down to Scott and family. Time to squeeze and freeze.

And these are the limes that we have left AFTER taking some down to Scott and family. Time to squeeze and freeze.

I am so far behind on blogging. I had hoped to catch up on my harvest tally today, but I am running out of time. I think I will just sum up this week’s harvest.

Harvest for week ending March 31, 2013

FRUIT

13 oz Lemon, Meyer

6 lbs 4 oz Limes

7 lbs 5 oz Oranges, Navel

Subtotal 14 lbs 6 oz

VEGGIES

1 lb 9 oz Bok Choy

1 oz Ginger

Subtotal 1 lb 10 oz

TOTAL PRODUCE 16 lbs plus 27 EGGS

If you had a harvest, or to see what others are harvesting, visit Daphne’s Dandelions. As for me, I’m off to Big Bear, CA for the day!

 

 

Home Renovation Hades

Man, I can’t remember my last blog post. February I think. Much is going on here at Green World.

First of all, Hubby and I are totally caught up in a whirlpool of home repair and renovation. We don’t do the work ourselves, but dealing with estimators and contractors, researching options, and running to the store to make choices takes up my day.

So far, we have had new sidewalks poured at the side and front of the house to fix dangerously lifted slabs, a trip accident waiting to happen. And we have had the deck repaired, but it STILL hasn’t been sanded and stained.

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This is the new walkway on the south side of the house, and the new redwood fence built by our new neighbors to the south. Our gardener pruned back the jade plants.  I may do something else here, like put in some vertical planters made of old wood pallets (using heat treated, not chemically treated, wood). I might plant some pink jasmine along the fence. I’m also thinking of building a trellis shade structure to shade my office window, the first window along the house. We definitely need a new gate. I think I can build one out of redwood and 2x4s. Which brings me to my next topic: woodworking.

Our garage work area with three new Lou-made drawers in the workbench shelves.

Our garage work area with three new Lou-made drawers in the workbench shelves.

I have taken up wood working. I don’t know why. I guess I have been inspired by Ali’s work on Henbogle and am stumbling along in her footsteps. And then there is Tool Girl. What a cool nickname. I wanted to be a Tool Girl too. But I really blame this new hobby on my garden.

Two years ago, my husband built me some beautiful raised beds out of redwood at the community garden. Construction work was going on all over the garden, so he borrowed a cordless drill to build it. Then stupid Southern California Edison made us remove all raised beds, and I had to disassemble them. I needed a cordless drill. Didn’t own one. Off to Home Depot I went. I didn’t know a thing about power tools, but there was a whole box of Ryobi power tools on sale: drill, circular saw, reciprocal saw, and shoplight, with two batteries and a charger. And it came with a cool carrying bag. How could I pass that up?

This is one of the raised beds that I built for the front yard. Parsley, chard, and flowers are pretty much hiding the wood.

This is one of the raised beds that I built for the front yard. Parsley, chard, cauliflower, cabbage, garlic, flowers and shadows are pretty much hiding the wood.

Well, now I had a drill, two saws, and a lot of nice redwood, so I decided to build stuff. The first project was three raised beds in the front yard, since my tiny back yard is already filled with fruit trees, chickens, and three raised beds. The next project was to build an outdoor plant shelf out of scrap wood from the neighbor’s home renovation project. The low shelves (plant stands) will keep my potted plants off the deck.

Wood Magazine 2013

Wood Magazine 2013

Then I saw this magazine at Home Depot. Look at that cute little tool cart for the workshop. I don’t know why, but that thing spoke to me. I just loved it. I wanted to build it! Keep in mind that I have NO woodworking experience, just a bunch of tools that I had no idea how to use.

My next door neighbor was kind enough to show me how to use a circular saw. I cut the lumber to make my plant shelves (one is assembled, two more to go, none are painted yet).  At that point, I decided that my skills were not up to making the little tool bench on casters, so I decided to make box drawers to go into my existing tool bench. The directions said that the tool cart with all those drawers could be made in a weekend, so how hard could a mere four drawers be? Hahaha!

Step 1 was to build a box drawer with cut-out handle.

Step 1 was to build a box drawer with cut-out handle.

I am now on week 3 of the project and am building fourth drawer. One weekend, my fat fanny!

The box drawers have cut out handles in front and back so i can pull a given box out to get to what is stored inside.

The box drawers have cut out handles in front and back so i can pull a given box out to get to what is stored inside.

Here is a drawer slid out to reveal the contents.

Here is a drawer slid out to reveal the contents.

I hadn’t been able to reach the back of the shelves before because they were so deep (and I’m short, with arthritic knees). Now access is no problem.

I plan to fill the drawer seams with wood putty, and either put on a light stain or oil or polyurethane or something. Like I said, I have no woodworking experience, but I think there should be a finish of some kind on them.

My time recently has been spent in the garage, making sawdust, and turning perfectly nice boards into distressed wood products with nicked and mismatched edges and boogered-up corners. Hey, it’s a hobby!

But wait, there’s more. We are also in the process of interior home renovation. And when I say “we”, I mean contractors. We have had a new shower door put into the guest bath, and new bathroom faucets installed in the master and guest baths. That will hold the bathrooms for now.

On to the KITCHEN. I have have had “range envy” ever since Ali at Henbogle got a five-burner range with convection oven. Lust, lust.

Meet Big Bertha, our new GE range.

Meet Big Bertha, our new GE range.

Turns out that problem was easily solved. I bought a new range. Our old oven was haunted. The darn thing would beep in the middle of the night, waking us up at 2 pm and asking us to turn it on. Sometimes the oven would turn itself on, which of course is dangerous. We had had it with that possessed beast. We replaced it with this beauty, which sadly sticks out farther than the old one. The kitchen drawers won’t open all the way now. ARG!

Our current kitchen with new stove in place.

Our current kitchen with new stove in place.

Home Depot is solving the problem by refacing our old cabinets and giving us all new drawers, new cabinet doors, and new countertop, plus some custom cabinetry.

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I may try to salvage these pantry doors by building a cabinet for the garage and using these doors. Seems a shame to just shred and compost them.

I may try to salvage these pantry doors by building a cabinet for the garage and using these doors. Seems a shame to just shred and compost them.

We have a new stainless microwave-hood combo, but were told to not install it until after the cabinet work is done. So here it will sit until the cabinet work is finished.

We have a new stainless microwave-hood combo, but were told to not install it until after the cabinet work is done. So here it will sit until the cabinet work is finished.

We chose natural maple for the cabinets and drawers. But this isn't the style. We went with double Shaker, which will go with the Craftsman theme of our family room.

We chose natural maple for the cabinets and drawers. But this isn’t the style. We went with double Shaker, which will go with the Craftsman theme of our family room.

This is our Craftsman/Mission/Shaker family room furniture.

This is our Craftsman/Mission/Shaker family room furniture.

We painted two walls of the family room a light green and hung a mirror and some  Audubon prints.

We painted two walls of the family room a light green and hung a mirror and some Audubon prints.

 

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This is an example of the craftsmanship of the drawers that we are getting. They have chamfered (rounded) edges, dove-tailed corners, and are made of solid maple. The insides of the drawers are going to be fabulous.

We wanted a quartz (Silestone) countertop, but couldn’t find a pattern that we both liked. We compromised on Corian in Platinum, which is gray with white speckles like granite. We are getting coved corners on the countertop and back-splash, a no-drop edge, and a built-in sink of white Corian. None of those features were available in quartz. It should look gorgeous.

Ah, but the cabinet guys don’t do plumbing. They will leave us with a sink that is not connected to the drains. And since the tile with a subsurface is being replaced by Corian with no subsurface, the countertops will be lower.

We were told that it would take 4-6 weeks to get the cabinet work done. Then 6-8 weeks. They claim that it will take only three days once they start. HA. If you believe that, I have a bridge to sell you. And thus we enter Home Renovation Hell. Maybe we will have the kitchen back to functional by mid May.

Meanwhile, the garden harvests continue. Last week, I harvested:

13 oz Navel Orange

1 lb 4 oz Meyer lemon

5 oz Bell Pepper (in February! Can you believe it?)

11 oz Cauliflower

TOTAL

3 lbs 1 oz of produce, plus 21 EGGS

If you had a harvest, visit Daphne’s Dandelions to share the good news.

Still waiting

My new computer still isn’t ready, so I continue to make do with my iPad. It is a spectacular June day in southern California. Birds are singing, a gentle breeze is blowing off the ocean, and all is right with my green world.

I just finished watering the front, and am sitting on my comfy chair on the deck in back, admiring my jungle of a garden back here.

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That was the front yard. With luck, a photo of the back will show up below. Or several photos.

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And that’s what the view from the deck looks like. My tomatoes have turned the back beds into a green tangle of growth. My German Johnson has reached a height of six feet already, but has set only one marble- sized tomato. It’s going to be a race to see which ones will ripen first– Early Girls, Box Car Willie, Mortgage Lifter, Super Marzano, or Black Plum. Neither of the oxheart tomatoes have fruited yet, and Paul Robeson is lagging behind as well. The Amish Paste and Big Russian Paste tomatoes are setting like gangbusters.

June is a happy time in the garden. Flowers galore on the squash, pumpkins, tomatoes and cucumbers, but nothing to pick, so I’m not up to my ears in canning jars. I think I ‘ll have another cup of coffee.

Setting Goals in the Garden

With only six weeks left in the year (I know, scary isn’t it?), it is time to start thinking about my gardening goals for next year. Last year, I had hoped to grow 500 lbs of produce. Then, when problems emerged at our new community garden plot, I downgraded that to 300 lbs. But I’m not even going to make that. I should exceed last year’s production of 224 lbs, but not by much.

But is that the right way to set a goal for the garden? Picking an arbitrary number? I decided no on that question.

I began looking at how much food a couple actually uses during the course of a year. To do that, I turned to figures from the US Department of Agriculture and the US Census Bureau.

We live in the city, not on a farm. We can't grow our own grains, dairy, meat, coffee, sugar, etc.

An average Americans eat about 1,950 lbs of food a year. Am I going to try to grow that much? No way. Based on figures from 2003, that includes 86 lbs of fats and oils, 194 lbs of grains, 142 lbs of sugar, 195 lbs of meat, and 594 lbs of dairy products. I don’t grow those things.

But even in the city, we were self-sufficient in eggs last year, and nearly so this year.

I homed in on fruits, vegetables, and eggs, which are things I do produce in my yard. In those categories, we as Americans eat 418 lbs of vegetables, 275 lbs of fruit and 32 lbs of eggs. That comes to 693 lbs of produce and 250 eggs per person. Since there are two people in our household, that would be 1,386 lbs of produce plus 500 eggs per couple. That’s still beyond my ability. And inclination.

Our flock consists of a mere three hens: Miss Hillary in front, Henrietta in back left, and the molting Chicken Little in back on the right.

We don’t eat that many eggs anyway. At our peak production of 463 eggs last year, we were giving them away. Let’s say that we have eggs covered at our urban farmlet and move on.

With 17 fruit trees in back, and 6 in front, we're able to grow a lot of our own fruit even though most of the trees are dwarf.

I decided to narrow the produce field even more. Looking at just the amount of fresh fruits and vegetables that Americans eat, and ignoring the amount that we eat frozen, dried and juiced, we eat 23 lbs of fresh citrus, 103 lbs of fresh non-citrus, 47 lbs of potatoes, and 154 lbs of other fresh vegetables. Now that seems more manageable. That comes to a mere 327 lbs per year: 126 lbs of fruit and 201 lbs of vegetables. Because there are two of us, I’d need to grow 659 lbs of produce to be self sufficient in fresh produce. Do I have the space to produce that much? Let’s take a look.

I found a range of figures for how much food can be grown per acre or per square foot. One couple in Pasadena grew 6,000 lbs of food on 1/10th of an acre. An acre is 43,560 square feet, so their tenth of an acre was about 4,356 square feet. That works out to 1.3 lbs of food per square foot. Commercial farmers get about 1.5 to 2.5 lbs per square foot. One guy using a process called permaculture gets amazing yields of 3 to 10 lbs per square foot.

Of course a lot depends on what kind of crops one chooses to grow and whether or not you can garden year round. Celery has one of the highest yields at 32,000 lbs an acre. Dry beans are among the lowest at 1,400 lbs per acre. Apples produce 25,000 lbs per acre, with peaches and pears yielding 31,000 lbs per acre.

I have three small raised beds in back, surrounded by fruit trees, bean towers, a pea fence and blueberries in barrels.

But I don’t have acres. I have square feet. My three raised beds in back have a combined area of 54 square feet. My entire back yard that isn’t occupied by the deck is about 10 ft x 60 ft, or 600 sq ft. In that space, I have a chicken coop and 17 fruit trees, in addition to the raised beds, a couple of bean towers, a pea fence, and a couple of barrels of blueberry bushes. I’d say that my back is maxed out for food production.

Fabric Grow Pots are a great way to get more growing space. We grow potatoes and yams in our driveway!

I have five Grow Pots in the driveway, where I grow potatoes in winter and spring and yams in summer and fall. The Garden of Perpetual Responsibility at the side has four artichokes and is lined with pots of horseradish, ginger, green onions, and a strawberry jar. I need to get my Fuyu persimmon planted. Then that area will be finished.

We grow artichokes in the side garden next to the driveway.

I need to rework the Garden of Infinite Neglect in front. It has some straggling chard and kale, but that’s it right now. I have plans for raised beds there.

My 14 ft x 20 ft community garden plot has pathways and a sitting bench that occupy some of the space. That leaves me only about 160 ft of actual gardening space.

My community garden plot is 14 ft by 20 ft. Some of that area is occupied by pathways and my sitting/storage bench. The actual gardening area is probably only 160 sq ft. So that’s what I have to garden in. I’m guessing that’s about 800 square feet total. So in theory, I could grow 800 lbs of food in the space that is available to me. But God help me, I don’t want to process that much food.

I think I would be happy growing half the produce we need, or 327 lbs a year. That leaves room for bananas and pineapple and others things that we can’t grow. So that will be my goal for next year’s garden: 327 lbs of produce. That’s a hundred pounds more than I grew this year or last year. If it turns out to be 500 lbs instead of 327 lbs, I would be STUNNED. But happy. I also want our urban farmlet to produce 400 eggs, which is all we need.

Last year, we were self-sufficient in eggs, producing even more than we needed. The girls are older this year, so they’re not laying as well. We actually had to buy eggs this month. They don’t lay well in November and December, I’ve learned. I will plan on getting one more hen to make up for the fact that Henrietta will be 4 years old next year, and then we should be totally self sufficient in eggs for 2012.

We are self-sufficient in a number of produce items. We produce all the lemons and limes that we need, as well as artichokes, arugula, beets, bok choy, chard, collards, eggplant, kale, Komatsuna, leeks, Mizuna, green onions, parsnips, radishes, snow peas, summer squash, tomatoes, winter squash, and yams.That’s not too shabby.

My herb garden produces all the herbs that we could want  year round except for dill, basil and cilantro, which are seasonal, and tarragon, which hasn’t grown well for me. I’m still trying on that one. Sage is a short-lived perennial, and needs to be replanted next year. We even have a bay laurel tree in a pot, which gives us bay leaves.

Growing your own onions and garlic is really easy.

We can get by for months on our own apples, oranges, onions, peaches, nectarines, cucumbers, bell peppers, and lettuce too. I have four kinds of pickles and four kinds of jams put by, canned tomato soup and sauce, and frozen pumpkin, snow peas and spaghetti sauce. I even have a jar of dried mint for tea and lavender sugar to put on berries. So we have preserved some things to extend the season.

Putting by your own jams and jellies is so satisfying. I love seeing all those sparkling jars on the pantry shelves. It's saving summer.

For next year, I not only want a larger harvest, I want to preserve more of my harvest. But most of all, I want to enjoy my garden. I want to relish each day as it comes, and savor the sounds, smells and tastes of my garden.  I want to delight in my flowers and native plant garden as well as my food production garden. I will take pleasure in gardening and let it feed my soul as well as my body.

All in all, this was a good gardening year. But next year will be even better, God willing and the creek don’t rise.

What’s in bloom in my yard, Jan. 2010

In addition to keeping a photo log of my veggie garden and fruit trees, I plan to post photos of what is in bloom in my coastal southern California yard each month. Some of my flowers bloom year-round, but others are definitely seasonal. These photos were taken Jan. 24. While the northern states are still buried under snow, spring is beginning here.

This little cyclamen is in a pot. I love the flowers so much that I think I'll add some cyclamen bulbs to my yard this year.

Allysum blooms year-round here, and is a great plant for attracting hoverflies, bees, and butterflies.

I got this Dendrobium orchid as a cutting from a friend, and just love it. It blooms all year long.

This container arrangement of bromeliads is about to bloom.

These bromeliads grow like weeds. I have a number of them to repot. They bloom only from new shoots, so repotting is a constant task.

One of my poinsettias is finished already, but this icon of winter is still attractive enough to keep.

Darned if I can remember what this fuzzy succulent is called, but I just love it.

What do you think? Is it an aeonium, crassula, or echevaria?

These jade flowers are showing signs of water damage from all of our rain.

Love these double paperwhite narcissus. I planted rows of them by my raised vegetable beds.

These single paperwhites may have an even stronger fragrance than the doubles. Love them too.

Rosemary blooms year-round here and is great for attracting honeybees.

Yippee, my first rosebud of spring. It will be February before it opens though.

These Nemesias are among my favorite yard flowers because they bloom all year long, are drought tolerant, and reseed themselves.

Unlike my purple Nemesia, these raspberry Nemesias are hybrids and aren't as likely to naturalize.

My Florida Prince peach is the first to bloom. I've had it three years, and this spring it has 300 blossoms on it. I'm hoping for a good crop, but I know better than to count my fruit before it sets.

This Crassula naturalized in my yard from the neighbor's containers. I just love its exhuberant flowers and keep many pots of this succulent growing all the time.

My dwarf Eureka lemons are showing new buds. No flower buds yet on my orange, lime, or Meyer lemon trees.

My camellias bloom in January and February, and are among my favorite harbingers of spring.

I have three different Camellias. This one is more salmon colored.

The third Camellia blooms later than the other two.

I adore these Scabiosa blossoms. They're new to my yard, so I'm not sure how long they'll stay in bloom.

A small pink-flowered Magnolia tree on the north side of our house blooms in January and February.

This golden yarrow flower is more of a fall hold-over than a new spring bloom. Butterflies love this California native plant.

February is when my first Freesias will come into bloom. They fill the yard with fragrance. I can hardly wait.

Pink cobbity daisies are just now beginning to flower. They'll reach full bloom next month and will bloom all summer.

Lavender blooms all year long in my yard and is a great attractant for bees and butterflies.

I have two varieties of lavender in the yard, English and Spanish, but I forget which is which.

Snowdrops bloom in January and into February. I planted them by the pond in front.

Gazania is a drought-tolerant plant from South Africa. It blooms all year long, but does better during the hot months.

Lantana is drought-tolerant, blooms all year, and is great for attracting butterflies.

There are over 20 different kinds of plants in flower in my yard in late January, most of them drought-tolerants. Many of them are in my yard to provide pollen and nectar for bees and butterflies. A professional landscaper would probably gasp in horror at my layout (notice that I didn’t show long shots, only closeups), but I’m not planting for them. I plant for the wildlife and my own pleasure. Hope you enjoyed your visit to my January flowers.

(To read more of Lou Murray’s environmental writing, see her weekly column, Natural Perspectives, in the Huntington Beach Independent at www.hbindependent.com /blogs_and_columns

My pond and veggie garden in southern California, January 2010

One of my New Year’s Resolutions is to keep a good photographic record of my vegetable garden, fruit-growing and yard this year.  My plan is to photograph my yard around mid-month so I can keep better track of what grows and blooms when. Since my raised beds are new, I’m still getting used to them. These pics were taken Jan. 26.

Raised bed #1

Raised bed #1 has bell peppers that I planted in spring of 2009. They are not only still producing peppers, they’re showing flower buds for the 2010 season!

Also in this bed are two tomatoes, a zucchini, and a square foot each of garlic, mizuna, arugula, hollow crown parsnips, Danvers half-long carrots, Lucullus chard, and red sails lettuce. In the background, I have a blueberry bush, Asian pear, Meyer lemon, navel orange, and a teepee of snow peas.

garlic

Arugula

Aristocrat zucchini, a total experiment. I don't usually grow zucchini, preferring Patty Pan and yellow summer squash, but I thought I'd try a winter zucchini for the first time.

Oh boy, flower buds on my blueberry bushes! I can hardly wait for blueberries. I harvested them over a two-month period last spring.

Raised bed #2, my favorite bed

The cauliflower is gone (YUM!) from raised bed #2. Ditto the spinach. Most of the lettuce is gone as well. I’ve replanted the empty spots with garlic and broccoli. The broccoli plants are heading up while the plants are tiny, so I think that crop will be pretty much a bust. My first leeks are ready to harvest though. I started them from seed last January. Amazingly slow, just like my savoy cabbage, which is also taking a year from seed to harvest. My rainbow chard has been producing steadily ever since I put the transplants in back in late Sept. Win some, lose some.

Raised bed #3, planted in October from seeds.

Poor raised bed #3. It has gotten less than three hours of sun a day since October, and the poor little seedlings are just languishing. In this bed I have sugar snap peas, red onions, yellow onions, lettuce (Black-seeded Simpson and Lollo Rossa), cheddar cauliflower, spinach, and mizuna.  

The sun has been moving north since the winter solstice a month ago, and the seedlings are finally showing some signs of growth. I expect better results from this bed in summer.

My Garden of Infinite Neglect by the front sidewalk. Boy, does this area need some attention.

 The Garden of Infinite Neglect has kale still growing from a planting of dwarf Scotch blue curled kale in 2007. The new leaves are just as tasty and tender as newly planted kale. Amazing plants. I have collards ready to harvest as well. Those plants also went in a year ago. I pick some of them about every two months for collard greens and a ham hock or bean soup. I planted these poor savoy cabbages from seed a year ago. They’re just now heading up. None are ready to pick yet. And somewhere in there is a patch of Lutz Greenleaf beets that I never got around to pulling, also a year old. This poor area got seriously neglected while I was working on my backyard makeover with new raised beds and resetting the pavers.

Artichokes in the Garden of Perpetual Responsibility

Speaking of neglect, here is my Garden of Perpetual Responsibility. Somewhere between the weeds, I have eight artichoke plants and about 30 red onions. The storms broke one of the trellises for my thornless blackberries, so that’s one more chore that needs doing in this area. These two gardens should make you feel good about your own gardening efforts. I’m sure you don’t let weeds grow in your garden.

I also grow baby bok choy in bowls during the cooler months. I think I'll eat a few of these for dinner.

I grow green onions in bowls, starting a new batch from seed every few months. With two bowls of green (bunching) onions growing constantly, I haven’t had to buy them from the store in over a year.

Pond in our front yard that I built myself about 10 years ago.

One of my recent projects is battling ecological succession in my front yard pond. I constructed this pond myself about 10 years ago, digging the hole, lining it with a felt blanket and thick rubber pond liner, adding rocks, then planting it with taro (elephant ear), water iris, water hyacinth, wiry rush, dwarf rush, and pennywort (big mistake–it has spread outside the pond and all over the yard).

But over time, the plants grew and leaves fell in and decayed. What had been an 18″ deep pond had only a skim of water in it, with a deep, soggy layer of debris going down almost all of those 18 inches. The mosquito fish were running out of room to swim. So after all of our recent rain, I thinned out the plants and mucked out some of the debris. More work remains to be done, but it’s looking better.

My backyard pond is a simple pond liner set in the ground and filled with plants and gravel. It's more of a water garden than a functional pond, but it provides water year-round for birds, insects and other wildlife in back. I set this up in October, so it's a new pond.

Our yard is a certified National Wildlife Federation backyard habitat, but most of the wild habitat now is in the front yard since the back got converted to veggies and fruit. To be certified and/or to attract birds, insects, and other wildlife, all you need is food, water, and cover. Using plants native to the area in your landscaping is a bonus. But that’s topic for another post.

(To read more of Lou Murray’s environmental writing, see her weekly column, Natural Perspectives, in the Huntington Beach Independent at www.hbindependent.com /blogs_and_columns

Harvest Monday Jan. 25, 2010

Once again, I’m behind with my Monday harvest report. I’m going to blame it on the rain. Yep, it’s raining again today. Just harvested some lettuce in the rain. Lettuce sure loves this weather. Here’s what I’ve picked in the past two weeks in my coastal southern California garden.

Jan. 11-17

7 navel oranges (4 lbs, 1.5 oz.)

2 limes (8 oz.), last of crop

4 bell peppers (1 lb, 8 oz.)

chard (6 oz.)

cauliflower, 1 head (8 oz.)

6 lbs, 15.5 oz. of produce

Jan. 18-24

2 navel oranges (1 lb, 2 oz.)

1 Meyer lemon (5 oz.)

2 green onions (0.5 oz.)

parsley (0.5 oz.)

cilantro

1 lb, 8 oz. of produce

(To read more of Lou Murray’s environmental writing, see her weekly column, Natural Perspectives, in the Huntington Beach Independent at www.hbindependent.com /blogs_and_columns

Fruit and veggies in a southern California garden in December

We just had four days of rain, but today the sun is shining again. I snapped these pics earlier in the week, just before the series of storms rolled in off the Pacific.

Dwarf sugar snap pea seedlings planted Nov. 15

German white icicle radish planted Nov 23

Lettuce seedlings

Spinach, cheddar cauliflower, and red and yellow onion sets are up also, but the purple cauliflower crop is a bust. No sprouts. These are all in raised bed #3.

Raised bed #2 with parsley in front

Raised bed #2 is still magnificient with chard, lettuce, spinach, leeks, red and savoy cabbage, and cauliflower. I’m playing a waiting game with my first head of cauliflower to see how big it will get before I harvest it. I think what this means is that I’m setting myself up to harvest it just a hair before it bolts or flowers out or whatever the heck it is that a head of cauliflower will do.Bell peppers ready to pick

Bed #1 continues to produce bell peppers. We’ve tried for years to grow bell peppers with no success. They were always thin-skinned and bitter. This year we’re getting perfect bell peppers. I sprayed the plants with blossom set (a plant hormone) early in the season and again in the fall. I don’t know if that is the difference, or the type I planted. I got a 6-pack of mixed color peppers from Lowe’s and they’ve produced peppers all summer and are still going strong. I have about 20 more coming along in various stages of growth.

Navel oranges

Winter is time for citrus in our neck of the woods. We have navel oranges, Eureka and Meyer lemons, and Bearrs limes ready for harvest. The valencia oranges will ripen later in the season.

Fruit trees grow all along our back fence. Here are Fuji, Gala, and Granny Smith apple trees, plus a Florida Prince peach and a Santa Rosa plum.

We have about 20 fruit trees, some in the ground and some in pots, in my urban orchard.  Some are dwarf, some semi-dwarf, and some are full-sized. The apple and stone fruit trees still have most of their leaves, but they’ll fall soon. I have some bird feeders here, and you can see the chicken coop (still no chickens! I’m such a procrastinator) in the background. I grew vegetables here a couple of years ago, but the trees cast too much shade now for anything except lettuce.

 I do some container gardening in front, where there is more sun.

Green onions in a terra cotta bowl

Bok Choy in a bowl

I grow green onions year round in these terra cotta bowls, planting them from seed. Baby bok choy also does nicely in these bowls, but it’s a cool weather crop only. Once the bok choy is eaten, this bowl will revert to green onion production. I use the potting soil over and over, just adding Sure Start organic fertilizer prior to each planting.

Rhubarb

The rhubarb plant is coming along nicely. Each leaf that sprouts is bigger than the one before. This is the first year in the garden for this plant, and I’m supposed to let it grow all year without harvesting so the root can get big and strong. But I can never wait. By February or March, I may harvest a few stems to put into a coffee cake. That’s the only way I like to eat rhubarb.

Artichokes in the Garden of Perpetual Responsibility

I really only wanted a couple of artichoke plants, so I bought two of them, thinking that my perennial artichokes had completey died. Turned out that they were just dormant. Then it turned out that the pots that I bought had two artichokes each. Then, inexplicably, I bought another pot of artichokes. I’ve ended up with eight artichoke plants, more than I really intended. Oh well, I like artichokes.

See all that lush growth around the artichokes? They’re mostly weeds. Somewhere hidden in those weeds are about 30 red onions that I planted from sets around the artichokes. I’ve not tried onions in this bed before. This plot gets precious little sun in the winter, as the neighbor’s trees to the south shade it pretty completely. Now that I have a break in the rain, I need to get to work on those weeds and see if I can find the onions.

Kale

Collards

Savoy cabbage struggling to make a head

An eggplant defying the season

I think I’ll name my garden by the front sidewalk the Garden of Infinite Neglect. Since I got my lovely raised beds in back from Gardener’s Supply Company, I’ve pretty much ignored it. Yet it continues to provide us with kale and collards. If I bothered to harvest them, there are eggplants and beets ready as well. There is always more to do in a southern California garden. It never sleeps.

(To read more of Lou Murray’s environmental writing, see her weekly column, Natural Perspectives, in the Huntington Beach Independent at www.hbindependent.com /blogs_and_columns/)

Saving Heirloom Seeds

blue lake pole beansWhen I was at the Garden Writer’s Association conference in Raleigh last month, I visited the exhibit booth of Baker Creek Heirloom Seeds and was quite impressed with their offerings.

cilantro seedsI took a peek at their website yesterday at www.rareseeds.com and was further impressed. Baker’s Creek Heirloom Seeds carries over 1,200 open pollinated, heirloom vegetables, flowers and herbs, many of them rare varieties from southeast Asia and Central America that I haven’t found offered elsewhere.

onion seedsI requested a copy of their 2010 catalog, but I plan to order some seeds of Asian greens now for fall planting. That’s one of the joys of gardening–being able to grow vegetables that you can’t find in the grocery store. 

Unlike hybrids, old-time heirloom vegetables breed true. You can save seeds from year to year and save money on your vegetable garden. I just planted some seeds of arugula (the British call it rocket) and mizuna (a Japanese mustard green) from seeds that I saved last year. Both are good in salads, and mizuna is great in stir-fries. I plan to try some Komatsuna (another mustard from Japan) as soon as the seeds arrive.

mizuna seedsBaker’s Creek Heirloom Seeds was started by Jeremiath (Jere) Gettle in 1998 when he was only 17. He had started gardening at age 4 and was making play seed catalogs by the time he was 7. Gettle has a passion for seed-saving and preserving old varieties that might otherwise be lost to the world. He has traveled extensively in southeast Asian and Central America, collecting seeds of unusual varieties of vegetables.

In the latter part of the 2oth Century, giant corporations were offering fewer and fewer varieties of seeds. Large seed companies focused mainly on hybrid seeds, which won’t breed true if the home gardener attempts to save seeds from them. I have nothing against hybrid seeds, because they certainly have their place in agriculture. But I would hate to see the old varieties lost.

Fortunately, American home gardeners have renewed their interest in heirloom varieties, and most seed companies offer at least a few varieties. Johnny’s Seeds is another good source for heirlooms.

arugula seeds

One way in which home gardeners can help save an amazingly diverse pool of genes is to buy heirloom seeds. This supports the companies that are attempting to maintain these old varieties in cultivation. As our climate is changing rapidly now, we would be wise to preserve as many of these old varieties as possible. Some of them may contain important genes that will enable them to survive variable climate and the new diseases that are bound to spring up. Besides, their flavor is often far superior to varieties that were bred primarily to withstand transport and look pretty and uniform.  Handsome is as handsome does.

(To read more of Lou Murray’s environmental writing, see her weekly column, Natural Perspectives, in the Huntington Beach Independent at www.hbindependent.com, under columnists.)

The Garden of Perpetual Responsibility

Time to get off my soapbox and back to the garden. We have a small (6 ft x 15 ft) garden area at the side of the driveway that is enclosed by a brick and slump stone wall. The driveway slopes down toward the house, making the area essentially a raised bed.

Garden of Perpetual ResponsibilityVic (my loving spouse) thought it would be a perfect place for a vegetable garden because it was sunny, so I began “farming” it a few years ago. That was right about the time our neighbors to the south planted a solid wall of trees and shrubs in their similar-sized planter.

Understand that we’re crammed into our respective properties like sardines in a can here in southern California. Their trees prevent sun from getting to my garden about six months out of the year. Since I attempt to garden year round, that was an unfortunate turn of events.

And sun isn’t the only issue. Some idiot dumped a truckload of gravel into the planter at some past time, possibly thinking that it would help with drainage. So the dirt (you could hardly call it soil) is positively packed with large gravel. Every year, more of the rocks surface. Getting a shovel through that morass is a challenge.

I’m not done complaining about this God-forsaken patch of dirt. Because growing vegetables there has proved so frustrating, I tend to neglect this patch even more than the rest of my garden. I let weeds grow. I let them set seed. I stupidly let the seeds fall to the earth. And there they reliably grow into more weeds. At least something grows there. And yet I persevere.

Our fall rainy season has started, so I spent the past week pulling weeds out of the Garden of Perpetual Responsibility. Then I raked the ground until I had the surface fairly clear of gravel. As I always do before planting, I dug in manure and compost, plus some E.B. Stone SureStart, an organic fertilizer that has beneficial soil bacteria and mycorrhizae.

rhubarbI can’t grow root crops here because of the gravel. And I’m tired of spading through that gravel each season. So I have decided to try perennials. I put in some thornless black raspberries last spring. I set them into nursery pots buried in the ground, just so the raspberry vines wouldn’t take over the entire plot. (Ha, like something other than weeds would grow in that garden!) On the spur of the moment, I bought a Victoria rhubarb plant and put that into the ground. They like colder winters than we have here, but I should get at least a couple of years of spring rhubarb stalks out of it.

new artichokeI had good luck with an artichoke plant there in the past, so I decided to plant more artichokes this year. I bought three pots, and was surprised to find that they each had two artichoke plants in them. Then I got another surprise. My original artichoke, which I thought was dead, had sprouted after our recent rain.

I only wanted three artichoke plants, but now I have seven. I put them into the ground and left them to their fate. Given my usual gardening luck, I’ll be doing good to get a mere meal or two of artichokes next spring.newly planted GPR

(To read more of Lou Murray’s environmental writing, see her weekly column, Natural Perspectives, in the Huntington Beach Independent at www.hbindependent.com, under columnists.)