gardening

Sloan Street Garden Update

Sunday, June 01, 2008

garden plot, may
Even with the unpredictable weather of late, my plot in the Sloan Street garden seems to be thriving, even with a few minor setbacks due to squirrel damage and some cukes that got a little too chilly one night.

From left to right, we have:
-snow and shelling peas (which are finally discovering their trellises)
-bright lights swiss chard
-lemon cucumbers
-pickling cucumbers
-kentucky wonder green bean
-bloomsdale spinach
-cherokee purple tomatoes (in chicken wire cage due to aforementioned squirrel destruction)
-rutgers tomatoes
-roma tomatoes
-jelly bean red & yellow grape tomatoes
-wee tiny genovese basil
-mesclun bundles
-carrots

I find is encouraging that just one short month ago this verdant urban oasis looked like this:
garden plot

And p.s.: that’s chamomile going crazy in the plots behind mine.

Posted by Emily on 06/01 at 01:09 PM


The Garden of Doom

Wednesday, May 28, 2008

may27turnip

I’m the only person in my neighborhood who grows anything more than a tomato plant or two (although there is a guy down the street with black walnut trees in his back yard - I’m trying to become close friends with him).  It would be surprising if that didn’t start to change this year - even my mother, who vowed never to keep a garden because of the trauma of growing up on a farm, planted a little mini garden this year to cut down on food costs.  There’s an element of thriftiness in my gardening adventures, but mostly I just like knowing where my food came from and how it was grown, and the ability to eat food minutes from harvest.

There is a small garden at our house, which I endeavor every year to intensively plant using the Square Foot Gardening method.  This year I sort of threw that out the window, and did a combination of Square Foot and row planting.  Is it a good idea? Only time will tell.  Things seem to be going well, but it’s planting is a little behind thanks to all the weird, cool weather we’ve been having lately.  I have to plant a few last minute things tomorrow and Thursday, but I’ll definitely be done by the end of the week.

So what’s growing in my garden this year?  Well, there are the things that come back year after year - rhubarb, a nice strawberry patch, chives, sorrel - and the four varieties of garlic I planted last Fall: Georgian Crystal Purple, German Extra Hardy, German Red, and Musik.  Sadly, my asparagus patch seems to have not gotten a good start and will have to be replanted this year.

I planted lots of herbs: Genovese basil, flat leaf parsley, rosemary, French tarragon, a few varieties of thyme, sage, oregano, cilantro, dill, and mint.  One thing I learned from my fellow Farm to Philly contributors last year is this - don’t rip up the herb garden at the end of the season.  So many FTP-ers continued to harvest herbs well into the Winter months.

There are the Hakurei and Scarlet Queen turnips (pictured above).  With only 38 and 43 days, respectively, to maturity, I should be cooking up a mess of sweet little turnips in only a few more weeks!  I’ll never forget the first time I had “hooker eye” turnips last year - I can barely wait!  I suspect I’ll be harvesting just about the same time as the strawberries ripen.

Here’s the rest of the list:

  • Thumbelina carrots
  • Tadorna leeks
  • Lacinato kale
  • Golden Swiss chard
  • Flash collards
  • Brilliant celeriac
  • Bloomsdale Savoy spinach
  • Cipollini onions
  • Caspian Pink tomato
  • Yellow Jelly Bean tomato
  • Peas
  • Akahana Mame dried beans
  • Ichiban eggplant
  • Golden beets
  • Orion fennel
  • Presto watercress
  • Sessantina Grossa broccoli raab

Like Allison, I also just purchased two raspberry plants.  I have yet to decide on a permanent home for them.  Then there are the two fig trees I bought last year (there’s a fig growing on one of them), and the single apricot tree that will finally get a mate this year.

Everything that has managed to get planted is doing just fine.  With dragon boat season in full swing, it’s hard to keep up with all the weeding, but I’ll be happy I did when everything is ready to harvest!

Posted by Nicole on 05/28 at 04:41 AM


New garden; Raspberry bush update

Sunday, May 25, 2008

I moved a month ago to a house with a partially dirt back yard. If you are familiar with South Philly backyards, you’ll know how unusual this is. The plantable ground practically sold me on the house. It’s small (14’ x 7’), but large enough for some of the plants I’ve been longing to grow. Top of the list: raspberries. If you look back to April 16, I posted when my bareroot plants began to show signs of life. This is the plant now:
raspberry 5-08
And the other finally woke up, too, about a month after this one.
Here’s the garden, Seamus’s favorite lounging spot. (He’s sitting near the dwarf sour cherry tree I bought with the raspberries.)
Seamus in garden Mem wknd08 -ftp
west side of garden 5-08 ftp
Most of the plants came from Greensgrow, a wonderland I’m embarassed to say that I learned about just this year. From the mushroom soil to the leaf compost to the flowers to the fresh produce (I bought wonderful asparagus on my last trip), I can’t say enough about the place. Over time, I’m hoping the improve the clay back there with compost from Greensgrow, my own over fall and winter, and worm castings. (The worm bin is temporarily out of commission. More about that in another post.) Among the Greensgrow plant purchases: Sungold, Yellow Pear, Brandywine, Mortgage Lifter, and Patio tomatoes; Yarrow; Stock; Swiss Chard; Sorrel; Catnip (for Seamus as well as for its spikes of purple flowers); Peppermint (in a container b/c I know from experience that mints will take over); Verbena; Bell Peppers; and French Marigolds. I still have plenty of room, but I’m committed to starting all my seeds from the Seed Savers Exchange. (More about that when they begin to do their thing.)

I’m a little behind with the garden this year, in part because of the actual move, but mostly due to the vast number of bricks I dug out. I’m talking 100+ whole or partial bricks. And I dug down only about 18-24 inches. There also was a layer of coal/charcoal-like stuff at one end. I pitched most of it along with about half the bricks. (Remaining bricks have been useful for “terracing” the containers.) Happily, I didn’t find much construction debris or glass or garbage, and I did find a lot of worms. Still, I mixed in several bags of leaf mulch, mushroom soil, and vermiculite before planting. (I think the space could take about 5 times that, but I am reminding myself to be patient.) Today, I tested the soil pH in several places, and all came in at about 6.5, thank goodness. I might acidify around the raspberries a teeny bit, but 6.5 should be comfortable for everything else.

Posted by Allison on 05/25 at 07:29 PM


Eating the front lawn

Thursday, May 08, 2008

Over the weekend I was spinning yarn in the afternoon, and my husband asked for my help outside.  “I went a little crazy,” he said “and I need your help cleaning up.”

Nothing could have prepared me for he did: half of our front lawn was completely bare.  He ripped up everything.

We do not have a traditional front lawn, all flat with a lovely expanse of green grass.  Rather, we have a steep front yard covered in ivy and other ground cover.  It often looks messy and sort of overgrown.  There’s a 6 feet by 5 feet section to the left of our front steps, and a 15 feet by 5 feet section to the right of our front steps.  My husband decimated the smaller section.

As we threw the detritus into lawn bags, we talked about what to do to the plot.  My husband wanted to put in some nice, flowering ground cover.  Vinca perhaps.  Or maybe Phlox.  The more I think about it, though, this might be the perfect time to introduce some edible ground cover.  It makes perfect sense - I’ve been trying to convert more and more of our lawn into garden space.

And as it turns out, there are a lot of options available.

Perennial herbs are readily available - oregano, chives, mint, thyme, bay, lavender, lemongrass, rosemary, just to name a few.  And there are also edible ground covers to choose from.  Lingonberry is viable option.  This low growing, spreading, evergreen ground cover produces edible berries in late Summer.  Cranberries are another interesting option.  Cranberries are a low-growing, spreading ground cover that, New Jersey being the cranberry capital, does very well in our area…and a bog is unnecessary.

Alternatively, lowbush blueberries are another option.  Lowbush blueberry bushes, also known as Maine blueberries, only get about a foot high at maximum.  They are also native to Pennsylvania and tend to spread like crazy.

Coincidentally, I recently discovered three local nurseries that specialize in native plants: Edge of the Woods, Red Bud, and Yellow Springs.  All three are a rich source of native edible landscaping!.

What are your suggestions for plants to include in an edible landscape?

Posted by Nicole on 05/08 at 02:21 PM


To bee or not to bee

Wednesday, May 07, 2008

bee

We’ve been concerned about bee populations for a while now, since the minute the reports of colony collapses began to be reported.  Those of us who garden truly understand the benefit of bees, and by now I think most of us appreciate the impact of bees on our food sources.  It’s said that Einstein predicted the end of mankind within four years without bees.

A report out yesterday indicates that bee health in commercial colonies has declined even since last year.

A survey of bee health released Tuesday revealed a grim picture, with 36.1 percent of the nation’s commercially managed hives lost since last year.

Last year’s survey commissioned by the Apiary Inspectors of America found losses of about 32 percent.

As beekeepers travel with their hives this spring to pollinate crops around the country, it’s clear the insects are buckling under the weight of new diseases, pesticide drift and old enemies like the parasitic varroa mite, said Dennis vanEngelsdorp, president of the group.

This is the second year the association has measured colony deaths across the country. This means there aren’t enough numbers to show a trend, but clearly bees are dying at unsustainable levels and the situation is not improving, said vanEngelsdorp, also a bee expert with the Pennsylvania Department of Agriculture.

Pennsylvania has committed an additional $20,400 into Colony Collapse Disorder research at Penn State, bringing the total funds dedicated to investigating CCD to $86,000.  That doesn’t seem like nearly enough money to me to investigate something that could impact us all so radically. Just last year Pennsylvania apple growers, as well as fruit growers throughout the region, had trouble getting enough bees to pollinate their acreage.  The cost of renting commercial bees increased by 60%.  With the greater decline, rental prices will likely increase again, and farmers will be forced to pass on the extra costs to consumers. So what can you and I do?  No one really knows exactly what’s killing off the bees, but we can support wild bee habitats.  Honeybees are not the only good pollinators - bumblebees and Mason bees are also prized for pollination.  To make your yard or patio bee-friendly, grow plants that have plenty of nectar and pollen.  Feed the bees!  Avoid pesticides and other harsh chemicals.  And be sure to give bees a place to live.  You can purchase bee habitats, but you can just as easily build your own.

Posted by Nicole on 05/07 at 06:01 AM


Signs of Life

Thursday, May 01, 2008

seedlings

Seedlings are the most optimistic things, don’t you think? They awaken some longing that I think I last felt as an elementary schooler as I headed home with my tiny pine tree on Arbor Day. These wee ones are Buttercup Squash. Please don’t ask me where I plan to plant even one of them, because I hear that they’re likely to take over my little garden patch. I wonder if I could train them to grow up a clothesline? I could have green squash bobbing in the breeze like lumpy paper lanterns…

Posted by Emily on 05/01 at 02:33 AM


To Feed Thousands

Tuesday, April 29, 2008

garden plot
Here it is! My very own plot in the Sloan Street Community Garden. I’m delighted to be a new garden member this year as I’ve got big plans to grow sugar and shelling peas, followed by all manner of green beans, peppers, zucchini, cucumbers and (how could you not?) tomatoes. It was a difficult choice, but I’ve narrowed down the finalists to yellow and red ‘jelly bean’ grape tomatoes, beefsteak slicers, and one precious Cherokee Purple. I started my baby seedlings on Good Friday with the intention of sowing them in the back yard. I changed my mind after a few attempts to sink a spade into the compacted clay soil. This decision was confirmed as I unearthed two whole glass bottles, several bricks and brick shards, and some extremely corroded cutlery.

I’m not alone in these, my first attempts at growing my own food. I think that many have taken to heart Michael Pollan’s urging from In Defense of Food to plant a garden. Though the impulse for me may have begun with the desire to wake up to the verdant smell of tomato plants and their August bounty, my garden planning has taken on a more somber tone of late. The headlines about the impending global food crisis are becoming as consistent as my morning coffee. Working in hunger relief means that every day I come face to face with the ramifications of this crisis as the drought plays out in Australia and people in Haiti are eating dirt for dinner, if for only the feeling of fullness that it provides. Every day at work I make phone calls asking for food to feed the working poor of Philadelphia. It’s true that hunger is different here, but the urgency is looming, the Farm Bill stalled, and people in both Haiti and Philadelphia go to bed hungry.

I can’t solicit enough produce, meat or bread to send overseas, but I can do my best to take care of those in my community who would otherwise have to choose between utility bills and groceries. The other thing I can do is exactly this: embrace my little square of dirt, not because it will feed thousands, but because it just might produce enough to feed me.

Posted by Emily on 04/29 at 02:36 PM


Sorrel revisited

Thursday, April 24, 2008

sorrel

There are a few things that over-wintered in the garden and are now going all crazy: the garlic, French sorrel, and chives.  Only the sorrel was a surprise.  And what a nice surprise it was! 

Sorrel sort of looks like spinach, but there’s no mistaking the flavor - it’s tart and lemony.  And it’s good for you!  Sorrel is high in vitamin C, vitamin A, iron, and fiber.

I tend to use sorrel more like a garnish, cut into chiffonade and used in sandwiches and with beets.  However, since I’ve got such an early and large supply of it, I’m looking into some other uses.  One interesting idea I came across is a sorrel pesto sauce for pasta.  Another really tempting idea is sorrel and goat cheese quiche.

Radishes will be one of the first crops we get when the CSA’s start shipping, and I found a recipe for butter-braised radishes with sorrel  The combination of spicy and tart sounds delicious!

Here are some other ideas for using sorrel:

It’s definitely not too late to plant some sorrel in your own garden - as I discovered, it’s a perennial…so it will give you many years of lemony goodness!

Posted by Nicole on 04/24 at 04:03 PM


Something new every day!

Friday, April 18, 2008

gar

This is really a fun time of year to eat locally.  There’s not a ton of stuff that’s seasonal, but fresh things keep dribbling into the farmer’s markets and every day brings some new shoot in the garden.  I have tons of chives already, and there’s some overwintered sorrel that looks ready to harvest!  And did I mention the fig growing on my fig tree?

Every time I get the email about what’s coming in the next week at the Fair Food Farmstand, I can’t open it fast enough.  This week there are wild garlic bulbs and spring scallions from Green Meadow Farm.  There’s baby rainbow chard and beet greens.  Spinach.  There’s even a recipe included involving the garlic and the great, locally grown spelt berries sold at the farmstand.

I know what I’ll be eating this weekend!

What’s in season at your local market?

Posted by Nicole on 04/18 at 07:30 AM


Starting seeds

Monday, February 25, 2008

celeryrootseedling

It’s nearly March.  I noticed the other day that I have at least three or four inches of leaves up on my daffodil bulbs outside.  It won’t be long now before the earliest bulbs are flowering, and before long it will be time to start gardening in earnest.  The official last frost date here in the Philadelphia area is May 15, but global warming is certainly pushing that date earlier and earlier each year.  Last year I planted tomatoes in the garden on May 1 and had a lovely crop.

For long season crops, like leeks and celery root, it’s best to get a head start on the season and start the plants indoors.  I planted seeds for both on February 18 and, as you can see, the seeds are starting to sprout.  If I can keep the cats out of the plants and if I can give these seedlings the love they need, I’ll have a healthy head start on the growing season by May.

I was intimidated by starting my own seeds for a long time, but it’s really pretty easy.  I prefer to use Jiffy peat pellets in those plastic greenhouse things for starting seeds. It’s easy, and I have a good sunny, warm spot that means I don’t need to mess with a grow light set up.  But you definitely don’t need to purchase peat pellets to start seeds - you can use things you have lying around the house instead.

Lots of people simply reuse egg cartons or yogurt cups for starting seeds. These containers offer a way to recycle your garbage, and they’re a great size for starting seeds.  You can use regular dirt from your garden or backyard in the container of your choice, but seeds generally do best in a soilless potting medium (which is one reason why I prefer the peat pellets).  A trip to your local gardening center will score you a bag of what you need. 

When you’re ready to plant, just take a look at the packet of seeds you have.  Read about how deep the seeds need to be planted.  In most cases, it’s about a quarter of an inch deep.  Make sure the peat or soil or whatever is moist and then plant.  Put your containers in a sunny window and cover the containers in plastic wrap to trap warmth and humidity.  Check your containers every day or two to make sure the soil is moist, and eventually your seeds should sprout.

It’s at this point where things most often go awry.  Seedlings need 12-18 hours of light.  If your sunny window isn’t providing the needed light, you may need to invest in a grow light - but be careful not to position the light too far above the plants or they may get too leggy.  When the plant gets its first set of true leaves, you may want to fertilize a little encourage good roots and healthy growth.  You can normally keep the plants in their original containers until you’re ready to plant, unless you’re growing them indoors for an extended period.  In that case, you may want to pot them up into larger containers.

It doesn’t take a lot of work to start your own seeds, and you’ll be rewarded with the most local of locally grown produce!

Posted by Nicole on 02/25 at 04:34 AM


An organizing fool

Friday, February 08, 2008

manure

It’s February and that means I have been nose-first in seed catalogs the last couple of weeks.  I suspect many FTP contributors are in the same boat.  There’s nothing more ‘local’ than growing it yourself!

I keep a stack near my couch so I can read and reread the catalogs, deciding which company has the best seed varieties, figuring out what I really want to grow.  Normally, I’d have a little notebook close by so I can make notes and lists.  Now I just keep my laptop handy - I’ve gone high tech.  I have become completely enamored of MyFolia.

MyFolia is a program for gardeners that let’s you electronically track, organize, and share what you’ve planted, what seeds and plants you’ve purchased, and what you want to buy.  There’s a reminder section for making gardening task notes and a journal.  It’s a pretty great idea.  The site is in public beta, so not everything works perfectly…but it’s definitely better than the system I was using.

For those of us who are knitters, you might think it sounds pretty similar to Ravelry.  It is very similar and even has the same Flickr interface. Like Ravelry, MyFolia definitely appeals to the inner nitpicky organizational freak in me.

I’ve been busily entering in all the seeds I’ve recently ordered.  Just this week I placed an order with Territorial Seed Company.  Spring will soon be here and I want to make sure I have time to start some seeds indoors.  Some of the first things I’ll start inside are the Brilliant Celeriac and Tadorna Leeks.  And, of course, one of my first outdoor plantings will be a sea of Hakurei Turnips, the seeds for which I procured from Kitazawa Seed Company.

Posted by Nicole on 02/08 at 09:39 AM


Garlic Interlude

Monday, January 21, 2008

Had to put a recent picture I took of some garlic left over from a garden we were given.  Garlic, as I was telling M, is so amazing yet unassuming it is probably my favorite veggie.  Well, there’s tomatoes too, of course.  And potatoes, brussels sprouts, mushrooms, onions…  Oh, dear.  Hmm… enjoy!

Posted by Eliza on 01/21 at 06:23 AM


Rice for the rest of us

Friday, January 18, 2008

For the last couple of weeks I and some of my fellow FTP contributors have had our noses stuck in seed catalogs.  Many of us will begin our indoor seed starting for certain long season crops pretty soon and it’s a great time of year to fantasize about gardening - especially in light of the snow yesterday!!

Always interested in growing new things, I stumbled upon a kid’s website recent that describes the growing conditions necessary for growing your own rice.  As you might imagine, rice is not exactly native to Pennsylvania.  Rather, rice is native to tropical and subtropical southern Asia and southeastern Africa.  Most of the rice grown today comes from Asia, and it’s growth requires quite a bit of water.

That said, it’s entirely possible to grow your own rice without flooding your backyard!  All it takes is a bucket, a bit of compost and potting soil, some rice seeds, and water.  You can grow the rice indoors - as long as your have temps above 55 degrees, that’s all you need (click for the full instructions).  The rice needs a long growing season - 90-120 days.

I have to assume that a large number of rice plants would need to be planted to get a decent enough yield.  Still, it might make a fun experiment - and think of how proud you’ll be to have rice that you’ve grown yourself without all the pesticides.

Posted by Nicole on 01/18 at 05:59 AM


A little poo is good for the soul

Thursday, December 27, 2007

One of our readers recently requested a list of local resources by county.  The other contributors and I are working to put that together, but while I was doing a little bit of Google research I ran into the latest newsletter from the Pennsylvania Farm Bureau.  I found a link of potential value to all of us home gardeners - Pennsylvania Manure Trader.

When I excitedly ran into the other room last night to tell my husband, he stared at me like I had grown horns.  I guess it’s a little strange to be excited about manure.

I compost, but my kitchen scraps can’t possibly supply all the nutrients I need for my little garden.  Oftentimes I end up purchasing manure to dig in, and then I wish I could find someone from whom I could buy it.  Some of the manure listed on the site is purchase-able, but much of it is free.  And it seems like nearly all the manure listed is horse manure.

horses

This is the time of year I start daydreaming about next year’s garden, so this is a great resource to have on hand.

On a related note, have you checked out the Seed Savers Exchange catalog that Allison wrote about?  The variety of tomatoes has got me drooling!

Posted by Nicole on 12/27 at 02:55 AM


Lapsing Locavoritude

Monday, December 24, 2007

herbs

Although I have not lost locavoraciousness, this time of year—lacking time and wheels and a taste for root vegetables—it’s tough not to skid off the runway of locally grown. I still have a few farmers market apples in the fridge, but that’s about it at the moment. Except for these herbs—the last scraggly tarragon from outside, some sage from a patch in the nabe, and some oregano I brought inside that’s hanging on—that I’ll mince and combine with butter and lemon zest (uh-oh) to slip under the skin of tomorrow’s Christmas turkey breast. (Don’t ask about the turkey part’s provenance, ok?)

Posted by Allison on 12/24 at 11:56 AM


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Support a local farmer, crave the freshest produce, worry about what's in or on your food - whatever your reason for eating locally grown and produced food in the Philadelphia area, Farm to Philly is probably writing about it. We're focused on where to find it, how to grow it, and what to do with it!


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