Showing posts with label radish. Show all posts
Showing posts with label radish. Show all posts

Sunday, May 24, 2020

Trials and tribulations of food forest farming

Much of the plants are bolting for the sun pulling them forward to bloom. The radish, cilantro and arugula like the cool weather, so with the hot sun beaming on them, they know it's time to seed for sowing in the fall.

Radish blooming

Arugula blooming

Cilantro blooming

The cool weather crops aren't the only blooming plants beaming in the sun. The blackberry and dewberry plants are blooming, and the wild roses too.


Blackberry


Wild roses in a tin can

I am fighting the birds to no end. Usually I fight the birds with the blueberries too...I cover the blueberries to prevent birds from eating them, but I have another issue: chemical sprays. The county sprayed the roads with weed killer and it wreaked havoc on EVERYTHING. My flowers, my fruit trees and fruit bushes are suffering from the chemical sprays. They have burnt leaves and spots. They are not flowering so they are not fruiting. There's nothing I can do for them, besides in the future to make signs that read: "no spraying, wildlife refuge".

Still, I cover the blueberries--in case there are some blueberries that fruit that the birds want.

Like I have previously mentioned, the birds or other critters are digging up and eating all of the seeds I have sowed for weeks. I have planted zucchini, yellow squash, peppers, tomatoes, pumpkin, cantaloupe, and peas in my garden and pots. But do you think the birds or critters care that I need to eat too? No. They have ate hundreds of seeds. A few seeds were left behind and germinated, so there are some plants growing luckily. We shall see what happens. At this point, I need to germinate seeds and then plant so this discourages critters from eating anything. 


pots full (and not full) of a variety of seeds

Zucchini or yellow squash..it's a mystery now that I have continously resown because of the critters 

Trying to keep them covered as pest prevention...
The white triangle has shittake
mushroom spawn which critters ALSO dug up,
but some may grow in the cedar mulch 

Some of the Blueberry bushes covered

Figs sprouting

Fig trees
The rain continues to down pour, so the weeds grow but my tilling and sowing becomes delayed. It is not a good situation right now. It is almost June, and still I do not have beans planted! The lettuce and radishes have done spectacular this year, and maybe that's all that will produce.

Every year, there is one or two veggies or fruits that out perform and harvest plenty; and then some that don't at all. Every year is different. One year, tomatoes and peppers will be harvested in mass, and then the next year, it may be the beans that have a tremendous bounty. Then the following years, the tomatoes, peppers and beans may not produce at all, whereas the pears or peaches or figs explode in abundance.

We'll find out this year what those great harvests will be...I think we already have.

Thursday, May 14, 2020

HUGE & EPIC radish harvest!

I have not stopped picking leaves for soups, salads, and sandwiches. I have noticed while the greens grow slowly, the radishes grow quickly!

Now I have 4 rows of radishes growing intermittently with greens and onion, and some strawberries. So  I have a large quantity of big radishes.


Today, I pulled up a patch of radishes and below you'll see that epic harvest.


After I pulled up the radishes, I worked the soil and sowed some peas, and covered with additional soil mix.

From here, I bagged and dated the radishes to give away or sell. Of course, I have been doing more giving than selling. Here are some additional pickings from the garden...


Asparagus 

There are many side projects behind the scenes...laying sand for ceramic tile in between the garden beds, tilling and hoeing the other gardens, filling pots and grow bags with soil mixes for planting. I have 45 garden pots and probably 20 grow bags filled with mulch and compost. In those, I'm going to plant melons, squashes, peppers, and tomatoes. I have potatoes already poking throigh the soil in the grow bags.

At my other gardens, I have potatoes growing in bags, buckets and in the ground. I am helping my grandparents in their landscaping endeavours as well, so I have made several flower beds and started additional flower bed spaces.

Like I said, there's so much going on, it's hard to detail all in one post. But, I'll keep y'all updated! See you soon.

Thursday, May 7, 2020

Garden greens, radish harvest & other garden prepping


Lately I have been cleaning up the gardens to prep for tilling, hoeing and sowing seeds.

At my grandparent's, I cleaned the garden of weeds, raked, hoed and made a burn pile of the weeds. I haven't been able to till and sow seeds because the garden has been sopping wet.

At my garden, I have been laying ceramic tile to make pathways. My garden is also sopping wet, which is why I want to have tile pathways for me and anyone to be able to walk casually throughout the garden with ease. And the tile helps suppress weeds.








I have continually been harvesting greens and radishes everyday. I have arugula, kale, spinach, green and red leaf lettuce, and radishes. Also, in between these plants and the strawberry plants, I have sown carrot, spinach, and basil seed.








With the garden food, I have been delivering to some people. But of course I have been making many meals for myself, green salad, vegan potato salad, pasta salad, sandwiches, green wraps, and much more.

Ramen with fresh garden radish & last years
 pickled radish, lettuce, seasoned with garlic salt,
Black pepper, & nutritional yeast

Potato salad with garden arugula, onion , & radish
With vegan mayo, mustard, salt pepper

Arugula in pasta 


The tulips have all faded away, but it's May, and the Alluims and Irises are blooming. I have strawberry plants too, that are growing beautiful dark red blooms, which I had never seen before. Although I may not update often, I'll keep y'all posted on the happenings in the garden. It's May, so there are many more veggies to plant, the tomatoes, peppers, squash, corn and beans.








Wednesday, April 15, 2020

Spring harvest & Frost protection for Food Forest

Before the frosty nights, I was sure to pick some garden greens and radishes. There was a lot of arugula so the salad was spicy eith the radishes.

During this pandemic, I am delivering some free garden food to the elders in my life as well.


As you may know, I'm here in zone 6-7 where it continues to have nights of frost up until May. I used towels, throw blankets, thin quilts and bedsheets, potato grow bags, tent covers, and tree covers, and tobacco canvas. You name it, I used it! I wanted to protect the many fruiting trees and bushes in the food forest. Besides the trees, I covered the 2 grapes, 10 blueberry bushes, 3 goji berries, 2 raspberries.

Grapes
 In the photo below, you can spot my dog rolling on her back and kicking the air.

Alberta peaches


Nectarines 



pear minimally covered

Pear

Plum and cherries 

Figs, cherry, and plum

Blueberries, goji, raspberries 

With this frost, I worry about the fruit trees and their fruits. I covered the majority of the fruiting bushes but barely covered the large fruit trees. I didnt cover the Tulip garden and I saw this morning that the petals have fallen, so they didn't make it. I ran out of covers for them plus anything weighing the tulips down would probably break them.

There's 3 figs, 3 peaches, 1 mulberry, 2 nectarines, 2 cherries, 2 plums, 2 pears, that are loaded with tiny fruits. I hope they survived the 28 degree night. I woke up this morning and there is frost blanketing the landscape. 

Pear fruits


Cherry fruits

Flowering aronia, which I ran out of covers to protect

Dogwood flowering

Cold April sunset