Thursday, June 23, 2011

Garden Art



Unbeknownst to me, Mark had donated a pair of my dad's sturdy footwear to the Children's Garden in Poulsbo for a garden art project. Is this something Pete and Wilma would have considered a good use of an old shoe? Heck yes. I'm pretty sure they are smiling about it right now.

Tuesday, June 21, 2011

Celebrating Solstice

I have mixed feelings about summer solstice. Although it is touted as being the first day of summer, it seems to me that it is more accurately the middle day of summer, since tomorrow the days start getting shorter. Already. Already? Really? We are expected to celebrate THAT? Well, in any case, here on Bainbridge Island we've had two gloriously sunny days in a row, so we are feeling pretty optimistic about the days ahead.

It's a good time to reflect on our garden experiences thus far.

Biggest success: Pac choi and broccoli raab
Most miserable failure: None yet!
Biggest mystery: Why our broccoli seems uninclined to form heads
Biggest pest: Slugs!
Most amazing: Snow peas appearing from nowhere every day
Notes for the future: smaller plantings, more successions (too much broccoli raab, mizuna and pac choi all at once), add sand to root vegetable area, plant the rows across rather than lengthwise, putting more space between rows of different veggies, and more intense slug warfare.

Here's that headless broccoli:



In our second plot, we planted peppers, squash and beans. We bought the pepper starts at the nursery (very iffy in our climate but we have to try) and Cheryl started the squash and beans on her front porch:





The broccoli raab is gone now and the mizuna is bolting and will be pulled soon. We'll plant more of both in August to see if we can get a fall crop. The mizuna:

Wednesday, June 15, 2011

What a way to spend my birthday

At the new plot, we mowed down the weeds, applied a citrus/clove oil spray, a layer of cardboard, a pickup load of dirt from the dirt store, and then some soil fabric. Just let those weeds try to get through all that. We plan to do some peppers and basil here.



The bounty continues, and summer doesn't arrive until next week. We are eating LOTS of greens, let me tell you. Potatoes soon, from the looks of it.


Wednesday, June 1, 2011

Look what we're missing

In our absence, Cheryl and Grover have single-handedly put the second set of rings on the potato beds (remember, we're growing them vertically). They have picked kale and spinach. They have planted cucumbers and beans. They have started more seeds in the cold frame.

Just look at this garden!!!

















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Location:Look at what we're missing