Showing posts with label seed saving. Show all posts
Showing posts with label seed saving. Show all posts

Monday, February 18, 2013

custom egg carton, first tomato blossom, and seed swap goodies

 i spent a good portion of my president's day holiday making this custom egg carton label. i'm not selling the eggs, i just want special egg cartons for giving them away.

the ladies are each laying one almost every day now, so they're stacking up fast.

 i made a second label that isn't personalized, just in case anyone else raising chickens wants one for their eggs. most dozen-egg cartons are approx. 10" long, so if you set the print size to 8x10 it should fit.

 first tomato blossom of 2013 opened today! i have 5 little baby hahms gelbe plants growing...was planning on just 2, but thinning the seedlings turned into carefully dividing and repotting them.

 i also bought another aloe and divided it. i'm really into succulents right now! maybe just because it's winter and i'm starved for green growing things. i like that they don't grow very fast, so you can keep them in small containers.

 beautiful springlike weather this weekend. damn near 60 degrees on saturday. i went on a couple walks with the dogs and saw lots of bulbs popping up, and i found this little grub friend.

 my haul from the seedy saturday seed swap. it wasn't the best swap, not a lot of people brought seed and the venue was small and cramped. worth going though. i'm excited to try calypso beans (the yin yang looking ones) and jerusalem artichoke.

 my contribution to the swap was a ziplock bag full of forellenschluss ("freckles") lettuce that i saved last year. it's a romaine heirloom, green with brown speckles.

 last year i also saved a ton of golden sweet peas. it's the best variety of sugar snaps i've grown (see my post from last june for more info). unfortunately, a major garden fail happened, in the form of a bunch of little beetles that ate the heart out of nearly every pea i saved. luckily this seed was in its own sealed glass container so nothing else was infected. i found about two dozen peas that look like they might be ok, but i'm going to germinate them indoors just in case there's beetle larva inside. bummer. :(

 mardi gras cauliflower! i wish i didn't have such bad luck growing cauliflower, i'd try some of the purple.

 i spent mardi gras at a reading with my mom, one of my favorite authors (who happens to be local) read a couple of his essays at the egyptian. it was outrageously good, and it put me in a deeply happy, appreciative mood.

 potato wanted to add something: thanks for the new flappy, circus!




Friday, July 29, 2011

a grower not a show-er

sometimes after i upload and look through a batch of garden photos i’ll go back outside and look around, like, where is all that stuff? all those plants and flowers and veggies i just saw...where did they go? from a distance much of my garden is barely visible.

when i give garden tours to friends i feel ridiculous, because in my head it’s this wonderful place, but looking at it through the eyes of a visitor makes everything look unimpressive. the garden isn’t all out in the open--there are huge trees and shade and xeriscaping to work around, so it’s mostly tucked away into corners and small spaces here and there. you really have to look for it.

tomorrow jeanne and i are touring each other’s gardens for the first time. i’m curious to see what her whole yard looks like and to be able to walk around and look for myself after having seen so many pictures. and since we live just a few miles away from each other it will be great to compare notes on the growing season so far--neither of us has been very good about garden blog updates lately.


my corn is silking and tasseling. it stayed dwarf, as advertised, only about three feet tall, five of them growing happily in one large container.


i have actual oranges growing on one of my dwarf citrus plants! after the plant finished blooming the tiny fruit started to swell. there are four, and the biggest is about 3/4” long now.

i wanted to have a large quantity of something other than sunflower seeds to bring to seed swaps next year...

so i collected all the seeds from two red russian kale plants.

snowy eggplant is my favorite. it never stops pumping out delicious fruit.

turkish orange eggplant is even more productive, unfortunately. these things are nasty. small and incredibly bitter. i’ve tried picking them young and leaching the bitterness with salt, but they’re still awful.

i don’t know what to do with them other than use them as decoration. and eventually compost.

fish pepper is pretty cool, but the variegated foliage isn’t as decorative as i expected. it looks like the plant’s been shat upon by a flock of birds.


i made scrambled tofu with diced black hungarian and mild jalapeno peppers. both are much milder than i thought they’d be, which is good because i don’t like a lot of heat.

i’ve only gotten to eat one raspberry and two blueberries so far.

here are some recent harvests:


lackluster "laissez-faire" potatoes from across the creek. sometime soon i need to post an update on the yardshare garden--we’ve gotten so many potatoes that just pop themselves up out of the soil, pounds of them without any digging yet.




ronde de nice zucchini on dave’s killer bread with tempeh, roasted bell peppers and homemade hummus...drool. i could eat zucchini every day. lately i have been.