Country Belle
Raised bed

January 30, 2012
by Crystal
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A small raised bed

The Husband and I hauled these old railroad ties to build a raised bed in a problem area of Dad’s corral garden. There’s a low spot that we can’t easily level out, which would defeat our favorite watering method of letting water run down a furrow.

In addition to that, Dad decided that while he loved pinto beans, he didn’t want to grow them again because the bean pods grow underneath the plant, making them too hard to pick. My solution was this raised bed. It’s narrow (only two ties wide), and tall, so the plants will be much easier to pick.

Dried pinto beans

January 29, 2012
by Crystal
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Dried pinto beans

Today was so beautiful (sunny and 60 degrees) that I was looking for any excuse to be outside. I wandered down to Dad’s corral garden, and noticed a lot of dried pods on the pinto bean plants. I hadn’t realized that we’d left that many behind. I started picking and shelling, and it wasn’t too long before I had a meal’s worth of pintos. I didn’t go down the whole row, but I may go back tomorrow and finish up. It’s worth it.

Coneflower in WM Garden Center

January 28, 2012
by Crystal
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Early garden shopping

As you may remember, my shopping choices are a bit limited out here. So when I hear that Walmart is setting the Garden Centers a month earlier this year, I get excited.

My friends who work in the Garden Center were talking about the reset earlier this month. Instead of the usual reset in late February, it has to be done by the end of January this year. One of them speculated that Walmart is moving toward having a full Garden Center year-round, and reducing the amount of Christmas merchandise that usually takes its place in the winter months. I am completely in favor of this move.

I haven’t been out to fully explore the Garden Center yet, but I’m going to go buy my seed starting supplies in the next few days. And I think I’ve got most of the seed I’ll want, but it doesn’t hurt to look, right?

Man, I can’t wait for spring.

Seed packets

January 26, 2012
by Crystal
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Last year’s garden

Last summer, our place had multiple gardens. I had one. Dad had many. Mine was all from Territorial Seed Co., and located out past the windbreaks. Dad’s were from everywhere imaginable, and in many places. There was the “little garden,” a garden we’ve been planting since I was a kid. (There used to be a “big garden” to the north, hence the name.) The rest of his gardens were in the corral. We haven’t had cows for years, and the fertile soil called to him. Our corral is divided into several pens, which resulted in several gardens.

I wanted to run through some of the plants I had last year, before I get completely obsessed with the plants I’ll have this year.

  • Rocky Cucumber – I adored these little cucumbers, that are meant to be picked at about 3 inches. They were tender, perfect for snacking, and never bitter. I reordered these for this year’s garden.
  • Fountain Cucumber – These grew more all-over-the-place as cucumbers tend to do. They tasted good, and weren’t bitter.
  • Little Gem Lettuce – This was a romaine lettuce that formed small heads. It made perfect salads. I reordered this one, too.
  • Victoria Lettuce – A buttercrunch lettuce. I liked it well enough, but not as much as the Little Gem.
  • Petite Treat Watermelon – This was a seedless watermelon that was pollinated by a seeded watermelon (seeds provided). It was supposed to be a smallish melon, but all I managed to get were the giant seeded watermelons from the pollinator. Whatever they were, they did taste good.
  • Candy Onion – I love sweet onions, and this was no exception. I just didn’t much like waiting for the onions to sprout from seed. I’ll try onion sets this year.
  • Sugar Sprint Snap Peas – I don’t know why, but these plants never grew more than 6 inches high. The peas were very tasty, though.
  • Yukon Gold Potato – This was my first attempt at growing potatoes. I think I overwatered them. However, I did get several potatoes that just ruined storebought potatoes for me.
  • Tigress Zucchini and Cube of Butter Yellow Summer Squash – Both of these produced tons of squash, as squash plants tend to do. I liked the flavor of Tigress, but if you didn’t pick them early, they were tough. The yellow squash produced more (I think) than most yellow squashes, but I think the yellow crooknecks taste better.
  • Cherry Buzz Tomato – Our tomatoes had a hard time of it last year, in the extreme drought and heat. They’d flower, and produce nothing until we started getting some rain in August. Because of that, I only got about five cherry tomatoes. They were absolutely delicious, though.
  • Sunseed Sunflower – My first attempt at sunflowers didn’t go well, but it’s not the plants’ fault. One day, the centers were starting to show the mature seeds, and the next day, they were eaten by the birds. All I could think was, “I should’ve seen that coming.”

I had a few more plants, like sweet corn, that just didn’t survive the heat and drought. (We had an unbroken streak of 100+ degree days that lasted over a month.) I wouldn’t blame the plants, though, because it really was an extreme summer.

Dad had tons more plants and varieties than I did, but I don’t know what most of them were. The few I do know:

  • Pinkeye Purple Hull Cowpeas – I think these were from Henry Field’s. They were extremely good producers, and tasted great immature, cooked like green beans. We didn’t let too many get big enough to shell, because we just didn’t have time or patience for shelling.
  • Brown Crowder Cowpeas – I don’t know the source for these, but they were also very good producers. We had to shell more of these than the Purple Hull, but the Purple Hull attracted wasps, and these did not.
  • Anasazi Beans – These were for dry beans, and we planted them from a package of dry beans from the supermarket. They’re fantastic, and my second favorite dry bean.
  • Blue Lake Climbing Beans – Good flavor, no strings, but they turned tough quickly.
  • Kentucky Wonder Climbing Beans – Good flavor, but stringy. They didn’t turn tough as quickly as the Blue Lake.
  • Contender Bush Beans – These were the best, hands down, of all the green beans I’ve ever tried. They tasted markedly better than all the other green beans. They produced like mad, even after all the leaves had died in the fall. They were tender. They were stringless. They’re getting planted again this year.
Walnuts

January 24, 2012
by Crystal
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Carpathian walnuts

I picked the last of the walnuts today. Mom planted two Carpathian walnut trees when I was a kid. They died back several times, and came back from the roots, so they’re both shaped more like enormous bushes than trees. I love that they’re different like that.

Black walnuts produce more heavily than the Carpathian walnuts, but Mom chose to plant the Carpathian walnuts because they’re a lot easier to shell. I haven’t eaten many black walnuts that weren’t in some product, so I can’t comment on the flavor differences. I just know that these are absolutely delicious walnuts.

Territorial seeds

January 18, 2012
by Crystal
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New seeds (and a call for help)

My Territorial order came in! I ordered some of everything I mentioned in my previous post, and of course, I added a few things to the order.

The Tomaccio tomatoes only came as plants, so I ordered three for shipment in late April. Everything else from my wishlist were ordered as seeds. I reordered the Little Gem romaine lettuce that I had last year, as well as the Rocky cucumbers that I had last year. Both of them made for seriously delicious salads.

I also ordered some herb seed: Profumo basil, German thyme, sage, and oregano. I already have seeds for cilantro and chives, but I needed rosemary. The rosemary I chose (Barbeque, for skewering) only came as a plant, so it’ll be shipped in late April as well.

I have a confession to make: I am not skilled at all in the use of fresh herbs, mostly because I’ve never had them. I know what to do with chives and cilantro, but the only time I use sage is at Thanksgiving, and I’ve only used basil and oregano in pasta dishes. I can’t say that I’ve ever used thyme or rosemary in my life.

So, obviously, any tips, hints, or fresh-herb-laden recipes would be welcome.

Vermont Bean Seed Company

January 14, 2012
by Crystal
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Old and new

I spent my morning sorting through last year’s leftover seeds in Dad’s collection, and my own. I brought some order to the mess, and wrote everything down so we could see at a glance what we had and what we needed. I also discovered that my father buys too many bean seeds.

After I organized everything, I figured out my order for Territorial Seed, which includes everything from my previous post about Territorial. I also ordered a few things that I grew last year, just because they were SO good. For example, Rocky cucumbers and Little Gem lettuce. Yum!

Dad’s already ordered and received some seeds from Annie’s Heirloom Seeds and Vermont Bean Seed Company. (See? Bean seeds.) They both shipped very quickly, and Annie’s upgraded the shipping to Priority Mail. I believe that Dad’s ordered from Annie’s before, but this is our first interaction with Vermont Bean.

We have some delayed shipping orders for each of them, as well. Annie’s will be sending us seed potatoes in May (I think), and Vermont Bean will be sending tomato and pepper plants in late April. We chose to buy our plants from Vermont Bean because of the fantastic prices on the collections, and the way they ship their plants. I couldn’t find a picture of their shipping container on their site, so here’s the one from my catalog:

 

Marigolds cushioning the cat.

January 11, 2012
by Crystal
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Flowering things

I’ve just about given up on flowers until I have a better windblock. Mom has plenty of trees for windblock, so we focus on her flowerbed.

It’s visible from the kitchen window, puddling around some pines and a redbud. She has a birdbath (and sometimes, a cat) in the middle of it, and bricks around the borders.

Because of the drought last year, she decided she only wanted flowers that required little to no fuss, only occasional watering. Our current list of acceptable flowers include zinnias, coneflowers, dianthus, and marigolds. I can probably talk her into a nice petunia mix, too.

I wonder if there’s a list somewhere of hardy, drought-tolerant, heat-tolerant, cat-tolerant, reblooming flowers. Am I asking too much?

Coneflower mix

January 5, 2012
by Crystal
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Burpee coneflower mix

I generally tend to buy my seed and plants from smaller companies, but Burpee is tempting me with this.

Isn’t that the most gorgeous mix of coneflowers you’ve ever seen? I could easily see a bed full of those stunning colors in front of my porch.

Last summer's tomatoes.

January 4, 2012
by Crystal
1 Comment

The last of the tomatoes

My parents picked most of their green tomatoes the day before our first frost. Dad spread them out in boxes and stored them in the old house to ripen. As fall wore on, Dad would go pick out the ripe tomatoes, and Mom would juice them for homemade vegetable juice or tomato preserves.

Today, she and I sorted through the last of the tomatoes, and found that a great deal of them were still good, at least for preserves.

She always told me that if produce was grown in good soil, they wouldn’t rot, but slowly dry out. Now, in January, with two boxes of perfectly fine tomatoes from last summer, I believe her.