Saturday, May 30, 2009

Moving Day

In the last 10 months, I've discovered that the secret to sane parenting is to simplify and consolidate whenever possible. Some of you may notice that I've not updated The Gorham Garden in over a month. There's certainly plenty of stuff to write about, but running three blogs - one of which has daily requirements - and considering a fourth blog to have a place to share some of my non-food and non-gardening stuff is really too many blogs.

That said, while The Gorham Garden will remain in place for posterity, I'm turning my former cooking blog into the new home for all my various projects. Come visit me at the revamped Wife Soup for more the gardening/cooking/miscellaneous projects than you can shake a stick at.

Tuesday, April 14, 2009

April 14: Pea day in Maine

Today promises to be a warm day here in southern Maine. That's a good thing since today is the day the peas are scheduled to go into the garden. Other cool weather crops that get planted today are scallions, spinach, lettuce, shallots, and radishes. The mini hoop is coming down, but the cold frame is staying outside to provide a little shelter for seedlings.

Inside on the grow table, the peppers are doing great. I'm already drooling whenever I think about cheese filled jalapenos. Broccoli, cabbage and Brussels sprouts are all up and looking strong. The celery root and the leeks continue to do well. I thinned out the celery root this morning and was surprised to see just how long the roots were. I also took a nibble on one of the seedlings that didn't make the cut. What a remarkable celery flavor!

The lettuce that I started back in March goes out to the garden today and in it's place under the light table go the tomatoes, basil and dill. Oooh. I have to go find some breakfast. All this talk about veggies is making me hungry.

Wednesday, April 08, 2009

What's in the box?

So, my experiment of growing winter produce has come to an end. My results are mixed. The radishes and the swiss chard did not withstand the cold temperatures back in January. All that remains of these plants are some moldy, brown leaves. The lamb's lettuce and the kale are a different story.

These two cold-hardy plants are happily getting larger every day. The lamb's lettuce is big enough to pick, and next fall I will make sure to plant a lot more of this sweet green.

The scallions that I planted are... well, they aren't dead yet but they are lackluster at best. I probably should have planted more of them.

On the plus side, being under the mini-hoop has warmed up the soil enough that it will be easy for me to plant my first round of peas, radish and lettuce.

The vegetable garden for fall/early winter experiment really only got half my attention last year and while I claim only a partial success, I will definitely be back next fall with the mini-hoop. I need to start the seeds earlier in the season than late October and I think I'll stick with the kale, scallions and lamb's lettuce.

Spring planting, here we come!

Sunday, March 22, 2009

Yay! Maine Maple Sunday!

Oh, hello! Why yes, it has been almost a month since I last posted. It's been quite busy around here with a little girl that's becoming more and more mobile.

The weather here in Maine has become decidedly springlike. That is not to say that it's warm, although it is warming up. There are even some pockets of ground to be seen in the back yard now.

I didn't get to make it to the flower show this year. Husband couldn't justify the time off and my mother in law, Kronk, was in Florida. That left just me and a no-longer-convenient-sized Buttercup as potential flower show visitors. She likes the outdoors and plants, but I think I'll wait until next year before we do the Flower Show together.

We've been quite busy getting stuff planted and shockingly, I'm right on time for all my plantings so far this year. The leeks and celery root were planted back in February, my first planting of lettuces was last week and I got my peppers planted yesterday. Yup! We're moving right along, although I find that progress doesn't always lend itself to blog updates.

I have more to share, like the new grow tables, what I found when I looked in the cold frame and all the plans for the new vegetable bed, but those will have to wait. Today is Maine Maple Sunday and if you're reading this early enough, you might still have time to get over to your local sugar house and get some tasty treats.

We always go up to Greene's Maple Farm in Sebago. Mr. Greene is a wonderful character and he makes a damn fine syrup. We picked up a 1/2 gallon of Grade A Dark which will hopefully last us the rest of the year when kept in the fridge. We also got yummy samples of the syrup served over vanilla ice cream and bought ourselves a couple of Maple Whoopie Pies. Buttercup wanted to get in on the ice cream action, but she'll just have to wait for next year.

Saturday, February 28, 2009

You like me! You really like me!

So after much debate, several rounds of cutbacks and five or six charts of where I'm going to put stuff, I have finalized my seed list for 2009.

The Winners for This Year's Garden Are:
  • Leek - King Richard
  • Kale - Russian Red
  • Mache - VIT
  • Lettuce - Claremont, Romaine, Green Oakleaf Galisse, Black Seeded Simpson, Buttercrunch, Iceburg, Summer Crisp Loma, and Green Forest Romaine
  • Pepper - Islander, Ace, Lipstick and Early Jalapeno
  • Broccoli - Gypsy, Packman, Marathon
  • Radish - Shunkyo
  • Scallions - Hearty Evergreen
  • Spinach - Space and 7 Green
  • Swiss Chard - Magenta
  • Pumpkin - Racer
  • Watermelon - Moon & Stars (thanks Deborah!)
  • Peas - Lincoln
  • Fennel - Orion
  • Zucchini - Raven
  • Cucumber - Little Leaf
  • Summer Squash - Yellow Crookneck
  • Celeriac - Brilliant
  • Brussels Sprouts - Oliver
  • Cabbage - Storage
  • Shallots - Pikant
  • Carrots - Nelson and Bolero
  • Beans - Provider
  • Tomato - Juliet
Many of these varieties are my classic favorites. Since I'm really starting the garden from scratch this year, I thought I'd go with what I know for the most part. The scientist in me can't help but try new varieties though and so I have a couple of experimental plants. I've never grown celeriac or cabbage before and although I have grown beans in the past, Provider is a new variety for me.

Also on the list for this year are two plants that I hope will become long time fixtures. First is the new asparagus bed. My previous asparagus bed was much smaller than I would have liked but now that I can build a new one to suit our needs, I'm looking forward to using all the crowns that I order. The old garden had Jersey Kings which have been replaced with Jersey Supreme in the Johnny's catalog. Since I can always scoot back to the old garden and "borrow" a cup of asparagus stalks from Kronk, I'm interested in the potential differences in growth and flavor.

The second new perennial is cranberries. I have the soil they like. I have the moisture they like. I love those tart little berries, so this seems like the perfect match. Johnny's is selling 4 year old plants which already have flowers. With a little luck, we might even be able to pick a few this year. Yum.

Thursday, February 26, 2009

The dog, cat and husband ate my garden.

Like most Americans these days, Husband and I have cut back to a more conservative spending lifestyle. I don't think that it's a bad thing and this period of budgetary evaluation is helping us pay down debt and identify some of the needless spending that we do.

The garden was never one of those areas that was up for cutbacks - that is, until our beloved Muttley started having seizures. Then George the Cat had kidney stones. Then Husband needed his wisdom teeth out. All in the same week. Yeah, it was a little bit busy.

We are responsible enough as consumers that none of these setbacks are going to break us, but we decided that it would be financially irresponsible to leave these things on credit for any length. I feel positive about that decision, but it comes at a rough time for the garden. I have already cut back on a handful of vegetables and now, to make sure we don't go broke installing this new garden, I've had to make some deeper cuts.

I've replotted this garden about four times now. As you can see, it has become quite a project and when my projects become complicated, the area I need to figure them out gets pretty large. I brought out the battlemat that we use for D&D Tuesdays and turned it into my Team Play Board, figuring out what will fit, what I have to have and what can be axed until another year. I should have my final picks by tomorrow, but as of right now the following vegetables have not made the cut:

Turnip and Parsnips - I'm the only one in the family that really likes these. They'll make it onto the list again sometime, but not this year.

Cauliflower, Romanesco and Eggplant - I'm pretty bummed about these three. I've never grown them and was looking forward to the challenge. While there are still new plants in the scheme, these three will have to wait until next year.

Potato - While the Great Potato Experiment was fun and the potatoes were very tasty, these are getting the axe this year because it's just too much of an expense with the other things we need to do. I live in Maine. Potatoes are cheap and local. Simple math, if you ask me.

Beets - My folks are expanding their vegetable garden this year. I'm hoping I can steal some of theirs.

Fava beans and Pole beans - I'm growing bush beans, so we won't be completely bean free. I need to see how much space the bush beans are going to take before I start adding giant trellises of beany goodness to the mix. Fava beans were definitely an exotic luxury.

Before you feel bad about what I'm not growing, I say maybe a little financial restraint isn't such a bad thing. I'm really starting from scratch with new beds, new soil, new compost, new fences and yes, even some new plants. That's a lot of new to worry about already, nevermind the three other kinds of peppers, the two varieties of onions and the cantaloupes that got cut in the first round. Perhaps the recession will lead me to some much needed garden restraint which could lead to the best crop of veggies yet.

That would make this a very rich year indeed.

Wednesday, February 25, 2009

My first seeds of the year are here!

No, I haven't finalized my garden for the year, but Deborah (who I'm claiming for my dream neighbor on the other other side of the house) over at North by Northwest had some extra seeds she was willing to share. The Moon & Stars watermelon just looked so cool that I simply have to try it. Of course, this means I have to re-re-rearrange the garden, but I was going to have to do that anyway.

I'll be sure to take extra documenting care with my swapped melons this season. If anyone out there has some extra vegetable seeds that they would like to swap, I have some extra Ace bell pepper seeds that had a 90% germination rate - even if they took their sweet time about it.