An exciting day at Cross Road Gardens. It really felt like spring, for the first time, I think. A burst of gardening energy, although I only really worked for a few hours.
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our maine home – zone 5b
An exciting day at Cross Road Gardens. It really felt like spring, for the first time, I think. A burst of gardening energy, although I only really worked for a few hours.
Early spring is a sparse time of year food-wise. The hoophouse greens were mostly eaten by voles last winter, except for the arugula and some kale. We still have garlic and a few squash stored. But no onions, carrots, parsnips or potatoes. Our root-saving capability is just not there. I tossed a fair number of potatoes into the compost because they were shriveled and sprouting. I could have planted them, but I have no desire to dig in the ice-cold soil yet.
On the upside, I found a baby garlic sprout under the mulch the other day. Very exciting!
So, feeling somewhat lacking in fresh food, it’s time to get serious about what is still in the freezer. It’s so easy to forget what’s available right here at home. So here goes.
Freezer compartment above refrigerator:
Chest freezer:
Looks like we’ll be eating a lot of squash. There’s so much frozen squash because of the bountiful harvest and the need to rescue a lot of it during the winter as rotten spots appeared.
Goals:
I moved my seed starting schedule two weeks forward. I think I started too early last year.
So far, so good. My alliums have sprouted and some kale. Still waiting on celery leaf and indigo.
Today I planted brassica seeds: broccoli blend, Speedia Brussels sprouts, and Mammoth red cabbage. All Fedco.
We bought a bag of Sunshine growing mix this year for seed starting. It has coir, which I’ve seen some complaints about. But it’s organic, so we’ll see how it does.
My first flat of soil blocks made and planted. This seedling mix contains mostly Sunshine mix, but I added our own compost, some sand, a little azomite, and a little greensand. The flat contains borettana cipollini onions, leeks, and two kind of shallots.
Harvested at the community garden this morning. There are no crops left there. Just need to put the plots to bed. Sam blew out the water system so it wouldn’t freeze.
Got my garlic planted. Early this year!
From Songbird Farm:
From Wild Tilth Farm:
We are harvesting:
It all takes some work. The garlic needs to be cured, the fingerlings dug and soil sifted, the fava beans shelled, blanched, released from their waxy coat, and frozen. The peas shelled.
I pick over the blueberries to clean them a bit then freeze them in a single layer on a tray. When frozen, we transfer them to a freezer bag. We pick blueberries every morning. This morning, hit a record of forty ounces.
Making room in the garden for a fall planting, which should be done – now!
We are spanning the year with garlic.
Other varieties planted: 50 Spanish Roja, 11 German Red, 45 Russian Red, and 23 miscellaneous cloves saved from 2019’s crop. Total planted: 177 cloves.
Harvest records:
2017 – 94 heads
2018 – 218 heads
2019 – 120 (approx.)
I use the same bed every year, adding hay, seaweed, and wood ash to the soil. It’s the perfect place for garlic which doesn’t seem to interest deer. I’m not sure what I would do if I decided to rotate this crop.
I put the squash plants in at the community garden. Planting is done there! Now I’m waiting for the plants to do their thing while I nurture them as best I can.
There’s also a nice perennial sunflower and echinacea plants, not in bloom yet.