Garden work mid-August

Is it still mid-August? A lot has happened. We harvested the fava beans on August 11. Had a big party, the third annual, to shuck the beans. I have three small freezer bags of leftovers, which is good. I didn’t take any pictures, unfortunately.

We have picked over 20 pounds of blueberries, all in the orchard except for two containers harvested atop Schoodic. I know that should be quarts, next year I’ll switch to the more typical measurement.

Blueberries in orchard

We are still waiting for the Reliance peaches to ripen. Last year they were all taken, probably by squirrels. This year we took more precautions (netting around the trunk). Sam propped up the heavy branches. They have great color, but are still quite hard.

Peach tree with branches propped

Reliance peaches ripening

Sam’s working on improving the orchard fencing. Too many deer are getting in there.

Orchard fence improvements

He also added two more raised beds in the hoophouse. Over the next few days I’ll plant some fall and winter greens in them. The peppers and eggplants in the older beds are growing but not exuberantly, but the basil in there is doing great. We had to protect those beds from deer who came to munch one variety of pepper when we opened the roof to the sun and rain.

Hoophouse with two new raised beds

I’m picking green beans almost daily in the main garden. Also sowed some fall seeds in empty spots.

Seedling carrots

Newly planted lettuces framed by Bianca’s white runner bean

The fava bean area freed up, so we put up a pea trellis there. Also planted cilantro, broccoli rabe, and spinach in that area.

Newly planted fava bean area

Harvesting lots of food: beets, cucumbers, a few ripe tomatoes, lettuce, escarole, radicchio, carrots, costata romanesca zucchini, kale, chard, dill, artichokes, broccoli, Savoy cabbage, fingerlings, strawberries, blackberries. Coming along: squashes, a few ears of corn, cabbage, soybeans, pattypan squash, lots of tomatoes!

cilantro – coriander

Low-tech method of cleaning coriander seeds. I got a small jar of fairly clean seeds. These have been stored on the plants in a pillow case outdoors to dry, harvested some time earlier in the summer.

I’ve never been able to grow as much cilantro as I want to eat, but I keep trying. There’s some baby cilantro out in the garden right now, under protection, in a probably vain hope that it will make it through the winter and take off in spring. It’s not known as a northern crop.

Now coriander is another story. I don’t know what to do with it in the kitchen, so I just save it year after year to replant in next year’s garden. This batch was quite dirty and really impossible to pick through. Sam got the idea that the seeds would roll and we hit on this solution.

farewell seedlings

We covered up the seedlings in the garden in anticipation of cold temps over the next few nights. This is an experimental bed. I don’t think they’ll all make it, maybe none of them will. Cilantro, lacinato kale, red lettuce, spinach. They are under a layer of plastic, a layer of agribon, and a few inches of hay mulch.