autumn
Under
the harvest moon,
When
the soft silver
Drips
shimering
Over
the garden nights,
Death,
the gray mocker,
Comes
and whispers to you
As
a beautiful friend
Who
remembers.
--Carl
Sandburg
Under
the harvest moon,
When
the soft silver
Drips
shimering
Over
the garden nights,
Death,
the gray mocker,
Comes
and whispers to you
As
a beautiful friend
Who
remembers.
--Carl
Sandburg
Yesterday I harvested almost all of our remaining
garden. We had harvested a bunch a few
weeks ago in advance of a few days of freezing temperatures, but decided to
leave and cover a lot of crops: beets, turnips, kohlrabi, and a few swiss chard
plants. It turned out to be a good
decision; we had a few weeks of nice weather and things grew some more.
Now, with more freezing weather and snow predicted
(and it has snowed!), we decided to get most everything out of there. I covered a few kohlrabi that I felt were
just too small to pick and some more recently planted radishes and
spinach. We’re supposed to get another
week or two of warm weather after this cold front moves through, so we’ll see
how the remaining plants do.
In addition to what we’ve already harvested and
eaten or freezed, we got about 2 ½ gallons of carrots, a good pile of chard, a 5 gallon
bucket of beets, turnips, and their greens, and a 3 gallon bucket of
kohlrabi. We’d already gathered about
that much kohlrabi, and I’ve been eating them almost every day. They’re delicious and remind me of being a
little kid, when my grandparents grew rows and rows of them. I’d bring them to grade school for lunch, and
kids would wonder at the smell of them.
All in all, I think this has been one of our best
gardening years. Except for
tomatoes. We had several very vigorous
seedlings that we got started very early.
It really seemed we were in for a record tomato crop—the plants took off
and grew quickly and strongly, but then, one by one, they succumbed to some
sort of mosaic virus. In the end, we got
very few tomatoes. Other than that,
though, I’m really pleased with how well the garden did. We harvested about three gallons of hot
peppers…after processing a bunch of those for freezing, my fingers burned all
evening. The next morning I stuck a
finger near my eye and was quickly burning there, too. Thanks to our friends who gave us a couple of
plants, we grew and ate several eggplants this year. They grew surprisingly well and offered a lot
of fruit. Our first planting of green
beans didn’t yield all that much; the varieties we planted just didn’t do that
well. We did a second, late planting
that did very well. I’d like to grow
enough green beans to pickle and can some next time. Spinach and lettuce did very well, too.
And there you have it—a garden update and year-end summary,
of sorts.
Here is a picture of the main part of our garden back in June. We also have two smaller areas that we garden in (where the peppers, eggplant, more spinach and lettuce, strawberries, and herbs are). We've also made a little fence and gate to go around the garden; you can see some of the fence posts in this photograph.
3 Comments:
Hey there! Thanks for giving us a garden update. Neal and I planted our first garden this year. After the growing season got underway i started calling it the squash monster. We planted ridiculous amounts of squash! It basically choked out everything else. Oh well lesson learned for next year. Our tomato plants also started out really well but did not yield much fruit and what there was was rotten. Apparently not enough calcium in the soil. How is life for you other than your garden? It is starting to get much colder in Fargo and I suspect snow will come soon and won't leave until spring. How is Aida? I bet she is growing and changing every day! I do hope we get to see the three of you again very soon! Miss you tons! Michelle
I remember the first time I ever had a radish was out of grandpa and grandma's garden. Grandpa took a radish--a big one--put a little salt on it, and told me to eat it. I was a bit hesitant at first, but upon his insistence, I took a bite, and it was delicious. And I remember he said, with a bit of a triumphant smile on his face, "See, I told you."
ben--Yeah, their garden was great...and the raspberry bushes were awesome!
bierwoman--Squash! You know, we've never really planted squash; we've had a couple of volunteers, but that's about it. I think next year we might plant some.
Aida is doing great. Yeah, she is growing so fast...and she is just wonderful!
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