Wednesday, August 3, 2011

My Garden

We're now harvesting hundreds of pounds of tomatoes each week, along with buckets full of summer squash, zucchini eggplant, carrots, cucumbers, and peppers. Add that to a couple hundred pounds of cabbage, some fennel, beets, broccoli, endive, kale, chard, scallions, onions, and purslane, and we've got quite a few farm-fresh veggies on our hands.

Compared to the farm's 4+ acres of organic vegetable production, my little garden is laughable. Its 10 foot by 10 foot perfect square is jam-packed with vegetable plants -- some of them experiments -- so who knows how they'll do. But much like the Little Red Hen who planted the wheat, harvested the wheat, ground the wheat, and made the wheat into bread all by herself, I've been taking care of this garden from the very beginning, and it's all -- for better or for worse -- mine.

I ripped up the sod on the lawn, I turned under the compost (which was acquired with the generous help of my co-workers), I raked it smooth, I sowed the seeds and planted the seedlings, I staked the tomatoes (more or less), I added the fertilizer, and wouldn't you know it -- I'm harvesting the vegetables!

The farmers were so kind to let me rip up a portion of their lawn so I could have a garden of my own. The following photographs show a little bit of the method to my madness:

In the beginning, there was sod. I measured out a ten by ten square plot, staked it, and started digging up the sod with my favorite farm tool: the digging fork. I started my garden rather late; this photograph was taken over Memorial Day weekend.

My enthusiasm for the garden was in constant flux as I dug up the sod. For all the sweat and effort I was putting into the digging, what I was really getting out of it (in the short-term, at least) was a perfect square of not-so-great dirt...


The digging fork, at rest.
 
I bought a package of  organic Clemson Sprineless okra seeds at a natural foods market in town. Here they are, germinating away, in the greenhouse. This photograph was taken in early June. 

The newly planted garden: more dirt than green. Here's a list of what's in it:
- 6 okra plants (sowed from seed in the greenhouse)
- 2 tomato plants left over from the seedling sales (sungold cherry tomato and green zebra)
- 2 volunteer tomato plants that I dug up from section 1. Last year's cherry tomatoes went crazy with the re-seeding, and these guys would have been pulled up to make room for this year's leeks and brassicas. I had no idea what kind of cherries they'd produce, but that was part of the fun.
- 3 volunteer husk cherry plants, which also re-seeded from last year. I dug them up like the cherries.
- 2 tomato plants I rooted from "suckers" pruned off of tomato plants in the greenhouse. I still have no idea what variety of tomatoes they'll grow, but they seem very healthy!
- 1 sorrel. yum.
- 2 lemon cucumber plants
- 1 zucchini
- 1 lacinato kale
- 3 pepper plants (1 mystery variety that lost its tag during the plant sale, 1 "lipstick" pepper plant, and 1 "King Arthur Bell" that I bought at Volante Farm)
Since this photograpg was taken I've added:
- 1 bok choy
- 3 Russian kale plants
- 3 lettuce starts
- 5 basil plants
- 12 red onion starts, which I found in the compost spreader we borrowed from a nearby farm. They're doing great. 
- 1 stunted sunflower, which has bloomed and is now looking a little sad.

I think this is a picture of one of the greenhouse "suckers" when it started producing fruit. These tomatoes are now huge but still green. Still not sure what kind of tomato plant it is. If only I could remember which plant I pruned it off of!

Lacinato kale. Scrumptious! 

Stay tuned for another post about what my garden looks like now-a-days. I'd love to say that I'm trying to build the suspense, but in truth I haven't yet uploaded the photos to my computer and I'm too excited to share the news about this little garden-that-could to wait. So far I've harvested one zucchini,  two lemon cucumbers, some kale, the bok choy, and a few leaves (here and there) of sorrel. Today, I ate my first two sungold cherry tomatoes! I definitely couldn't live off of this garden, but hey, it's a start.

2 comments:

  1. Wow. I'm impressed. I should send you photos of my two pitiful tomatoe plants and 3 scrawny basil plants. I hope for pesto this fall but there's not enough sun in my yard- anywhere- for this to happen apparently. So it will be off to the farmer's market for me. Or you could drop off a basket of goodies anytime you have surplus.

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  2. lemon cucumbers are so yummmm!!! and sungolds!! i remember eating those like candy on the farm. sigh... oh how i wish i had my own garden. i've been struggling with an experimental windowsill herbal garden. many have died in the fight but right now i've got sage, rosemary, oregano, parsley, mint, some near-death thyme, micro greens, and siberian kale. all have been fighting off and suffering from various insect and fungal attacks, a result of being in a closed off indoor environment.

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