Finding Asclepias tuberosa or Butterflyweed seed pods is relatively easy. Getting the seeds without a load of the white “silks,” however, can be a bit more difficult unless you know how to open and hold the pod for seed saving. Continue reading
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Potato bags, bins and harvests
This is half of our potato crop. At home we grow them in potato “bags” made of polypropylene. At schools and other places we grow them in storage containers with holes drilled in them.
One great thing about this method is that once you run out of space in the garden you can just plunk a tub anywhere, regardless of soil quality (or any soil at all) and grow potatoes. Continue reading
Hold onto your parsley, people!
Now is the time to harvest and quickly preserve lots of parsley for winter soups (and soup stocks).
Sure, parsley will survive much cooler weather, but as the daylight wanes and cooler daytime temps become the norm, the aesthetic appeal of the plants diminishes and eventually it becomes a bunch of limp, dangling green branches that are halfway to mush. Continue reading
Compost volunteers in the garden
Composting rarely kills off all tomato and squash seeds. This is one reason that municipal yard waste programs don’t want you to place your pumpkins in yard waste.
If you don’t want the “volunteer” tomato and squash plants that pop up, they’re easy enough to pull. Sometimes, however, they work to your advantage.
Maple leaves have fallen and we’re all going to live
This is a follow up to the recent post “maple leaves falling and we’re all going to die.”
Turns out, stories of our imminent death may have been premature. I was able to contact Professor George Hudler of Cornell for more information, and he’s got more good news. Continue reading
Our apple harvest
Every other year we typically get a great apple harvest from our Gala tree. What you’re looking at is this year’s harvest, in a plastic bag in the trash can.
Maple leaves are falling and we’re all going to die
I’ve received a lot of questions about the diseased Maple leaves falling early and whether they’re safe to compost.
I’m terrible at this whole “don’t give an answer right away in order to drag readers along” so here’s the short answer:
If you hot compost, you can compost them.
If not, send the leaves away.
More explanation and information after the jump. Continue reading
We keep our harvest, but we don’t can
Fungus is among us. Spray your tomatoes!
This summer has not been great for growing tomatoes. It was cold, then it was cold, and after it got hot, it then got cold again. Finally, as the weather seems to be warm long enough to keep the tomatoes happy, Late Blight is approaching.
Time to spray. Continue reading
Portly cukes and the people who eat them
Despite best efforts, cucumbers sometimes go unharvested a bit longer than they should. By the time I find them, they’ll be a bit, well, portly. Once they’ve reached that size the seeds can be large and the flesh bitter.
All is NOT lost. Continue reading