If I could only put one thing into my garden it would be compost. I have been composting for twenty years now. When I first started to garden I would just simply put the plants into the soil and expect them to grow. My gardens have since improved dramatically thanks to compost. When people come to me and ask what they should do to get their garden going I always say ” compost, compost, compost”. I think it is the first step! Composting can be as simple, or as complicating as you make it. I like to compost everything. Whereas some like to add manures into the garden without composting, I will compost it first. I feel this way I still get the benefits of the manure without it robbing the soil of nitrogen and it also kills weed seeds that I would rather not deal with later. Composting choices are numerous, ranging from worm composting to what I call “dump and run”. Pick a spot in your yard for your compost pile, ideally near your garden for easier access and where the sun hits it for most of the day. You can just simply build a pile right on the ground with nothing around it, or you could use pallets, a wire fence enclosure or something of the sort to encase it for a more tidy look. I don’t like to make composting rocket science. For one, I don’t have the time, and two I’m not a rocket scientist! What I have available at the time is what I use. Water near by is a must because if it’s not…..well, we have a tendency to neglect giving our compost heaps enough water that it requires and if we have to drag a bucket it probably won’t get done. At least that would be in my case! One thing to get out-of-the-way and I can’t stress enough! DO NOT use synthetic fertilizers (chemical) to heat up your pile! Compost is made when billions of microbes digest the waste you provide for them. Think about it. Would you eat a cup of synthetic fertilizer? Of course not, because it would be lethal. Yes, it will decompose with synthetic fertilizer, but I prefer not to add such things that will go in the garden and then my body. Carbon, Water and nitrogen are the key ingredients. I like to have bare earth beneath my compost to allow worms and other organisms to get into the pile. For better drainage you can add straw or twigs for the first bottom layer. Start layering greens (nitrogen) and browns (carbon). Like I said I use what I have. If I have loads of fresh grass clipping I don’t add much water, because there is enough moisture. Add kitchen scrapes, leaves, garden waste or wood chips for layers. When adding a new layer I like to add a handful of blood meal and bone meal. Every layer gets a little stir. Your compost needs to be moist, not soggy to break down. Like a wrung out sponge. I cover my pile with burlap to help keep the moisture and heat in. You can turn your pile every few days, every few weeks or just let it sit and rot. The moral of the story is-everything rots. The hotter the pile the faster it will decompose. Chopping or shredding your materials also helps speed things up. Water occasionally. Nitrogen materials consist of: grass clippings, kitchen waste, coffee grounds, eggshells and chicken manure. Carbon materials: dried plants, straw, newsprint, cardboard, dryer lint and wood chips. Things you shouldn’t compost: meat, bones, milk products, diseased plants, weeds with seed heads, walnut leaves and roots from pernicious weeds. Some people add wood ashes and that’s okay if your soil pH is low (acid). I don’t because our area has a high alkaline count. If your compost is soggy and/or stinky, turn the pile to aerate and you can add some dry peat moss to tame it. Things that I keep near my compost pile: Pitch fork for turning, blood and bone meal, machete for chopping, compost thermometer and burlap. An unknown author once said; You know you’re a real gardener when you think compost is a fascinating subject.
Casper and the Little White Pots
Several people have come to the garden this week asking about Casper. Where he is and what he is doing. Not far off I can point him out, on the patio table, in the flower-pot, in the goat manger. This loveable, lazy creature has touched many people’s heart. Some days when feeling his oats (not often) you know he has been into something. At my cottage retail store I have multiple herbs for sale. A few months ago I was experiencing problems with the lemon catnip being drug all over the place. Mind you! Not just a few feet away, but I would find the little root balls from the front of the store to the back, to the orchard and other various places. I know cats like catnip, but really! dragging it all over the yard. These poor little plants were mutilated to the point of no return. Casper does have his own catnip garden but he prefers the little white potted lemon catnip plants! When getting in several flats of new herbs today, I see Casper enjoying a new flavor! Sweet Grass! Soon after his indulgence he became frisky rolling around in the planter boxes for a few short moments before he fell fast asleep.
Filed under Casper the Cat
Preserving Peas
Think back to the time when you were a kid and you and your mom would sit on the porch on an early summer evening, shelling peas for winter storage. Okay, this never really happen in my life because the peas never made as far as the kitchen, but this is something that I think of as a past time from generations before. Simple life, simple pleasures bring me happiness just by the thought of it. I have, at times with my own children experienced something of the sort. Of course most of the time peas were consumed by my kids and their cousins sitting in the pea patch for hours making simple talk, enjoying each other and the sunshine during early summer months. When I could preserve peas I would never “can” them. If all you have ever had is canned peas and you despise them, I can understand. Truthfully I think canned peas don’t have any place on this planet! Fresh is alway best, but come winter months and you just want a couple handfuls for your soup or pot pie, freezing them is the next best option.
A couple of steps will help you have success in preserving your bountiful harvest of shelling peas.
Pick peas early in the morning hours. This is when they are at their best and sweetest. Rinse if they are dirty. Shell simply by pressing your thumb into the seam and popping it open. Get some water boiling for blanching. Peas (and other veggies) contain enzymes and bacteria that break down over time destroying nutrients and change the color, flavor, and texture of food during frozen storage. peas requires a brief heat treatment, called blanching, which is done in boiling water to destroy the enzymes before freezing. Get another bowl with ice water ready for cooling the peas off quickly. This stops the cooking process. Pour peas into boiling water and blanch for no more than 90 seconds. Quickly drain (they smell so good) into a colander and then immediately into the ice bath. Let them stay in there for another 90 second. Drain well. I then put them on a baking sheet covered with wax paper or parchment. Spread them out so they don’t touch each other for the most part. Freeze for 15 to 30 min. This will make them easy to use so they aren’t in a big clump in a bag. I use this method of freezing for most things that come from the garden. I seal mine with a vacuum sealer. Date and once again freeze. Peas should be used within a year for freshest taste. Enjoy!
Filed under Preserving
The Carrot Patch
When planting the garden, don’t forget about the carrots! Carrots are often thought of only as a spring time planting, but I like to plant carrots though the growing season into early summer and then again in the fall. Home-grown carrots have a sweet juicy flavor that can’t compare, thank goodness, with supermarket carrots bland taste. I plant closely and start to thin out baby carrots for early nibbles and roasted baby carrots. When growing your own carrots you have so many more choices. Carrots are diverse. Some varieties are pencil thin and some short and stubby. Colors go beyond the familiar orange. Purples, white, and yellow are so fun to display on a white dish at the dinner table. And who can’t resist eating a few straight from the ground.
If you have ever grown carrots and they each seem to have grown many legs in many directions, you can probably blame your soil. Carrots grow best in sandy soils with good drainage. Work in plenty of organic matter (compost). If you have clay soil you can amend with perlite or vermiculite and peat moss. This opens up the soil allowing your carrots to grow longer root systems. If your soil is still being worked and is not yet loamy, don’t let that stop you from planting carrots. Just plant varieties that are shorter like, Chantenay varieties. They are also very good winter keepers. Just let them stay in the ground over winter. This is a great way to have fresh carrots all winter long without taking up space in the root cellar or frig. If you live in a cold region put a layer of straw over them the keep the tops from getting damaged from frost. Carrots require an open sunny site. Sow seeds outdoors in early spring until summer. Carrots do not transplant well. Broadcast seed, tamp down and cover with a thin layer of fine compost. You can also sow carrots and radishes in the same row. Just be very careful when pulling radishes that you don’t disturb the carrots too much by pulling the radish with one hand and the other holding down any carrots that might want to come with. Water with a gentle wand so as not to disturb the seed much. Keep soil surface moist till carrots germinate. I wait to thin my carrots until they are big enough to eat as baby carrots, 2-3″. This does take away from the size of later carrots a bit, but I don’t mind a smaller carrot. You can thin early when greens are 1-2″ tall to 2–3″ apart. Put thinnings into your compost pile. Keep weeds out of your crop making sure not to disturb the roots too much. Carrots are companions with onions and chives. Now! Go plant some carrots!
Roasted Baby Carrots With Honey and Rosemary
Scrub baby carrots. Trim off all but 1/2 inch of the greens, arrange carrots in a single layer on a foil-lined baking sheet. Drizzle with olive oil and roll back and forth to coat. Roast until carrots are tender when pierced with a fork, about 20-40 minutes. remove from oven and season with salt and pepper. Drizzle hot carrots with a little honey and finely chopped fresh rosemary. Easy and so good!
Filed under Gardening, Recipes from the Garden








