Showing posts with label To Do. Show all posts
Showing posts with label To Do. Show all posts

Saturday, September 25, 2010

Garlic Planting Season


The gathering of the Canadian Geese at the lake and the arrival of crisp, Autumn mornings indicate that Garlic Planting Season has arrived in the High Desert.  In years past, I have planted Bogatyr, Polish, Georgia Crystal, Korean Red, Siberian, Music and Kettle River.  With the exception of the Kettle River, all have been hard necks that enjoy a good, freezing winter.  Over and over, Siberian has been the best grower, with the rest of the hard necks being one slight step below and about equal.  The soft neck was still good and quite edible, but did not produce as large a bulb as it might have with a milder winter.  It has been a few years since I have grown garlic, and the most I've ever grown was about 100.

This year, I decided to plant enough to perhaps sell a few and give away some... so far, 316 cloves are in the ground.  I waited until the last minute to order garlic as I wasn't sure I would have time to plant out so many, due to school and other obligations; however, the urge to plant garlic was irresistible, and I succumbed at the last moment.  Alas, this meant that my favorite garlic supplier, The Garlic Store (http://www.thegarlicstore.com/) , was out of all of the varieties that I wished for.  So instead, I ordered from Two Sisters Garlic (http://www.2sistersgarlic.com/).  I am somewhat disappointed that they also ended up not having Siberian and ended up making a substitution; however, I understand I ordered late.  I also understand that the biggest and best bulbs had already been sold.  Still, the varieties I have should make plenty of wonderfully stinky garlic.


This year I am growing only 4 varieties.  One of the reasons I limited myself to four varieties was not simply because I ordered late and choices were limited, but also because it is difficult to keep track of the different varieties.  Many look similar in clove color, skin color, shape and size.  Planting maps need to be carefully kept and the bulbs must be tagged at harvest if there is going to be any chance of knowing which variety you have.  The four varieties I chose for this year are all different in appearance, so even if some are confused at harvest time, there is a middling fair chance I will be able to tell them apart.

The varieties I am planting this year include Inchilium Red (soft neck), Fireball, Music, and German Red. Planted so far - 316 cloves. 281 main crop and 35 small cloves to let flower or to eat the scapes from.
  • 29 Inchilium Red
  • 126 Fireball
  • 99 Music
  • 27 German Red
  • 35 very small cloves Fireball
Main Bed North 56 Music, 27 German Red, 42 Fireball
Main Bed South 43 Music, 70 Fireball
Raised Bed No. 2 10 Inchilium Red along the south board
West Sunflower Bed 14 Fireball, 19 Inchilium Red, 35 small Fireball for scapes or flowers

Still left to plant - about 100 cloves of planting size and 100 small cloves for chive, scape or flower use. And somewhere along the way, in a totally unrelated drive to plant flowering spring bulbs, I also now have 45 daffodil bulbs to plant out!

Sunday, December 28, 2008

Lessons Learned 2008

Many blessings in the garden this year. Although not as productive as the 2007 season, I was also more focused on chickens and work travel during the 2008 season. Now that the chickens are under control, I shall try to be more focused on the gardening aspects again.

Procrastination Kills Plants!


    Successes
  • Spring planted peas - probably they could have benefited from mulch and a floating row cover, but by garlic harvesting time in early June, they were going like gang busters.
  • Garlic - planted on time in the fall of 2007, mulched and fed and watered at the correct times
  • Fruit trees growing well - bloomed nicely before winter came and froze the buds. No fruits yet, but the trees are maturing nicely and are starting to look like, well, real trees (as opposed to sticks)
  • Sunflowers - planted in basically pure sand. They were stunted, but all grew. Watering enough was a challenge. Planting in trenches, watering deeply and mulching probably will help. As well as some fertilization. Chickens loved the sunflower seeds (what few they got) and loved eating the leaves, too.
  • Chickens - grew well and started laying right on schedule in mid-November.
  • Corn - well, not successful in that people didn't get to eat it, but very successful in that chickens enjoyed the heck out of their corn stalk forest and ate and shredded both the corn, the leaves and the stalks. Going to grow some for them and some for us in 2009.
  • Zucchini - Eight Ball - will grow standard zukes next year, but the protected ones did well. The others were eaten to the ground by the young chickens.
  • Oregano, Rosemary, Lemon Balm - surprise survivors that overwintered from 2007
  • Shredded paper mulch - made mostly of bills and junk mail. Need to do this for the trees this year.
  • Watering the compost pile and keeping it mostly covered - I noticed a seemingly overnight improvement in the speed of the pile decomposing as soon as I started doing that.

Chickens Kill Plants!


    Problems and Challenges
  • Chickens - they are cute and they love scratching around the garden and eating everything green in site. Meaning, anything unprotected got trampled, eaten or trampled and eaten.

    • Zucchini
    • Young tomatoes (they didn't eat them; just trample them as they hunted tomato worms)
    • Bearded irises
    • Strawberry plants

  • Tomatoes - tomatoes plus desert sun equals no fruit setting; fruit setting in Sept won't ripen before the first hard frost
  • Cukes - keep planting these too late, but the flowers are pretty, so not a total loss
  • Didn't plant garlic for 2009 on time; going to be a small harvest this year
  • Sunflowers - wild birds got to the seeds before I was able to feed them to the chickens, so the chickies only got to eat some of the seeds.
  • Beans - too hot for them. Miss one day of watering and they wilt and die when the temps are over 100°F. Mulching and planting in trenches might help. Grasshoppers loved them.
  • Lots of space yet unused. Need to fill it or Nature will fill it with weeds!

The Desert Kills Plants!


    Some Ideas for the 2009 Season
  • Tomatoes - grow in 3 - 5 gallon buckets and haul in and out and grow under lights so that they are well on their way when the last frost is done
  • Make cages for the plants so that the chickens can't get at them - SLW in photo above is showing her disdain for the fencing I used to protect sleeping garlic bulbs!
  • Plant some corn in the chicken run - protect until it is well matured. That will give them shade in the summer and something to play in throughout the fall and into the winter.
  • Shred more paper - it's tough to keep up with, but it works wonderfully as both mulch and chicken bedding
  • Mulch, mulch, mulch and mulch some more
  • Compost more
  • Make manure tea for the trees and plants
  • Implement an automated drip or sprinkler system
  • Plant more hybrid poplar trees along the front - plant in trenches, flood irrigate and mulch and feed well.
  • Plant a few hybrid poplars on the outside of the south and north sides of the chicken run - this will provide shade and wind blocks during the summer. (If I plant them inside the run, the chickens will be able to use the trees to escape from the run!)
  • Plant extra herb and tomato plants so I can give some away
  • Try early maturing, "closer to wild" grape or current tomatoes to see if I can get a harvest this year; protect them when the nights start getting colder
  • Grow enough basil to make pesto

Tuesday, May 13, 2008

The "To Do" List


Seems like no matter the good intentions, after months of planning and waiting for the weather, once agreeable weather actually shows up, it is all a race to get everything done for Spring Planting - and invariably, many things just never get done.



Current List of Things to Do:
  • Build a little alter in the garden area
  • Feed the backyard trees
  • Feed the front fence trees
  • Continue the loosing battle against tumbleweed
  • Clean up potting table
  • Cut back all the yellow "ferny" weeds (and use as mulch)
  • Sow more sunflower seeds
  • Prep the main pole bean area
    • Add dirt/compost to the sand
    • Put up a trellis or string
  • Pot up more toms and basil
  • Start more seeds
    • Toms
    • Peppers
    • Basils
    • Herbs
  • Buy/Order
    • Hybrid Poplars
    • Lavender plant