Tuesday, June 28, 2005

hot day update

lots of exciting news from the garden--a fair number of peapods are ready to go, the chard and lettuce are out of control, there are some more beets sticking up out of the ground, and i spotted little zucchini, yellow squash, peppers, tomatoes, and beans. i'd guess that there's at least one zucchini that will probably be ready by the end of the week so someone should go out there and get it!

on the work side of things, it looks like our little straw plan only sort of worked because weeds are getting out of hand in some areas, despite the straw. apparently we didn't do a super job of getting rid of everything before putting the straw down. some places are better than others.

i was able to weed a little bit but i didn't have a ton of time. i'd say that the "problem" areas are in the back right where the peppers are being choked out (and a couple of the roma tomato plants in the way back on the side that have no cages) and then by the herbs. i did some emergency weeding to give them a little room but i would guess that they'll be overcome again in a few days. almost everything is marked with sticks or cages or has yellow flowers or actual little vegetables on them so it should be much easier to weed now.

it was really exciting to be out there b/c there's a lot of stuff coming in. yippeee!!

oh, and if anyone has the nerve to put up our signs (in the dead of night?), they're on our front porch.

Friday, June 24, 2005

The heat is coming

I've been out a few times this week to water and weed and put down more STRAW (finally looked it up, we are using STRAW, not hay). Things are looking pretty good. We need to eat greens like crazy - go nuts with that stuff. I also made a better pea cage, so that oughta be safe now. We'll try to get out and water daily if we can, and every other day at the least, on account of the insane heat coming our way. FYI, I've been watering just using the hose without a nozzle and basically dumping water right at the base of the plants, which seems to work well and is a fairly fast way to water.

The peas, squash, greens, beets, chard, and 'maters are all looking good. Beans look pretty good but might need some poles (we need more tomato cages too). The peppers are looking decent, but not amazing, hopefully they will perk up. The herbs are not looking horrible, they just don't seem to be going crazy like I had hoped - maybe we need to take off the wind shields that we put on when we planted em and see if that helps.

There are a few spots that still need to be weeded and "strawed", and a few places where I guess we just put straw down over the weeds and they are poking through. The area where the squash was planted is looking kinda weedy, but I'm unsure where the plants and weeds begin and end on the south end of the rows, so maybe someone who planted those should weed them. Also, the far west row where we planted okra is a loss and we should clearcut that and plant more okra and/or some fall squash. The dudes behind us said okra is supposed to take 60 days from planting to eating, so we can have em by the end of August if we get em in now.

I'll try to get out and do some more weeding, caging, etc before we head for NYC.

Tuesday, June 21, 2005

Harvesting advice

i'm wondering if we could all share our harvesting knowledge since we are starting to have a pretty good looking garden (despite what some older neighbors may think...). we have lots of lettuce, chard, beets... and tonight we spotted a few peas!

i read in the gardening book that chard should be harvested by picking (meaning taking a leaf and snapping it off at the stem) some of the bigger leaves from each plant and leaving some of the other leaves. i guess this keeps the plant viable so more chard can grow. when i harvested some chard the other day, i was able to get a pretty big bag just from picking a few leaves from each of the plants.

oh, i also know that beets are ready when you can see their tops coming out of the ground. please don't eat the beets without eating the greens, or at least seeing if anyone wants the greens. they are super-tasty and it would be sad if they went to waste.

any other harvesting advice? how soon to pick things, how to pick them, etc... we need help.

Monday, June 20, 2005

Mean Midwesterners

That's it. This isn't really garden related, unless you see the WORLD as GOD'S garden (you do? seriously? tool.) in which case I would like to make the point that the Midwest is as nasty and weedy a part as any other. I have heard so many people claim that the Midwest contains a different sort of person than the rest of the country - specifically a NICER sort of person.

Um . . . . . bullshit.

Seriously.

Bull. Shit.

I would like to take a moment to decry that particular sentiment as the sad mix of patriotism/xenophobia and anti-urbanism that it is. This belief is founded on the idea that Americans are somehow the best people and that the Midwest is somehow, due to its geographical position, the part of the US that is the least corrupted by the outside world (the incredible number of Mexican restaurants in a town the size of Champaign notwithstanding). Alternately, it is founded on the belief that people in cities have somehow been corrupted by the evil inherent within them and that this evil manifests itself as a lack of "nice".

Crap. Crap. Crap. Self-serving, egotistical crap. Are you serious? Does anyone really think that Americans are better people? Or that people in cities are somehow less wholesome? Look, I'm sorry if the only time you went to New York you got freaked out by the homeless guy in Times Square but lets be reasonable. Cities scare you. That doesn't make them evil. And anyone still laboring under the belief that Americans are a superior group of people needs to carefully consider both John tesh AND Paris Hilton at the same time.

So look, cut the crap. Some old ladies in the Midwest are every bit as crabby and pushy as those in Philadelphia. Some bouncers at bars in Chicago are every bit the assholes that bouncers at bars in L.A. are. Silly teenage mallrats dress ridiculously all over this country. Peopl here are not inherently nice. nice people are nice people. They are everywhere and they deserve nice treatment in return. Crabby, pushy, scolding old hags are also everywhere and need to be dealt with through sarcasm, name calling, and possibly jokes about Jesus.

I am going to go pick some beets, and if Grandma gets cheeky I'm gonna belt her.

Sunday, June 19, 2005

Our lovely garden neighbor...

Actual quote from the mean old lady in the garden next to us: "Someone needs to teach you how to use a hoe. You never had a garden before, did you?" Seriously, she said this to me today. Her reasoning was that I was pulling weeds by hand, which clearly implies that I don't yet know how to use a hoe and have never had a garden. I tried to explain that the bean plants were too closely tangled with the weeds to use a hoe, but she just said that was our own fault for letting it go so long. She said, "Aren't there a bunch of you? Why didn't somebody take care of it sooner?" Also, she said our beans look "pretty pathetic."

I almost whacked her in the head with my hoe.

Friday, June 17, 2005

Speaking of progress...

I just ate a delicious salad from our beautiful garden. Planbreaker and I spent the morning laying straw, and, in the process, we discovered baby tomatoes, baby peppers, and plenty of flowering plants. All the work that you people did while I was out of town has completely paid off! So, in this moment of optimism, I thought it might be a good time to take a look at just how far our little garden has come.

Remember a few weeks ago when we had no idea where the weeds ended and the plants began?



Well, compare that sad hodgepodge of greenery to our new "super-rows":



And how 'bout that mystery row? What were those plants anyway?




That's right...They're beautiful bean plants! (OK, so we still have a little weeding to do, but come on, they still look pretty good).

And look at this panoramic shot of tfoster watering in late May. One false step and a whole row could be wiped out:




Just a few weeks later, and look at the difference. I dare tfoster to try to crush these hearty plants:



And these were our peas just a few short weeks ago:



Now, they've grown so fast you can hardly recognize them:



All in all, it's been a good few weeks for the garden. Seriously, two different people commented on how good our garden looks today when planbreaker & I were out there. Yay garden!

Monday, June 13, 2005

vacationing....

what are people's "away" schedules for the rest of the summer? I'd like to figure out a watering schedule, if possible.

Friday, June 10, 2005

Frustration

Ok, it seems that the weeds are seriously taking over the garden (and this is after some pretty hefty weeding sessions by all on sunday and monday). df and i went to water last night and found that the kale and many of the other greens had been covered over *again* with weeds. we took some time to rescue them and some of the other plants but we only spent an hour weeding so there are still a lot of weeds out there. what can we do to make those weeds go away?? what's going on with the straw/hay?

the signs are also ready to put in but i feel like a jackass doing it b/c the garden doesn't look spectacular yet.

in better news, anyone who wants lettuce/salad greens should go and get it. i believe you can just bring scissors and cut some off and it will grow back. just don't eat the stuff that the bugs have eaten-- those are weeds! oh, and the new pepper and tomato plants and herbs seem to be doing well. and the one thai basil survivor looks like it's making a comeback!

Wednesday, June 08, 2005

Money

A quick appeal for sanity. At this point there have been numerous purchases for the garden: sprinkler, several rounds of tomatoes and peppers, stakes, bigger stakes, cages, seeds, etc. I think that it is a really terrible idea to assume that we will be able to remember all of this in November, so I am sending out a second appeal for people to send their expenses to me to put in one place (a nerdy spreadsheet that I created).

Send me your expenses!

An update about our lovely garden for Melissa

Amy, Donovan, and Tim all planted herbs and more peppers this weekend, and they and I did a ton of weeding. Amy watered yesterday and Tim and I watered today. Tim also tied the peas up around posts and they are looking good. I'd say about 5 more hours of weeding total and the garden will look beautiful. Donovan and Tim are looking into the hay option to place between plant rows.

Wednesday, June 01, 2005

what's in the garden?/RIP peppers

Ok, so i'm not all fancy with some graphic but here's a little guide to what's planted in quadrant 1 (which is what i'm calling the first quarter of the plot we planted):

row 1: cucumbers
row 2: mesclun
row 3: green lettuce
row 4: kale and beets
rows 5 and 6: beets and chard
row 7: edamame (aka soybeans) and snap peas
row 8: okra and white onion

hopefully this will help us distinguish the weeds from the plants.

df has some crazy map that deals with quadrants 2 and 3 (the next two quarters, moving counter-clockwise) so I'll let him relay that to you.

also, here's a list of what didn't make it: red chili (hot), yellow peppers (2 plants), green peppers (2), red peppers (2), tomatoes (umm... some type I can't read--3), tomatoes (roma-2), tomatoes (beefsteak-1), 4 thai basil plants.

Sprinklering

I took the sprinkler out to the garden today and am happy to report that it performed quite well. Only drawback: garden gets really muddy. Please beware of this when you go to retrieve the sprinker. My New Balance running shoes were not so lucky.

Also, in case you're interested I found a great trail to go running or biking on right by the garden. You enter it near that crazy monument to Olympic athletes (the giant white doorway thing). I don't know how long it is in total, but I followed it down to near Schnuck's (maybe a mile each way?). Anyway, it's a good place to run while you use the sprinkler.

I'll be out of town Friday thru Tuesday, but will be available for garden work beginning Wednesday the 8th. Keep me posted.