Friday, February 4, 2011

Mary Mary quiet contrary how does your garden grow.....

If I had a toonie every time someone has said that to me in my life I would be rich....oh wait, I am rich.....or at least I was this past summer, rich in vegetables anyway.
Last fall I was inspired to have a greenhouse built, inspired by a lady in California who blogged about her small raised garden bed in her backyard. I couldn’t believe the amount of vegetables she got out of her tiny space and I started imagining what I could do with my backyard, which is a lot bigger than hers. I knew I could not compete with her long growing season in California unless maybe I had a greenhouse. So I hired a dud to build me a 10x12 greenhouse with 4 12ft x 2ft beds in it. 

I started plants indoors in March and in May I moved them out to the greenhouse; I had to heat it up with a space heater until the weather warmed up in June.  I also built 5 4x8 and 2 2x8 raised beds and had them filled with a ½ and ½ mixture of old cow manure and topsoil. I did not like the topsoil and will not use it again, when it got wet it got very hard and lumpy, from now on I will use compost which I found out later that I can get free at my local landfill. In April I transplanted everything except the tomatoes, cucumbers, watermelon, cantaloupe and peppers out into my bed and planted the seed vegetables. There was still frost in the mornings at this time so I covered my beds with my leftover plastic from my greenhouse for a few weeks just to be safe. This is so easy to do with raised beds; I found my raised bed so much easier to manage than a large garden plot in the ground. At the top of each raised bed I had built a trellis to train my plants to grow up to save some space and this worked great, I ended up with a green wall across my backyard made up of, beans, peas, sweet peas, pumpkin and squash. 








It looked like the green lush California garden that had inspired me to begin with; it was the look I was looking for. I discovered that I love to grow creeping and climbing plants like cucumbers, watermelon, cantaloupe, beans, peas and my favourite of all...squash. I only had spaghetti squash this year but want to experiment with a few different kids this year, and I also want to try eggplant.....I hear it likes to climb as well. I had a great beet crop and fell in love with beets. Beets had never been my favourite, I would eat them if I were served them somewhere else but have never bought a beet and cooked it myself, I have been missing out, they were so good. I loved them just boiled and then lightly tossed with butter and salt...so easy. I peed purple all summer. I have since learned that they are great raw, shredded into salad, and add a nice flavour to vegetable juice. Beets are on the list again for next year. My carrots were great, there just was not enough of them, same with onions, didn’t have enough. I didn’t get a lot of cucumbers, I think that was due to it being too hot in my greenhouse for them, next year I will start them in greenhouse and them transplant them out, the tomatoes however loved it in the greenhouse, they became a huge jungle in there, I had planted them too close together I think, it was a tangled mess but it produced a lot of tomatoes. I ate tomatoes from June until September when I finally just stopped tending to everything.

 I had a little bag of baby tomatoes in my lunch every day. Not sure what happened to my peppers, did not get a lot of green peppers, my chilli peppers however did quite well. I had great corn but again just not enough of it. 
This is a 2x8 bed that is completely overgrown with corn, squash and beans
I had even planted some popcorn which was awesome but...not enough again, it popped up so white, it was beautiful. Another vegetable that I feel in love with again is Rutabaga, I hadn’t had them since I was a kid, it brought back memories of raiding grandma’s garden. I would cube it raw and munched on it at work on my tractor, never cooked it, ate it all raw. It is defiantly on the list for next year.  Of course it wasn’t all a success, my cantaloupe got smothered by heat in the greenhouse, I ended up with 2 cantaloupes the size of a big apple that were good but I had hoped for a bigger crop. The watermelon got smothered by the pumpkin, the pumpkin went crazy, it was the garden bully, and you could almost watch it grow. I ended up harvesting 5 small pumpkins, which was the perfect amount for me. 








I lost my whole cabbage crop to bugs (worms) I battled it for a while and then finally gave up. The bugs also attacked my broccoli and cauliflower, but I did manage to harvest a bit off them before I gave them up as well. Since these are known as the buggy plants, I will grow them in a separate area next year and cover them with row covers as I do not want to use pesticide. I had nice onions and garlic as well but again...not enough. I think I smothered my strawberries last fall, I covered them with grass clippings in the fall I think that was not the answer, I used dried leaves this year, so I hope to have strawberries this year...more than a handful. I also planted some raspberries bushes and they died too....I forgot to water them during the hot time, so I need to replant.
I really really enjoyed by garden, the whole process from seed to tending it, and the harvesting, I loved it all, I couldn’t wait to get home at the end of my work day to check on my garden. It was the first thing I did in the morning....wander around  my garden with my coffee and it was the last thing I did before I went to bed...wander around the garden with my cup of tea. The absolute most thrilling part (yes I said thrilling) was go out with a bowl at supper time and gather my supper and my lunch for the next day. I had either stir fried, steamed or boiled vegetables for supper....my favourite is lightly steamed and then tossed with different flavouring, and my favourite is steaming them in my homemade chicken broth. 












I have a new plan for next year, I plan to freeze chicken broth in ice cube trays and then put in bags in the freezer, and then when I want to steam my vegetables I can just put one cube in the pan. I also plan on making my own tomato bouillon as well the same way, in ice cube trays.
I discovered that having a meatless meal was much more satisfying then coming home from work famished and gorging on a meat heavy meal, it always left me feeling so bloated and lazy. I still got my protein from either a boiled egg, or cottage cheese or beans. I did eat meat as well, just not as often and not as much at a time. I found this way I still had energy after supper instead of just wanting to veg out for the rest of the evening. Making lunches for work as also thrilling, it was so much fun to go to work with a Ziploc baggie of tomatoes and a bread bag of cut up vegetables to munch on while on my tractor. This was not my lunch, it was my snack. It was not hard to get my 5-10 servings of fruit and vegetables in a day; this was usually done well before supper...which is why I felt I could treat myself to having a bag of chips and a Pepsi for supper sometimes. Makes sense to me.
Here is a summary of what I learned this summer in my garden

-         A greenhouse needs vents, not just a window (even in the north)
-         You cannot grow buggy plants without row covers (unless you want to poison yourself)
-         Pumpkins are garden bullies, give them space
-         Corn and beans love each other
-         Squash is beautiful....it can build a green wall
-         Popping your own home grown popcorn is very thrilling
-         Starting your garden indoors in March is too early
-         Peas, when growing upward are fun to pick
-         Eating a raw Rutabaga makes you feel like you are 6 again
-         Gathering your own supper makes you feel rich....like you won something
-         Squash and pumpkin soup is amazing, and can  be cooked in so many different ways
-         You can freeze spinach
-         Freezing tomatoes is not complicated, wash them, put them in container of your choice, stick your hand in there and smooch them, put a lid on it and stick in freezer....leave 1 inch head room.
-         You can never have too much compost or cow manure on hand
-         You never get tired of eating raw vegetables when on a tractor for 12 hours s day
-         Eating beets makes you pee purple
-         If you want lots of onions you have to plant lots of onions...it’s a one for one vegetable.
-         Vegetables are very tasty if you don’t over cook them
-         You can never have enough tomatoes....so many things you can do with them
-         Collared greens are goooood
-         Loved eating the peas raw in the pod...never shelled or cooked a single pea

Plans for next year;

-         Already expanded my growing space last fall, built new raised beds
-         Don’t put slow growing plants beside fast growing plans....they get smothered.
-         Plant more stuff that can be stored over winter, beans, cabbage, squash, potatoes, broccoli, onion, garlic, corn, tomatoes, peppers etc...
-         Freeze my spinach instead of letting it bolt if I can’t eat it all
-         Plant my buggy plants at the community garden (with row covers)
-         Not start so early in doors....maybe not start indoors at all, just start heating the greenhouse earlier
-         Plant a variety of squash and eggplant
-         Try planting sweet potatoes
-         Want to grow some fruit, maybe a few apple trees, and replace the raspberries that died
-         Encourage and help someone else start a garden
-         Green is beautiful


The green green grass of home......my second home, the golf course. Sharp crisp cut lines in the grass thrills.
 I planted squash in a raised bed by the 11th tee box at work, can you believe there are only 2 squash plants in here. I am going to use some more empty space at the gold course next year to plant vegetables......eatable landscaping they call it. The dirt in here is 100% old horse manure. 



And then came spring...finally

Just a wee bit before the first sign of spring I made a walkway to my greenhouse
I finally learned the secret to beautiful compost, it is a combination of patience, making sure you turn it often and  lots of brown organic matter 
I started some plants in small trays
and others right in the ground
In my greenhouse I used newspaper as mulch and it worked very well for me ..... no weeds
My garlic was planted last fall
Holy Moly peppers were my favorite, they did very well
I ordered my garden seeds in February , this was very exciting for me









A brief look at my winter in High Level, Alberta

It was frosty and cold of course

but I still managed to get out and do some snow shoeing 
On a sunny day the snow can be almost blinding

Living up north you soon learn that sunglasses are a year round necessity  
Don't think you can buy these anymore, I love them
Went camping up north .... yes there is more north than me. I Like to go on a  camping trip to Hay River  just before Golf season starts, once golf season starts I usually don't get to leave town.
My little cabin that I rented for 5 days
It has everything that I needed
I brought some books
and a box of wool....and no, I did not get that much wool kitted up
This is how much snow there was, that is the top of a picnic table....or the door to Narnia
The falls were frozen but still beautiful.
and once back at home
there was some baking.......





Some giant pretzels 

Some croissants with cheese inside


and of course always bread




My new to me beater

There was some sewing........




and some pretty pillowcases

some new summer pajamas, I still haven't mastered taking pictures of myself

and a some new cotton hand towels and wash cloths


I took a moccasin making class......like I need another hobby

There was some fun sewing....aren't they a cute couple.


An update regarding my last years plan on eating better.


Last year at new years I made a plan to eat more real food, and less if not none processed and pre-packaged food. When I went home I also decided not to buy any food in plastic packaging, this ended up being harder than I had thought and I ended up cheating a lot. It’s the dairy products that are the hardest. I had hoped to find a source for whole milk and make my own cheeses and yogurt but could not find anyone to sell me whole milk. The other hard one was potatoes chips; I love potato chips and wish they came in a card board box instead of a plastic bag. I did also make some homemade chips which were good right out of the oven but I wasn’t sure how they would store and just got lazy and never made them again. Other than that I did fairly well, it helped that I had a very bountiful garden and there was an endless supply of vegetables from May to October. I learned how to be very creative with stir frying and steaming vegetables using herbs and homemade sauces and salsas. I learned that lightly steamed vegetables are my favourite, lightly steamed being the key. If you just steam them ever so lightly they taste and still have the texture of fresh vegetables not like soggy used to be vegetables. Every day I took a bread bag of cut up raw vegetables and a bag of cut fruit to work with me and munched on them all day while on my tractor. (this is in addition to my lunch) I discovered I love rutabaga, something I hadn’t had since I was a kid and beets soon became my favourite.....
who knew. I loved them boiled and tossed with a little butter and salt, I peed purple all summer. I have since discovered that they are also good raw, shredded into a salad. I also learned that when you are eating fresh vegetables from your own garden it is not hard to eat 5-10 servings a day. I learned that vegetables can taste good when not over cooked and that one can actually have a craving for vegetables. I found I looked forward to an all vegetable supper as I was driving home from work, excited actually. To make sure I also had a serving of protein I would have boiled eggs on hand, or cottage cheese or a pot of beans, Kidney beans being my favourite. Not that I did not eat meat, I did, just not a whole lot of it. I found a meatless meal does not leave you feeling full, bloated and sluggish...down right lazy I would say. To all you women out there t hat are frustrated that your husband comes home from work, has supper and then lies on the couch all evening.....it’s the food you are feeding him in his lunch and at supper. Less meat more vegetables is the key. Remember I am saying less meat, not less protein. Meat is not the only source of protein and it certainly is not the best source either. Your body has to work very hard to digest meat protein, and it can only digest 4 oz at a time anyway, the rest goes to storage and becomes fat....or something like that. Little bits of protein at a time more often throughout the day I believe is the key let me know if I am wrong here.
All in all I think I have faired fairly well with my new years plan from last year. I will continue this year with a bigger garden and focus more on growing vegetables that store well over winter like squash, pumpkin, potatoes, onions, garlic, carrots, cabbage, corn and beets. I have also learned that you can freeze spinach and peppers. (did not know this)