From the monthly archives:

December 2010

Late Harvest

by Alyse on Monday, December 13, 2010

Crisp lettuce, plucked out of the snow in November, brought me nearly as much joy as my entire Thanksgiving dinner. No mulch, tarp, or cloche was involved - this lettuce would simply make it on it’s own or not at all. I only went to the trouble of putting the seeds in the ground. By the end of the season, I walk a very fine line between hobby gardening and overworked burnout. Any more effort may have taken me to a limit I didn’t want to reach, so if my lettuce crop was destined to wither, unprotected from the cold, so be it. I would look forward to the next crop in the spring rather than get sick of all the work and quit. This makes real farmers laugh and roll their eyes but we’re not real farmers and we know it. We tend to our crops after we’ve worked all day, finished the house chores, gone for a run, mowed the lawn and kept dates with our friends. Although it’s our biggest hobby, it’s still just a hobby and when a hobby becomes too much work, it’s no longer a hobby at all. Managing the amount of sweat we’re willing to commit to, ensures we’ll continue to enjoy our passion for growing food. I will say there’s great pleasure in enjoying something you’ve worked hard for, but if you’ve worked too hard, the pleasure is lost. That was a lesson from my wise parents.

This was the very last harvest of the rather effortless fall salad greens and I ate them plain, stuffing one whole crunchy leaf into my mouth at a time – knowing it would be months before I would get to enjoy them again. The cold gave the lettuce an extra rigid crispness that felt as though it was flexing it’s muscles to withstand the elements. I’m not sure what variety these were. I remember sprinkling a little of each seed to give them all a chance, knowing only the toughest would make it. Just one distinct variety survived in two colors. I’ll have to research my seed mixes to identify it as the epitome of hardy.

Not every leaf survived the weather so well. I had to separate the good from the bad and the ugly.

 When we heard the snow was coming, we harvested what was left of the late tomatillos and a few leaves of kale. The tomatillos are still in the fridge, keeping well. Some are meager but still treasures to us.

We’ll enjoy some green salsa soon but the kale was needed to add some life to a hot can of soup for lunch that day.

The Red Boar Kale is as beautiful as it is delicious. It seems to turn deeper shades of purple as the temperature drops but it remains crisp, firm, and loaded with fresh green flavor. 

 

 

{ 2 comments }

There’s no such thing as too much asparagus.

by Alyse on Tuesday, December 7, 2010

It’s the time of year when my head is buzzing with ideas for next year’s veggie patch. The crop on my mind today is asparagus. It’s been growing for two years in a bed at the front edge of two half-barrels.  My theory is this:  if it’s spreading outward in front of the barrels, it must also be spreading in the other direction under the barrels, but it can’t sprout there because the barrels are in the way. If I move the barrels, I should have twice the asparagus crop, right? Doubling the asparagus bed would take up a large space in my little garden so I need to interplant it with other crops that won’t interfere. I’m thinking leaf lettuce and small radishes. Besides being annual crops, they don’t have spreading or deep imposing roots so they should do fine. This is also a shady corner and none of these crops will mind a little shade.

It’s said that asparagus should be kept weed free to avoid crowding or stunting it’s growth, but when I was a kid I lived in a place where asparagus grew wild in a big open field. It produced just fine among the weeds and grasses with a bounty that feds all of the lucky locals who harvested it. It’s this asparagus memory that makes me believe sowing lettuce and radishes among it won’t stunt my asparagus at all. I guess we’ll find out.

{ 0 comments }