Just Add Water Project

Goodnight Garden

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And Then There Were Two..Brussel Sprouts

It's All Over But The Brussel Sprouts

My absence from the blog for the last month pretty much reflects my life as a gardener. I’m wildly enthusiastic in May and June, celebrating every shoot and pod. By July and August, my enthusiasm gives way to methodical labor; weed-water-harvest-replant. By September and October, I’m down to a few quick harvesting missions.
Just Add Water Garden In August

Just Add Water Garden In August

So when my son asked if I was sad to say goodbye to the garden today, I said no without a second thought. I’m a four season girl and it’s time to put the garden to bed.
Sure, I’m jealous of the warm weather folk when I visit my Florida in-laws in March. (I swear I can smell the soil over the jet fuel when I get off the plane in West Palm Beach.) But year round gardening would become a chore for me.
And so on this chilly October Sunday, we ripped out the brown shriveled basil, lamented, briefly, the third crop of beans that never produced, untangled the squash vines, and left the last two brussel sprouts that should produce a few more few side dishes.

And Just as we did back in early May, my husband, son and I shoveled manure from a nearby horse farm onto the raised bed. The difference now is that my almost 4 year old has become a farmer. Without questions or whining, Zach went to the shed, grabbed his wheelbarrow and shovel, attacked the compost pile, only asking for direction once with a jaunty “where do you want it, Mommy?”
Now I can’t say for sure that it’s a summer’s worth of fresh organic vegetables that made the difference, more likely the passage of time, but it was a pleasure watching him grow along with the Just Add Water garden over the last six months.
I look forward to gardening with all of you again next spring!

Take Notes Now

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Just Add Water Garden Early September

Just Add Water Garden Early September

By mid-September, I’m all about harvesting and not much else in the garden. I overlook weeds and watering and only ponder insect infestations if supper is threatened. But experience has taught me that it pays to take a few minutes to review the season’s successes and failures before the leaves fall. Taking notes now will prevent me from attacking the garden catalogs like a sailor with scurvy come February.

As you know, I started the season with seed suggestions and a 10′ by 10′ layout from the great gardeners at Johnny’s Selected Seeds here in Maine. For the most part, their varieties and succession planting ideas worked well, but I will make a few changes next year based mostly on personal preferences. (Click on layout to the right if you’re curious about what I grew.)

A Bouquet of Carrots, Red Lettuce and Chard.

A Bouquet of Carrots, Red Lettuce and Chard.

Working with their plan encouraged me to try some new veggies. I’ve discovered that I like chard and LOVE summer squash. We’ve been doing ratatouille with squash, zucchini, basil and (sigh) canned tomatoes for the last month in my house. Even the little guy likes it. I’ve also concluded that for me, kale will go back to being an ornamental plant. Are we sure it’s food?

I had bad luck with some transplants. Neither my cuke or basil seedlings fared as well as the plants that were sowed from seed into the garden. Next year, I won’t bother starting those indoors.

The peas, beans, lettuces and spinach have all been delicious. All will be invited back.

Thanks to the confines of the 10′ by 10′ space, I found I was much more disciplined about succession plantings. In the past I tucked veggies all over my garden beds and sometimes forgot about them. Not this year. Even in mid-September, every inch of the Just Add Water garden is still producing. Beans are coming up in the tomato graveyard. New rows of lettuce and spinach are launched next to the beans. I tucked in some discounted celery and cauliflower seedlings where the peas once grew. Those will be harvested in the coming weeks. The buds on my brussel sprouts are starting to swell. And the chard, carrots cucumbers and squashes are growing like gangbusters.

Cauliflower On The Way

Cauliflower On The Way

Regrets. I’ve had a few. I’ve already said too much about the tomatoes, but that was the nadir. I also regret not planting several crops of carrots. Johnny’s layout called for only a mid-summer planting, but in my house, raw carrots are served at every meal. Next year, I’ll start sowing carrot seeds as soon as the ground is warm enough. That reminds me, I plan to lay black plastic down next spring and purchase a soil thermometer. I definitely would have forgotten that idea over the winter!

What lessons does your garden have to share? If you’re like me, you won’t remember them in February and by then your garden won’t be in the mood for conversation.

Problems In The Pumpkin Patch

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Move on Charlie Brown.  No Great Pumpkins Here.

Move on Charlie Brown. No Great Pumpkins Here.

When planting a children’s garden, almost anything goes, but there are a few, three really, obligatory crops. And any kid can tell you what they are. Sunflowers, corn and pumpkins. And this September, the news from the pumpkin patch at the community garden is not good. We planted nearly thirty seedlings and do you know how many vines are bearing fruit? One. And by one, I mean one pumpkin. One small pumpkin.

Crop failure is always a disappointment, but losing pumpkins is a real bummer. I think those bright orange balls ease the transition back to the school year. Their promise of treats and after dark antics helps lessen the burden of homework and diminishing daylight after supper.

Thirty Seedlings. One Small Pumpkin.

Thirty Seedlings. One Small Pumpkin.

I always thought pumpkins were easy to grow. Stories abound…..”I just threw the seeds out the window and the next thing I knew, Jim had to use a forklift to get an 892 pound pumpkin off the lawn.” This has not been my experience.

The pumpkins were plagued with cucumber beetles, powdery mildew and too much rain this summer, but this isn’t the first year our patch has produced a scant crop. I’m hoping some of you pumpkin pros will have a few suggestions. We usually transplant seedlings into the garden in mid June and I wonder if we’d be better off direct seeding into the garden? Our soil is good, but maybe sidedressing with compost would help? The fact that we have so few pumpkins tells me we’ve got a pollination problem, but I find this hard to believe. There’s a very active beehive about 15 yards from the pumpkin patch.

We promise a “pumpkin for every child” at our fall Harvest Supper. Hmmm. Maybe I should start spray painting the zucchini?

Summertime (Tomato) Blues

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Back off. It's Mine

Back off. It's Mine

Went out to the garden (da-da-da-da-DA)
In search of a treat
But instead of tomatoes
I’ve got fungus to eat
I’ve got the Summer of 09, Late Blight Tomato Blues
And it’s bringin’ me down….

I’ve tried to move on. Really. I have. But the truth is I mourn the loss of my tomatoes every time I walk in the garden. There may be gardeners who love their vegetables equally. I’m not one of them. Tomatoes are the reason I grow a garden. All that other green stuff is just there to keep the tomatoes company.

And this Late Blight outbreak pushed me to do something I’m not proud of–purchase a non-organic product. Let me explain. I do most of my growing at my community garden which is strictly organic, but I had a few straggly leftover seedlings that were on their way to the compost pile. You know how gardeners hate to throw away plants, so at the last minute I stuck them in an old apple barrel planter in my driveway. I pretty much ignored them all summer UNTIL, I lost all my other tomato plants. Suddenly, those two plants became my only hope for home grown tomatoes.
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Please Read If You’re Growing Tomatoes and/or Potatoes

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Early stages of Late Blight on tomatoe plant. Note the brown lesion. These lesions grow rapidly. Also look for brown discoloration on stems.

Early stages of Late Blight on tomato plant. Note the brown lesion. These lesions grow rapidly. Also look for brown discoloration on stems.

Late Blight, the fungus that caused the Irish Potato Famine back in the 1840’s, is moving rapidly across New England this summer and it’s much more prevalent and destructive than first anticipated. At first, only gardeners who purchased seedlings from big, box stores were told to be on the lookout, but the spores travel for miles through the air and thrive in moist conditions. As a result, this blight is showing up everywhere. Sadly, our entire crop at the community garden here in Maine had to be pulled this week and my plants in the Just Add Water garden are going to have to come out too. All these plants were started from seed locally, not purchased as seedlings from box stores. Here’s what gardeners should know.

Do you have it on your potato or tomato crop?
Look for nickel sized brown lesions often ringed by dying yellow foliage and brown discoloration on the stems of plants. This link about late blight shows a few more photos and has helpful information about how to control it.

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Still Time To Plant

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Zach and I Pull What's Left Of The Peas.

Zach and I Pull What's Left Of The Peas.

I had planned on pulling the remainder of my pea crop last weekend, but the plants kept producing–a pod here, a pod there–and I couldn’t bring myself to rip them out. But the garden clock is ticking, and I knew I need to put the pea real estate to good use. So, with Zach’s help, the pea crop came out this afternoon with three forceful yanks.

I decided to go the easy way and buy deeply discounted seedlings from my local garden center. Unfortunately, I waited until the pickings were slim. I purchased and planted a half dozen sad looking cauliflower seedings and 4 celery plants. I’ve never planted celery so I’m looking forward to watching the plants mature.

I’ve also seeded the old spinach beds with carrots-twice–and germination is spotty. In past years, I’ve had good luck with July carrot plantings. I’m wondering if the rains have washed seeds away? We all know it can’t be the heat this summer! I may pop up to the garden before work this week and drop a few more carrot seeds in the ground.

What are all of you planting in late July?

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