So much rain!

the garden between rain showers. The pumpkins will be going away in the next few days.
the garden between rain showers. The pumpkins will be going away in the next few days.

It’s really getting ridiculous- we’ve gotten almost 6 inches this month! So… okay, I’ll just clean the house and peel roma tomatoes (that part really didn’t take long except that I chose to vacuum instead of actually making a sauce so the tomatoes could go bad in the fridge).

I got out to the garden for 15 minutes that turned into a half hour. It’s wet. I picked leaves that were touching the ground off of several kale plants and pretty much got a bucket’s worth. I may have gone a bit too heavy on the fertilizer. We already knew that, based on what the raccoons did to that bed and others. I also picked a handful of peas :).

I went out on Thursday to pick strawberries. I did half of the east row and did not get a single edible/blemish-free berry.  I filled up the rest of the compost bucket with the stuff from the ground in that area and called it a day.

I went to water aerobics twice this week (and went swimming with T today). It’s so great to be back in the water and moving around. During the last 2 winters, I lifted weights 2-3 times and did water aerobics 2-3 times a week, which made me a fixture at the gym. I just don’t feel like I can stay out past 7 anymore and Z often doesn’t finish work much before 5, so it’s going to be hard to get there without bringing T to the totally germ-infested childcare room.

Fog has covered the top of the mountain that's visible from the garden
Can’t see the top of the local “mountain”

What’s available right now on our farm

I think I should start regularly posting an availability list… (possibly not complete)

Around 20 small and 20 medium pumpkins. 4 small Cinderella pumpkins. 3ish large pumpkins, 1 xl (nearly ripe). Others that are not yet ripe.

Lots of bottle gourds and speckled swan gourds (still green, some young speckled swan)

Strawberries (seascape)

Tomatoes: everything from slicing to sauce to Sungold

kale: toscano, green leaf, and red russian

a few onions

corn leaves and stalks

herbs: Green and purple basil, rosemary, oregano

flowers: some calendula, borage, small cosmos, aged zinnias

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Getting ready for rain

I realized yesterday that my biggest priority in getting ready for this week’s rains was to cover the ground between the strawberry and tomato beds. There’s room enough for a whole bed there, although it’s nice to have a nice, wide path in which to throw bad fruit and not have to step on it while I’m picking other fruit. There were a lot of spots where the ground was bare and hard because the gophers had left mounds that had dried out in the sun. I am trying to limit opportunities for rain-caused erosion. Today I finished picking up the rest of the fruit and leaves off the ground there and put out 10 wagonloads of compost. It might be a bit heavy, but when the tomato plants are gone, I might be able to spread some of it at the edge of the bed where I apparently did a really good job of hoeing the weeds out.

Brown leaves visible on the ground
Behind these zinnias is the space between the tomatoes and the strawberries. Brown leaves are visible in this photo. They have all been picked up and composted.

The other thing that I did today was start a new compost pile. I had a big pile of corn stalks, leaves, husks, and bad ears from when I pulled out about half of the corn plants the other day, plus some other weeds and some 13 buckets (5 of them had bad strawberries and some tomatoes in them, and there were a lot of corn cobs and husks in the buckets from the house, lol). The compost pile is still like half the size it needs to be to compost properly. #goals While I was building the pile, T did some walking around the garden all by himself (with pokemon go on his dad’s phone, of course). Yay for exercise and his sense of accomplishment! Boo for screen time.

The amount of rain we’re expected to get in this week’s storms has been decreased, thankfully. I’m still trying to figure out how the fava bed can be prepared so I can plant into it- it was chisel plowed but not raked, iirc.

Z is putting a lot of pressure on me to get the pumpkins sold. I guess we need a marketing person, lol. People are really not willing to pay very much for pumpkins. And the stores charge WAY too little for them!

view from northwest corner of garden includes grass on the road around it!
Grass is visible on road around the garden (far right) after last week’s rains

 

Report about the National Heirloom Expo

I wrote this in mid-September (ish).

I guess I’d better write these notes before I forget what I was going to say! Photos: 2016 National Heirloom Exposition

The Expo seemed smaller this year- in attendance, and in vendors. The first thing I noticed when I arrived at the Sonoma County Fairgrounds was that the ticket booth wasn’t open – instead, the Expo had its folks selling tickets from a table in front. I wonder if it was cheaper to rent the space without paying the folks in the ticket booth.

I went in and checked out the vendors. Lots of great stuff, as always, as well as some craft-type vendors that seem to always be “filler,” just taking up space. Chelsea Green was not there – they usually have a large area that must be 2-3 booths’ worth of space. Their books were available from other vendors such as Real Books. I ordered a book that I’d seen at their table last year 🙂 Oh, last year and the year before I think I saw Sandor Katz at this one booth where they sold homesteading supplies and some books and stuff- they weren’t there.

On the first day of the Expo, the Health Department came through and ticketed people who were giving out food without the proper permits. This caused an uproar that included Jere Gettle, the owner of Baker Creek Seeds, which runs this event via its Seed Bank in Petaluma, saying that the Expo might have to move to another city such as San Jose. The fact that he had other places in mind seems to imply that they’ve already been considering moving the event. Attendance seemed lower and I’d imagine that having fewer vendors was frustrating. The head of the Health Department resigned this week.

One thing that I’ve noticed about the vendors such as seed companies like Johnny’s Selected Seeds and our local Harmony Farm Supply is that nearly every company is focused on growing for summer, or summer growing by default. Here in the greater Bay Area we can grow food all year long. You’d think they’d have at least displays about winter growing, perhaps even selling season extension supplies or providing coupons to encourage folks to order them. Our local Natural Gardening Company had garlic bulbs and seed potatoes ($4 per pound? I could swear those are cheaper elsewhere), which was good to see.

Farmers. There are usually a half-dozen or so produce farmers in a spot near one of the exits. Is it possible that they were scared away by the health department? Soda Rock Farm was one of the few farms onsite (they primarily grow a lot of varieties of tomatoes). I did see the owners of Green Star Farm (who are never at the farmers’ markets I go to, even though my understanding is that owners have to be there once a month), but they were talking to each other when I went over to say hi.

I think there may have been one less building of exhibitors, which was weird. One of the best things that I found was the kids’ building. We showed up there to find the kids’ seed exchange. Matt Powers, the host of the Permaculture Tonight podcast, was mc’ing up on stage, and there happened to be watermelon sampling there in the same building! Yay! There was a table for coloring (pages from a coloring book that was available for sale, lol), and there were displays about seed saving and who knows what else! There were games being played outside (sack races and whatnot), but we didn’t make it outside in time to see them.

We never went to the animal area. I always enjoy seeing the animals, although I’m always nervous about picking up animal diseases on my shoes. My poultry husbandry instructor is a veterinarian, and he told us about how diseases are often spread at county fairs. The animals are housed in the fairgrounds’s barns.

I didn’t get to hear any speakers this year. There were some repeat speakers, which is nice for new folks, but kind of frustrating for someone who wonders who else is out there in the “real food” movement. I am always so annoyed at the “real food” thing that Baker Creek espouses. Yes, it’s nice to focus on heirloom varieties, but HOW they are grown is so important. Organic or Certified Naturally Grown certification answer so many questions that customers need to ask.

I love that there are vendors of healthy foods, although the $15 burger from the Fork Catering food truck was brutally expensive. I didn’t see a Petaluma Pie Company table. I’m hoping that this is because things are going so well for them at their restaurant in Petaluma, and not because they didn’t think the event would be financially worth-it.

The displays of squash were beautiful, as always. The old-timey music, especially Sideshow Slim, was annoying, as always. He does this weird self-deprecating thing between songs (I think he probably has pretty bad depression) where he also makes some kind of nasty comments about women, and I don’t like it. Old-fashioned sexism is still sexism. The worst part is that he always says the same lines between songs. He’s an amazing musician, though- he demonstrated 2 styles of yodeling!! The kids, including mine, loved dancing in front of the stage.

T had so much fun that weeks later, when we’d drive near the Fairgrounds, he would ask if the Expo is there, and when it will happen again. I hope that the National Heirloom Expo will be back in Santa Rosa next year!

Huge to-do list

Omg, there is so much to do, and I’m getting so little time out there. I’m so glad that there have been peas to pick when I’m out there. I’ve been trying to keep up with the strawberries – I’m down to less than a basket a day from 1/2 the plants.

There have been some lovely pollinators and I’ve been trying to get pictures of them. I’m so glad the zinnias are still there. I’ve been trying to figure out what to do about all the pumpkins we’ll have.

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old kale, still fine!

Some of our lovely gourds (left) and pumpkins

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apparently cabbages can make a new head if you leave them in the ground long enough (?).Some have like 4 small heads.

Planted some cover crops

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In the last few days, I’ve scrambled to get cover crops planted before the rain started on Friday. On… Thursday? I planted bell beans, rye, vetch, and mammoth red clover in the big empty section on the south east side. I didn’t cover it at all – too much area to be raking. When I ran out of clover, I got more of the other seeds and kept going. I did the end of the tomato bed, the path alongside the south sunflower bed, etc. I may have done the bed to the west of the corn and beans, too. I need  to check on that. I am so bad at recordkeeping these days. I also had hoed, raked, and seeded the part of north sunflower bed that didn’t have anything growing in it, along with the bed next to it, with yellow sweet clover.

Today I broadcast phacelia seed in the bed to the east of the south sunflower bed. I wonder if it will be ok – we got over half an inch  of rain today. (yesterday, too)

Yesterday I was frantically picking tomatoes, strawberries, corn, and basil before the rain got going too much. Sometimes the tomatoes split before I even get to the house (too much water). Sad. Tonight I picked 2 gallons of tomatoes. Z has been trying to get them roasted and put into jars to cool and (hopefully) get frozen in a ariety of smaller bags. I want to try to dry them, even though a lot of them are beefsteak-type heirlooms. But there is the time question (gotta clean them and dry them before slicing, no?).

I need to collect more stuff around the garden and start a compost pile.

Tonight I put a couple of wagonloads of woodchips out in the path down the middle of the garden and near the north gate to the garden. I wanted to put them on the south side path to the compost pile, but I had to focus on the north path because it was bare in many spots and squishy in others.

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I did something today!

Grey kitty on my back. I'm inside the low tunnel and she is on top of the chicken wire that is on top of it.
Grey kitty on my back. I’m inside the low tunnel and she is on top of the chicken wire that is on top of it.

It’s been a rough week. T was home with The Cold on Monday and there were preschool field trips to go to on Thursday and Friday! I’ve been coming in from the garden around sundown, so there’s just not that much that can get done.

Today, Saturday, I did get to do some transplanting. We moved our 1st low tunnel (the shorter one) the other night so I could have a new planting space.Tonight I transplanted a whole sixpack of Broccoli (Arcadia?) and a few curly green kale seedlings. By the end there were calls for “Mummy milk!” coming from the house and yard. I will run out of space tomorrow. Embarrassingly, there are still 2 seedlings left in one other sixpack. I think they were cabbages, but I’m not sure. Some of the recent spinach transplants are doing ok, but in other places I’m like, “am I missing some seedlings?” Probably. There are gopher mounds everywhere. I may have found a green onion seedling and later weeded it out while I was out there. Mummy needs a greenhouse so I can start my own seeds!

I’m typing this instead of continuing work on my cover crop crop plan. It’s coming along. I’m almost ready to figure out how many beds’ worth of things I have. I’m listing the amounts I have and the planting rates so I can figure out how many beds I can do of each thing (aside from rye, bell beans, and maybe vetch, which crops I think we still have a lot of stored in a different spot) I might try to plant some clovers, but I realized that 1oz of clover will cover like 60 square feet of bed, and my beds are 300 to 400 square feet, lol.

I haven’t picked strawberries since Thursday night, so I’ve got to get on that on Sunday. And pick tomatoes. It was hot today so things are bound to be gross! The purple green beans are pretty much finished. I have mostly stopped picking the summer squash, because those gigantic ones just sit on the counter and rot!

Hello, blog

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No, I haven’t forgotten about you. I’ve just been sick. Still. This cold is brutal, but at least it’s not the stomach bug that’s going around T’s school. Speaing of cold, it was 35 degrees last night, according to our wildlife camera, and we had our first rain today. Not a lot, just a few showers. A total of .15 inches, according to the weather folks.

I finished transplanting my old seedlings and got some more yesterday. Today I put a sixpack of collards and half of one of broccoli into the ground. Picked 5 ears of corn on my way out! Zak picked a lot of peppers – the padrons, I think, and the habaneros, and is trying to dehydrate them. He moved the habaneros out of the kitchen because the smell reminded him too much of getting burned from peppers.

Z did some mowing (mostly our yard and along the driveway, but also next to the corn, which is good because the western neighbors entered from that side last week and it looked terrible!) with the pushmower this weekend, and did some chisel plowing this morning while it wasn’t windy and it seemed that the rain was able to catch most of the dust. I want to get cover crops into the ground! It’s a bit early, but not if we are having an early winter (?).

This morning I made a list of the fall/winter cover crop seed that I have in the house. I tried to organize all of the seeds that are in the 2 containers, but I was there too long with T and he disorganized them. (roots, summer crops, herbs, flowers, and maybe lettuce/greens is how I organize them, with tons of packs of peas lying around, too)

Oh, no, the peas are starting

T shows me the piece of drip tape that Z cut from the west row of the strawberries, as Z worked on "fixing" the leak
Fixing a big leak in the strawberries

The dozen-ish of (snap? they look a bit like snow) peas that survived the first planting are starting to grown little peas. T ate them tonight.

I’ve been sick this week so I haven’t been keeping up with harvesting. Picked 3 baskets of purple and green green beans today. 2 baskets of decent-looking strawberries from the west side. A big zucchini and a bolting bok choy. Some of the Cinderella pumpkins are just about ripe. The Petaluma Gold Rush beans, well, we’ve missed some. and fyi, they are a pole bean. The 1st packet I got of them didn’t say that, iirc. Think they might be an heirloom, so maybe I’ll get seed.

I checked at the sort-of hardware place across the street today to see if they had fencing, rebar, etc, and they didn’t (today), except for small widths of hardware cloth. On Monday they could sell me 10′ lengths of rebar and we’d need to cut it into 2′ pieces. Z might build another section in the next few days so I can plant the spinach seedlings I’ve had for a couple of weeks :(. I should thin those on Sunday…

Things are starting to die back (not just because of the 2nd heatwave in a week coming on) and I’m feeling pretty sad about the fall. Hopefully we can get our cover crops in, as well as fava beans and strawberries with garlic and flowers and not totally lose those.