Biggest 2014 harvest yet. First carrots & beets, main crop of potatoes, lots of cabbage, garlic, onions & greens, and the perpetual lettuce keeps on coming.
Today’s Harvest – July 16, 2014
First zukes! Yes, it's that time of year.
Today’s Harvest – July 12, 2014
First potatoes, last of the peas and fava beans, first serious harvest of onions, and garlic. Lots of "perpetual lettuce" and other greens, and bush beans. Pole beans went in today after the peas came out.
Pea-picking confusion
Picking peas last night, I found it difficult to distinguish the mature flat-podded snow peas from immature shell peas, because they are right next to each other and are roughly the same height – the line between them is fuzzy. The sugar snaps are reliably taller than the other two, so next year I suggest that we plant the snap peas in the middle, and simply note on the garden plan if the snow peas are on the left or right of the snaps.
What’s with the red plastic?
Q: Why did we plant the tomatoes through red plastic mulch this year?
A: It's an experiment. According to a UMass Extension report on the use of plastic mulches "Researchers at the USDA and Clemson University noted that certain crops performed better when grown in red mulch as opposed to black mulch: tomatoes, which yielded 20% more fruit; basil, the leaves of which had greater area, succulence, and fresh weight; and strawberries, which smelled better, tasted sweeter, and yielded a larger harvest. Penn State researchers found yield increases for tomatoes and eggplants on red mulch compared to black. Anecdotally, gardeners in Berkshire County saw marked increase in overall plant size, fruit size, and yield of tomatoes, eggplant, and peppers when plants were grown in red mulch as opposed to straw mulch."
We have noted that weeds are growing under the mulch, which might be a problem later in the season.
The particular perforated product we are trying is "Better Reds", by Dalen Gardener, about $8-10 for 8 3'x3' sheets.
Today’s Harvest – June 21, 2014
Today's firsts were peas, peppers, basil, cilantro, baby potatoes and garlic scapes, and we harvested the winter rye a little early so we could get the nursery bed going. The lettuce rotation continues to provide a good harvest, but the radishes are just about through for this spring. Plenty of greens keep coming.
We got our first okra flower, which is early, and may be the result of warming the soil with black plastic. |
And Lisa found one of these on the fennel (a juvenile American Black Swallowtail caterpillar). |