Kitchen / Garden / Sanctuary - Urban Homesteading to Nourish Body + Spirit

Month: March 2011 (Page 2 of 2)

Glorious Early Spring Flowers!

I had a wonderful St. Patty’s day dinner with my folks last night (corned beef, cabbage, potatoes, Irish soda bread, Irish beer, and a banana cake with chocolate-coffee frosting & green sprinkles!), and as I was riding my bike home in the peaceful night, it began snowing lightly. This morning at 7:00, the neighborhood looked like a wonderland! Here’s a picture, though it was much neater in person:

But spring is right around the corner, so after the snow melted I took a walk in the sunny afternoon to see all the blooming beauties…

Dwarf iris

Pulsatilla

Snowdrops

Crocus

Hellebore, or "Lenten Rose"

Crocus

Winter aconite

Crocus

Mega Weekend in the Garden!

Just finished seed planting! ...What? You can't even see your hand? Me neither.

Well, in what has become a bit too much of a yearly tradition, I finished planting seeds yesterday in the pitch black.

Every year this happens! I get too late of a start, and then I’m outside trying to get it all in the ground…it’s freezing, I’m barefoot, and I’m sowing cabbage seeds by feel because I can hardly see the garden anymore let alone the seeds.

I’m feeling good and satisfied though, because seeding the beds is the culmination of a whole heckuvalotta work: clearing out the raised beds, turning the soil, carting soil around the yard, getting a truckload (1 cubic yard) of compost from a landscape place with my dad, loading it into the wheelbarrow, distributing that into the raised beds and mixing it into the annex pots, digging in the compost, mixing in organic fertilizer, smoothing the beds, and then finally planting the seeds. Shew! I’m bushed, but it was invigorating to be outside moving my body! We were even blessed with *perfect* weather the entire weekend which is no small miracle in the fickle month of March in the Rockies!

I planted lettuce, spinach, radishes, arugula, broccoli raab, beets, onions, garlic, scallions, carrots, cabbage, cilantro, dill, and parsley.

Here are some photos from the weekend:

Getting started: clearing out the beds & turning the soil.

Dug up this very disoriented bumblebee. It's stretching its legs in the picture after taking a good 5 minutes to get its wings flapping again!

Schlepping

Dumping

Mixing

And look at that, I forgot to take an “after” picture in the daylight. Ahh well, you can easily use your imagination because the beds pretty much look like…absolutely nothing. But just wait! In a few months it’ll be a jungle!

Did you have a mega garden weekend? What are you planting?

It’s Been Busy at the Homestead!

So busy!! Since quitting my job, I am so busy!! Busy doing the life I had been putting off for all that time. My, how good that feels.

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Here are some random pictures from yesterday & today:

Inside the grain & legume cupboard in late afternoon. (I love the old fashioned jars — they’ve been in the family a long time, and they give me a homey feeling!)

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I just finished reading this inspiring book about how “the rest of the world” deals with diapers (hint: they don’t use ’em!) and how we westerners can have diaper-free babies, too. This is a must-read for new parents — or even better, before they become parents! Click here for a short synopsis of Natural Infant Hygiene (being diaper-free), written by the author of the book.

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The parsley in the kitchen window looks so pretty in the sun!

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Homemade organic applesauce ready for the freezer. I gobble this stuff up, especially when I warm it up on the stove and add cinnamon & cream!

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2 jars of freshly made chicken bone broth, cooked way down and concentrated…now ready to pop into the freezer. Also, brown rice that’s been soaked overnight and is ready to cook, and raw pumpkin seeds that were soaked overnight in salt water, and are drying. (I love to snack on them and add them to soaked oatmeal!)

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Went to the health food store yesterday (our favorite — Natural Grocers, aka Vitamin Cottage) and got some good stuff at reasonable prices. Everything’s organic except the chocolate and peanuts. Lettuce ($1.99), cilantro ($1.39), seedless tangerines ($1.79/lb on sale), Cara Cara oranges ($1.59/lb on sale), Food for Life sprouted grain tortillas ($2.65 for 6 large), raw cheddar ($3.49 on sale), peanuts ($2.33 for 1 lb), brown rice ($1.99 for 2 lbs, on sale), Kalona Supernatural whole milk ($3.69 for 1/2 gallon – to make kefir), Kalona Supernatural whipping cream ($5.79/quart), Chocolove 70% cocoa chocolate bar (the best-tasting brand and incidentally the cheapest…$1.49 on sale), and two “$1 grab-bags” — one with carrots and celery for juicing, and the other with 3 lbs of bananas at the perfect stage of ripeness to cut up and freeze for smoothies!

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Frozen banana slices for smoothies…ready to be transferred to a freezer bag:

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Then I made a delicious dessert of a sliced banana sauteed in coconut oil with a bit of maple syrup. A favorite!!

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Also made a yummy snack (called a “cheese circle” in my family when I was little!) of cheese melted over a sprouted grain tortilla, topped with Penzey’s Zatar seasoning and Smoked Spanish Paprika. Dynamite! (I make these circles in a cast iron skillet, over medium-low heat, covering the skillet with a cookie sheet until the cheese is melted, then adding seasoning. And normally, I use only 1/4 or 1/2 of a big tortilla at a time!)

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What’s been keeping you busy lately?

A Good Day

I had a really nice day today; how was yours? It’s been crazy energy lately — can you feel it? — and for the past week or two my mood has been sagging a little too frequently into depression. Yuck. I’m prone to those very low feelings from time to time, and I just haven’t been able to shake ’em off all that well lately. But today felt really good. I got up early and put 4 lbs of chicken backs into the big pot to make “bone broth” then went back to bed and let my body sleep as long as it needed to. Oh heaven.

Then later I took a good long walk at a clippin’ pace, ending up at our local herbal apothecary. Walking felt good, I delighted in seeing signs of spring, and ending up at the apothecary was a smart choice. Sometimes getting into a healing atmosphere like that is just what I need! Good medicine, ya know. I browsed the books, the essential oils, all their beautiful things…ahhh. It was fun. Stocked up on some dried nettles and rose petals for tea from their bulk herb section, and then walked home. The sky was cloudy and the air chilly and humid, and I loved it. Living in Colorado, I sometimes get tired of the unrelenting sunshine, and I savor the cloudy days when we get them! It had even been snowing lightly earlier in the morning. I’m sure I’ve said this before, but I just love the cozy feeling of being inside with a cup of tea and a book, looking out at swirling flakes!

Anyway, I arrived home from my walk to find a package waiting by the door — YESS! My new art supplies I’d ordered! But by that time it was 2:30 and I was starving, having not eaten anything yet today. I started right in on making Shrimp Etouffee over soaked brown rice, something I’ve never made before…and oh my…it was divine. I could hardly stop eating it. I love when I’m absolutely starving because food tastes so unbelievably good!

Then I fixed some nettle-peppermint-raspberry leaf tea and tore open the art package. Just like Christmas! See what I got!? Markers and colored pencils!

And by then it was late afternoon and my Honey came home from work…which is actually the biggest treat of all. 🙂 🙂

What did you do today?


How To Plan Your Spring & Summer Vegetable Garden

Good grief, it’s already March! Planning my spring & summer vegetable garden is on the agenda for this coming week, and so I’m re-posting my instructions from last year on the planning process I devised and use every year. Hopefully it’s helpful to you!

Today I’m going to give you a little tutorial on how to plan your vegetable garden. Over the years I’ve developed a planning method that works well for me. Admittedly, I don’t really like garden planning very much. I do love looking through all my seed packets and deciding what to grow for the year, but the process of actually planning what to put where is a task that takes literally hours of mental work (for me at least). It’s a lot of thinking, decision-making, & considering all different garden plan configurations (and past years’ plant placements) in my head before I even put pencil to paper.

That said, though, there comes a feeling of satisfaction and excitement when I’ve completed the plan and am thoroughly happy with it. Each year’s plan is different, depending on what I want to grow and also considering what grew there last year.

I have three 4’x8′ raised beds, one 2’x8′ raised “lasagna” bed (a story for another day!), another 4’x8′ raised bed against the south side of the house, plus various pots here and there for extra tomato growing space.

Here’s my basic planning process:

1. Decide what you want to grow. Look through seed catalogs or go to a garden center to get seeds, or if you’re like me and already have wayyy too many seeds to choose from, go through all your seed packets and set aside what you think you want to grow. (I like to start all my veggies from seed, but you could just as easily decide what you want to grow, and then buy plants from the nursery.)

Once you’ve narrowed down which veggies you want to grow, write them all down on a piece of paper.

2. Determine which vegetables will be in the Spring plan, the Summer plan, or both plans. If you’re planning both a spring and summer garden (which I do), you’ll have 3 categories of vegetables:

– Early-spring-planted veggies that you’ll harvest before summer (like spinach, peas, lettuce, etc.)

– Early-spring-planted veggies that you’ll leave in the garden through the summer — the “spring carry-over veggies” (like cabbage, onions, parsley, potatoes, cilantro, dill, chard, carrots, etc.)

– Summer-planted veggies (like tomatoes, squash, peppers, cucumbers, etc.)

Click here for a comprehensive list of which veggies fit into which categories.

As you can see in the photo below, I mark my piece of paper with “Sp” (for “spring”) to the right of the spring-planted veggies, and “M” (for “main” summer) to the left of the summer-planted veggies. Vegetables with both “Sp” and “M” will be in both garden plans. As I place each vegetable into the plan, I put a check mark next to it.

3. Draw two outlines of your garden plots on paper — one for spring, one for summer. For my plans, I have one piece of thick paper; on one side I have Spring, on the other side I have Summer. Be sure to also note the year somewhere on your garden plan. On both plans, draw in any perennial vegetables that have overwintered.

Graph paper isn’t necessary, unless you like to use it. I draw my plans free-hand, and just eye the scale of things. The first year that I did a formal plan, I got mathematical about it and used graph paper, with “one square = 6 inches” and all that, but in the end, I found it unnecessary to be so precise, and I haven’t used graph paper since.

Also, always work in pencil! 🙂

Draw your garden plots, and draw in any overwintering perennial vegetables.

4. Plan your summer garden first. I find it easier to plan my summer garden first, and then my spring garden. To plan my summer garden, I decide on the location of both the spring-planted carry-over vegetables as well as the summer-planted vegetables.

I begin with deciding where I’ll put my tomatoes…though in doing this, you’ll be thinking about all your vegetables — not just the tomatoes. But I like to put the tomatoes down on paper first, as this makes it easier to place other things.

I also place the tallest vegetables (tomatoes, plus anything grown on a trellis) at the north end of each of the raised beds, so that they don’t block the sun from reaching shorter veggies.

I also consider the locations of last year’s vegetables, and try not to plant the same thing in the same place the next year. It doesn’t always work out that way (for instance, this year’s cabbage will be partially in the same spot as last year), but to me, that’s okay.

I like to plan the summer garden first.

5. Plan your spring garden based on the summer garden. Now, on your spring garden plan, copy down the spring carry-over veggies that you placed in your summer plan. Then, fill in the empty spaces with all of your spring veggies that will be harvested before summer, like the lettuce, radishes, spinach, peas, etc.

I plan the spring garden based upon which veggies will be carrying over to summer.

6. Check your veggie list to be sure you’ve placed everything, and then you’re done! Now it’s time to plant your spring garden!

Click here to read about how I amend my soil each year to get ready for spring planting.

And as a side note…if you start your own seedlings inside (rather than buying from a nursery), that adds another step to the spring preparation process, but it’s not bad. I definitely prefer to grow my own seedlings! Mostly I start my summer stuff inside, like tomatoes, squash, cucumbers, and peppers, but this year I also started my cabbage inside and it’s germinating better than when I plant it directly into the garden. But other than cabbage, I plant all my spring stuff directly into the garden, without starting it inside. Anyway, I’ll share more about all that soon, too.

*UPDATE 3/5/11: The past couple years I’ve just planted cucumbers and squash seeds directly into the garden rather than starting them inside. I’m much happier with this method since it’s SO much easier and the difference in fruiting times is not appreciable enough to be worth the bother of starting them inside. So I’ll stick to starting tomatoes, peppers, and cabbage inside. I might also start my celery inside, too, since it never quite took hold when I direct-seeded last year.

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