Saturday, July 31, 2010

Very happy being out

Like last year at this time, we are enjoying the start of eating a lot from the garden. This week we've been eating lots.

Starting:
  • sugar snap peas, regular peas
  • yellow beans
  • kohlrabi
  • yellow zucchini
  • baby carrots
  • apples
  • cherry tomatoes (from upside down yellow pear tomato)
Eating  in full swing:
  • strawberries
  • raspberries
  • rocket, lettuce and spinach
  • cucumber
  • small peppers like chili and mini bell
  • edible flowers (like nasturtium)
  • red currants
  • basil, dill, oregano, chives, rosemary, sage, and mint
This last week we have finally started to have some serious sun, and thing are growing very quickly. Mike and I continue to pull up grass in the front yard in prep for pumpkins and zucchini up there next year, and I have been loving my clothesline. However, the biggest deal is the living space.

I love to be outside. Swimming at the river, camping, canoeing etc. are my favorite activities next to gardening. In the summer my yard is my living and dining room, and I go there to rest and relax.

This summer the girls are doing a lot of the yard work. Leora hand waters from the rain barrel and prunes. Anwyn does the mowing. Both of them help me with picking. Their work gives me more time to relax and play in the yard.  Now that the rain is less, I am out all the more. My only sad bit is that we still can't get three dry days together and Mike and I really want to get the metal roof on the house.  I also want to re-paint the deck as it bubbled where it was rained on when the paint was wet last year. We have managed to do some smaller projects. Mike, Brad and Anwyn trimmed a tree, and I have been doing lots of picking and freezing (24 cups of raspberries a few days ago).

The girls finished swimming lessons yesterday and we celebrated with a short trip to the river. I also hope to get in an overnight camping trip next week before Teela and family come to visit on Thursday. Jodi and Brad are here until Friday, so there will be no roofing anytime soon (we are still missing the supplies yet anyway).

Friday, July 23, 2010

Eating well

This week has been the beginning of starting to eat well out of the garden. In the summer months, it reduces our grocery bills between a third and a half, but the big deal is fresh and organic. This week we are finally eating both.

Yesterday we ate the remains of Thai salad and Saskatoonberry cheesecake we made when Anna and Ian were over, and started doing some serious cooking with the fruits of our labour today.  Anna came berry picking with us at a U-pick, so I added substantially to the wild Saskatoons we have been getting from the river bank and the bushes in our park. As a result, our family got the following done:

  • Leora made Saskatoon/Rhubarb muffins using a jar of Mike's homemade yogurt
  • Anwyn made Zuchinni/Saskatoon loaf (using last 2 cups we had of the 2009 freezing)
  • Mike made 11 cups of raspberry sauce, which we freeze and mix into yogurt or serve on pancakes.  We need a pressure caner before we'll be able to can it, as it doesn't have enough sugar. He also made a red current reduction out of the berries on our bush by the deck.
  • I made tabouli, a Bulgar-based (wheat berry) salad that uses our fresh cucumber and one and a half cups of fresh parsley. It also uses a half cup of fresh mint, and I added Saskatoons to that, too. It is delicious and inexpensive at this time of year.
We have also started to freeze down supplies for next year. I have frozen 52 cup worth of Saskatoons, which will likely mean we run out of them in May. So far I only have 32 cups of rhubarb, and I will keep freezing it in 8 cup increments into the fall.

Because we try to use a square foot gardening method, I rarely freeze a lot of vegetables anymore. Instead I get a bit of a variety of things all the time. This year, the constant rains will likely impact that and clump things together more, as little happened to the group in the first six weeks I was planting, and a number of the things that I pre-started died.  Having said that, we are currently eating:

  • strawberries (a handful a day)
  • our last cherries 
  • the last Saskatoons from our yard
  • sugar snap peas
  • all our herbs (mint, parsley, basil, oregano, sage, dill)
  • spinach
  • rocket
  • romaine lettuce
  • chard
  • cucumbers (which have done horribly the last several years, died twice this year and are now spectacular)
We cleaned out the freezer today and compared it to what is left in our cold storage. This week we ran out of our salsa and we'll run out of canned tomatoes soon. We've finished our Saskatoons, Strawberries and rhubarb much earlier. We still have about 6 cups of apples, but it is an off year for our tree and our neighbor's tree, so we won't freeze much. 

I always have some much fun seeing the yard grow and change each day (view this week in pictures). This is my favorite bloom time for the yard, as it has all of the lilies in bloom. I pick flowers for myself every few days and have them in the living room, kitchen and bathroom. I love to share plants with others and give away extra things growing in the garden (Anna and James are always great for looking at everything and taking food home). I am sure I could be a great Eastern-European grandma if only I had the pedigree. . .

Mike and I are also enjoying working on projects in the house and yard. Mike finished the piano bench he made from the wood of an old desk, and we've been covering the compost with a tarp so it is dry enough to sift.  We've have ordered the stuff for the roof but are waiting until there are a few days with no change of rain (our deck bubbled last year because it rained 4 hours after we painted it).

Friday, July 16, 2010

At Home in my Garden

After 3 weeks of being in Denver, Ottawa and Waterloo, I was worried I would miss a whole bunch of things happening in the yard. However, the near constant rain means that little happened while I was gone. I missed the peonies and the giant bell flower, and my greens all went to seed with no one cutting them. My pea shoots also turned into peas.  Other than that, I haven't missed that much.

We spent our first afternoon back weeding and mowing. The next day we cleaned house and trimmed clematis, edged the yard and did some transplanting. Now that it is all done, I have been able to get into the yard and really enjoy it. Check out the beautiful pictures of the things currently blooming.

New pink lily
Currently Blooming
  • yellow lily
  • orange lily
  • red lily
  • pink lily
  • orange day lily
  • mini bell flower
  • pinks
  • veronica
  • 6 types of ground cover
  • tea roses
  • spirea
  • theromborgia vine
  • sweat peas
  • morning glory
  • potatoes
  • tomatoes
  • cucumbers
Currently eating
  • all herbs (I am drying and freezing lots now)
  • rocket, spinach, romaine
  • saskatoons
  • strawberries
  • green onion
  • cherries
  • rhubarb
  • chili peppers
While I was at my parents and Greta and Gus', I ate lots of peas, carrots, kohlrabi, raspberries, and fresh blueberries. Today Mike and I went to pick Saskatoons with the girls and I froze some and made crisp.  Now that I am eating lots of fresh things and playing in the yard, I finally feel like it is summer. My flowers are similar to last year, it is mostly my veggies that are late. But I am out in my yard, processing and eating things, so I feel great!