Bed No. 1
The favas are SO HAPPY! It's hard to tell from this perspective but when I walk down the path the tops are as tall as I am.
And there's lots of flowers and beans. This was the first plant to set beans. Most of the rest of the plants have smaller beans.
The Royal Snow purple podded snow peas are close to producing pods big enough to harvest.
Royal Snow Peas |
The Golden Sweet snow peas were more quick to produce and I already started to harvest them this week. I sowed the Golden Sweets on January 23 and the Royal Snow on January 30 so both of them would probably have been ready to harvest at about the same time if I had sown them at the same time. Good to know for future plantings.
Bed No. 2
The Good News/Bad News Bed.
Let's get the bad news out of the way.
I thought that the 2-foot fence of hardware cloth surrounding the bed was keeping the Damn Rodents out of the bed but I guess they figured out how to climb in. I went out to the garden one morning and found that they had snacked on the cabbage plants that I had just a few days earlier freed from their cloches. The snacking stopped when I added a 2-foot cylinder of hardware cloth around each plant.
Filderkraut Cabbage |
Trimmed Yellow Cabbage Collard |
Not One Snap |
Once Upon A Time Broccoli |
Still Standing Broccoli with Chile Dust |
Still Standing Cabbage with Chile Dust |
They Syrian Medieval Chard is bolting! Yes, that's good news because I want to save seeds for this very rare variety.
Syrian Medieval Chard |
Orion Fennel and Italian Scallions |
Sweetheart, Golden, and Badger Flame Beets |
The AFTER shot. Radishes are gone, arugula is harvested, and Tennis Ball butterhead lettuce seedlings are set out.
Salads waiting to happen.
Queen of Crunch and Tennis Ball Lettuces |
Pai Tsai Chinese Cabbage Baby Shanghai Pac Choi Purple Pac Choi |
Another happy to see bolter. Cilician parsley is my favorite variety of parsley these days. It's a rarity and the seeds are not easy to find so I like to save my own. I also like to sow the seeds with abandon. I've found that it's a happy companion to broccoli so I scatter the seeds around the broccoli plants and I can, or could, harvest both of them for months. My stash of seeds is dwindling and aging so it's time to renew.
I'm testing the early limit of when to plant Tromba D'Albenga squash. Last year I set the plants out on May 15 and the plants absolutely thrived so this year I'm experimenting with an even earlier start date. Last year I discovered how tasty the tender young vine shoots are and my harvest records tell me that I didn't take the vines out of the garden until December 19 or shortly thereafter because I recorded a harvest of 11.4 ounces of vine shoots on that date. My plan this year is to keep these rampant vines in check by regularly harvesting the vine shoots.
I started the plants in quart pots indoors to get them off to a quick start. Now they are under the protection of cloches to keep them cozy through our chilly nights (down to the low 40ºF's regularly) and to keep them from being snacked on by birds or rodents.
Tromba D'Albenga Baby |
Potato Pot Holes |
Bed No. 4
I took no photos because nothing has really changed other than that the Frieda Worlds snow pea plants are declining because of powder mildew. I really can't expect too much more from a planting of peas that I sowed back on November 7 last year! Those plants have produced 8 pounds of peas, thank you very much.
And my parting shot is of the I'itoi onions that I'm growing in fabric pots. The pots don't seem to have been the best choice or I just need to be more diligent about watering because I think the pots dry out too quickly for the onions' liking. I'm trying to water regularly now especially since the rains seem to have taken a break for the foreseeable future so I'll see if they green up with some TLC.
I'itoi Onions |
Good morning, your favas look fabulous. I just earlier today pulled mine out. No blossoms. I think the heat spell got them.
ReplyDeleteI tried fabric pots for the first time this year. Big mistake. Can't keep them watered. I put runner beans in them. The water just runs out the sides and they dry out so quickly. What was I thinking? Glad to know someone else has that problem as well.
The favas are a treat to behold. They do not do well in heat which is why they do so well here.
ReplyDeleteThe fabric pots are good for some things and not so good for others. My strawberry plants didn't seem to mind, they constantly bloomed and set berries for the DR's. Potatoes did ok in them too although I grew them in a fairly shady spot so they didn't dry out so easily. So it might be worth experimenting with them since you have them. Runner beans have pretty extensive and fleshy roots so I'm not surprised that they weren't happy.
Your snow peas and fava beans look incredible and it seems like you're getting a lot of planting done. It'll probably be a few weeks for us before the ground dries up enough to plant.
ReplyDeleteThe Royal Snow peas are truly stunning! I hope the hot pepper treatment works against the DRs . I know it keeps the squirrels and raccoons away from our bird seed and suet.
ReplyDeleteI need to remember your tip about eating the Tromba vine shoots. And to prune them too. I'm planning to grow mine on a remesh trellis this year and I know they will quickly overrun it if I let them go.
That's an interesting way of planting potatoes. Our brassicas need protecting from the moment they are planted. In our case the problem is wood pigeons. They sit on the wires watching us, just willing us to forget the nets.
ReplyDelete