Showing posts with label spring blossoms. Show all posts
Showing posts with label spring blossoms. Show all posts

Monday, 10 November 2014

Springing into the Garden

It is officially Spring, and the weather is the usual mixed bag of yuck and promising.  Nothing is certain and you are thrown into the whirlpool of hope and delight, tinged with gloom and despair!  It is 6 November, and we have a fire blazing to feel a temporary blissful heat!  

But, on those days when the wind and rain are not-too distant memories, and the sun wins the battle to outshine the chill in the air, I venture out with a clipboard of To Do lists!  First up: declare war on all the weeds that took over while we were sunning ourselves in Bali, and on those pesky overwintering slugs and snails that decimate whole beds of newly planted spring seedlings (I use Quash, an eco-friendly option which kills the slime-footed blighters but leaves birds and hedgehogs to see another day).

An oxy-moron; frozen chilli!
In the Kitchen:
Rustling in the back of the freezer, I found a few bags of frozen chillies which needed sorting - they are actually great to freeze, freshly harvested, then frozen, whole!  They freeze well and when one has to process them, they are easy to handle, and the chilli juice not as fearsome as when handling fresh chillies.  Each year I make 2-3 bottles of Sweet Thai Chilli Sauce - easy-peasy!  I often don't have time at the end of Summer, as harvesting becomes a semi-full-time job.  A big freezer is just what a gardener-cook needs, to stave off those processing jobs till the need arises, or time is plentiful.

Frozen chillies blend well. I now have Sweet Thai Chilli sauce for summer supply.
We chopped down a sorry-looking bunch of winter-frosted and blackened bananas which had ripened.  They are not the best for eating, but I have made endless blueberry/banana smoothies for breakfast with them, as well as inventing a new banana jam recipe below:


Banana jam
One morning, I whizzed about 6 small bananas with 2 tablespoons almond butter and a large teaspoon honey, with a shake or two of cinnamon.  Spread on toast, and sprinkled with sesame seeds, it was SOOO yum!!  Tastes far better than it looks!

'Tis the season of Citrus.  Wonderful Signature Food for female breasts!  I am collecting red and yellow grapefruit, oranges, vaniglias and mandarins by the basket-full!  Or Pouch-full!  I tend to make blends of different citrus orbs into a wonderful juice most mornings.  A great immune boosting dose of fresh Vitamin C.

Citrus collecting pouch
Wonderful grapefruit
Grapefruit, orange, vaniglia juice blend.


Making Citrus Cleaner with citrus skins
Easy Cleaning Spray and Wipe Recipe:
Fill a glass jar with 1L white vinegar.  Add the skins of citrus; grapefruit, lemon, mandarin, orange etc.  Allow to steep for 3-4 days.  Pour mixture into spray bottle and use as a general spray and wipe (not to be used on brushed stainless steel surfaces).  Does not smell of vinegar but rather a pleasant citrus undertone.  And flies don't like it, so don't tend to land where you have recently sprayed!
The Garden in Spring
The cat that loves the garden
Garden Harvest
We are picking swedes, citrus, spring onions, cauli, celery, artichokes, peas, silverbeet, lettuce etc.

There are definite signs of Spring, even though I find I am still wearing my merino thermals!  Blossoms everywhere and that rush of growth on everything green!  I have planted my seeds: tomatoes, zucchini, eggplants, beans, flowers, chillies, corn, herbs and lettuces.  Many have come up and grown into healthy little seedlings, still awaiting others' slower emergence, but it never ceases to thrill me when I see them push up through the soil.  I am trialling a home-made compost mix to raise the seeds in, covered with a fine blanket of seedling mix (store-bought).  That way, I have to buy far less store-bought stuff, and although I have the odd 3-4 weeds come through in each tray, a quick cull restores order.

Store-bought seeds have a Best Before date, which I take roughly  not terribly much notice of.  If the date is older than a year or two, I simply sow more seeds than normal, allowing for seed failure rate.  It does happen, rarely, that nothing comes up, but I would rather try than throw away perfectly good seed!
Garlic crop growing nicely

Peas and salad garden

Green leafy veg bed

Always in the garden, never far away from the gardeners!  Garden-loving Shanti.

Claw-sharpening exercise, usually done in frenzied style!
The blossoms have long since blown away on my plums, nectarine and macadamia (we have had very fierce Bay of Plenty (wind??) winds, so hopefully, the bees have managed to sneak in the odd pollination miracle!  The blossoms were very breath-takingly beautiful while they lasted!  At the moment, there are still blossoms on the apple and pear trees.
Bee Balm Blossoms

Blossoms, like ladies in their finest gossamer-silk frocks.....

He loves me, he loves me not, he loves me..........

Nothing in Nature lasts forever, floral beauty undergoes a metamorphic change to swollen edible delights!

Spring:  A sign that Hope Blossoms!

All the bees need, is a little love, understanding, and blossoms.  Plenty of all that stuff.

How delightful for the waiting blossom; the sweet anticipation of bee-tickles!

Oh, my Honey, if you were a Bee, and I were a Blossom, you'd drive me crazy with anticipation!

Artichoke and blue Jewel-bug

Masses of Bee Fodder

Busting out with Colour

So, as I stoke the fire tonight, and plan my garden activities for that sunshiney day (whenever that may be), I languish in the anticipation of long, warm, sunny days to come................. Bring It On!!



Tuesday, 22 October 2013

Reflections


Reflections of the garden in the shed window
What's happening in the garden mid-October?  Quite a lot, actually!  I have been harvesting heaps of silver beet to make smooth-pureed pasta sauces before they have to be uprooted for my tomato plantings.  Lots of parsley, and artichokes starting to flower and feed us wonderful exotic French fare!!  I have learnt how to handle these buggers after several impalings on the nasty little prickles of the leaf edges.  Now I carefully cut them, holding the bottom, then cut the sharp little prickles off the leaf edges with secateurs.   Place them in a big pot, add a little water and boil them for about 20 minutes.  Serve with a couple of bowls with olive oil, chopped garlic, lemon juice and soy sauce.  Delissimo!



Sharp little spikes that bite!


Shhhhhh, the beans and peas do sleep
A makeshift tent to keep the frosts off - just removed it yesterday and they
are doing fine.


The last of the last season's green leafy crop soon to make way
 for tomatoes.
Since this photo was taken, I have set up a trellis for cucumbers and stuck several thick bamboo stakes in the ground for tomatoes.  I have planted 6 Roma (acid-free) tomatoes - good for cooking and for sauces as there is very little seeds and pulp.  In the other "fruiting" bed, there are 6 Yellow Pear tomatoes - a small droopy sweet fruit, suitable for salads and snacks.  I have a few trays of other small tomato seedlings - brandywine (old heritage variety that grow large and convoluted at the top) and moneymaker.  Tomato plants excite me in every way! They have such amazingly resilient seeds that can stay in the compost till conditions are viable for them to grow - a whole year later!  I usually plant about 24 plants - twice that amount seem to pop up everywhere in the garden!  And they can produce sooo much fruit - I often am able to freeze half the produce for "the cold times".  I have just learned another tip; to plant the seedlings deeper at transplant time, right up past the hairy stem which makes aerial roots and helps anchor the plant.  Here are some tips I have learnt over the years, to produce the best crop.

GreeNZ Best Tomato Tips:
1.  Set up stakes before planting, this way you don't damage root systems
2.  Sink a little plastic pot next to your seedling tomato - you can use this for feeding and    watering the plant -   it all goes down to the root system rather than running off on the surface.
3.  When transplanting seedlings, plant them deep enough to cover the hairy stem.
4.  Remove lower leaves - the first couple, when planting into the ground.
5.  Pinch out laterals (that's the little stems which grow out between the main stem and side  leaves) so that energy can go into the fruiting offshoots.
6.  When tomatoes reach the top of your support, pinch out the top or else the plant becomes top-heavy and pulls the entire plant over!
7.  When fruiting, feed your hungry little tomato plants every 2 weeks ( I alternate between sheep  poos and  worm wees or comphrey tea).
8.  Watch for hungry birds - they love to snack on the lower sets of fruit!  I net these with re-used  onion net bags.
9.  Don't water the plant - try to water into the little immersed plastic pot or immediately onto the  soil to prevent fungal diseases.  Or gentle water pressure to water the ground around it.
10.  Mulch around the plants to conserve moisture - compost or straw or even vacuum-cleaner   collections of hair and dust!

Did you know?  Tomatoes are the signature food for a healthy heart?  Anyone with heart disease or complaints should learn to cultivate these little treasures and make tomatoes a regular part of their dietary intake.


New season's green leafy crops: kale, broccoli, cabbage, caulis, chicory and
leeks interspersed with chamomile
I have remembered to feed my brassicas this year (broccs, cabbs and caulis) - and have harvested some whoppers!  Caulis weigh about 1.5kg while the cabbages weigh nearly 2kg!  Wow - shows you what a little worm wees and sheep poos can do!  The cauli was put to a sensational soup - gourmet!  Garlic, onion, a sweet potato, veg stock cube and salt it's only additions.

Second green leafy crop bed with salad greens: coriander, mizuna, lettuces,
cauli, silver beet and cabbages

Our salad bed is rampant, I think I've overdone them and could probably feed 3-4 families with these guys - they are now wall-to-wall salad stuff and we can't make enough salads to get through them quick enough.  I am still supplying a local coffee shop with parsley, in exchange for their coffee grounds but that soon should run out.  Must sow more parsley seed! 


Lettuce

I like to grow the leaf variety lettuces, rather than the "head" variety, which require picking in one fell swoop.  The leaf variety allows you to pick a selection of different lettuces for a salad - red, green, freckled, frilly or 2-toned, like this one above.  Rocket and Mizuna add another dimension, with a slightly peppery taste.  A wee smidgeon of herbs like parsley, coriander or mint, so as not to overpower the salad, and then the tit-bits to brighten it up - calendula, borage or nasturtium flowers, capsicum, cucumber, tomato (sun-dried in winter, or fresh in summer) and sprouts of the day (either mung bean or alfalfa).  



Rocket
Coriander
Mizuna
As I was working in the garden this weekend, an idea came to me: Mike and I have been working hard at building a business - a greengrocer's.  In years to come, as our children head off to live lives of their own (as our son has already done), they can always return weekly for a few bags of fruit and vegetables.  We will always have more than we can utilise, so this will become their living edible inheritance.  And as they currently share not in the joys of gardening or learning from us the skills of survival, perhaps one day I will print off my blog and bind it in book form to gift to them.  Hopefully there will come a time when they will want to learn about sustaining themselves with real-live nourishment from garden to table.  Well, that's the hope.........
I never did quite resonate with the saying: "Give a boy a fish and you feed him for a day. Teach him how to fish and you feed him for life."  My version goes something like:  "Give a kid a carrot and he nibbles on a snack.  Show him how to sow carrot seeds and he'll learn how to make carrot soup, carrot stew, carrot juice and carrot cake!"
Planting seeds of hope.......
Leeks, parsley and kale
I have set out a small batch of Maori potatoes in a pot.  Mind the spelling error on my sign - that should read Urineka! These are delectable eye candy on the plate - bright purple flesh.  Purple foods are high in anthocyanins - and protect us against cancers and neurological damage like Alzheimers.   Makes awesome mashed potato!  To buy the seed potatoes, click on the link above.
Urenika potatoes


Bright splashes of Spring Cheer
During my holiday break, I added handles to my Wonder Cooker Box.  Makes life easier to pull it out of the shelf!  The wooden box is lined with 2 pillows of polystyrene balls - bring a pot of rice or soup to the boil, pop it into the Wonder Cooker - off you go and 20 minutes later, it's cooked.  No boiling over or burning!  You can safely leave it 3-4 hours and it will still be hot enough to eat.  Eco-cooking at it's best!  No cleaning up spill-over messes, burnt pots or using heaps of energy to cook.  And this technology is easy enough to make!!
Wonder Cooker with handles!


Lime flowers
The smell of citrus blossoms hangs in the air, as one walks through our little "Garden of Eatin".  I am sure it is an aphrodisiac to humans and bees!  I want to fill my lungs with the stuff - can't get enough!  What a sight I must be - a little demented hyperventilation freak gulping in the scented air as I walk around with a ditzy smile on my face!
Strelitzia or Bird of Paradise flower
My strelitzias are doing so well this year.  They sulked for 2 years after being transplanted but now they have established themselves nicely and are flowering conveniently enough to allow me to pick one or two each week.  They last a week or two in a vase.  They amaze you with their regenerating tufts - as one dies off, another emerges - up to 3 times. A reminder of my African roots.


Strawberry blossoms mean one thing..............fresh berries for Christmas!