Sunday, August 26, 2012

Luscombe Street Update - Week 18

I hadn't been out to the plot for two weeks, and as the weather has warmed up over that time, I was faced with a massive amount of new growth when I arrived!  The plot has just gone ape!

Purple sprouting broccoli everywhere, the carrots and rashes have grown about two inches, the broad beans are beginning to flower, and the spinach is going crazy!  Its so great to see that just a little bit of warmth and the plants just love it :)

I harvested so many veggies today - spinach, lettuce, coriander and radishes.  I will leave the broccoli until next weekend I think as it could do with a little bit more growth before I pick the first lot. 

Root / Fruit bed


Legume Bed


Brassica Bed


Allium Bed (see the Coriander at the bottom!)


First flowers on the Broad Beans


Purple Sprouting Broccoli!


Spinach, coriander, garlic, spring onion...


Nasturtium, radish, carrot and coriander...

Hawthorn Garden Update - Week 19

Things have slowed down again this weekend which is wonderful - it has meant I have been able to spend some quality time in the garden at home and at Luscombe Street which has been great.  The weather has been warming up over the past couple of weeks, and the garden is going leaps and bounds ahead!  Its so great to see things on the move, and growing well.

The potatoes have sprouted, and so time was spend on Saturday rolling up the sides of the containers and adding more soil over the sprouts ready for the little potatoes to do their growing!  The broccoli is also growing really well, and there are lots of little sprouts coming along on all of the plants which is great.  The beetroot and two kale plants are moving along as well, so hopefully we will be able to plant the sugar snap peas in there soon and harvest the beetroot soon after!

Many of the seeds have sprouted in the hot house as wel.  I sowed a heap of butter lettuce seeds at the same time as the other seeds I purchased from seeds2freedom and they are growing incredibly well.  The next to sprout were the sugar snap peas, and then the tomato seeds.

We went for a drive out to the Diggers Club garden in Dromana on Saturday and picked up some strawberry plants and a Stevia plant as well, that have now been planted out near the front door in a pot. 

Potatoes


Strawberries and Stevia plant out the front


Snow peas and baby spinach - we continue to pick from the spinach twice a week and it keeps on growing and growing!  An awesome crop...the snow peas have been growing, but seem to be prone to a bit of mould or something similar and are dying back in areas.  Might go for another variety next time, and provide a bigger trellice for them to grow on.


The Broccoli and Nasturtium are doing really, really well.  They're taking over a bit, but are doing so well so that's great!


Beetroot and Kale are going well as well.  Once the crop is ready to harvest we will plant the sugar snap peas and lettuces in this container.


The backyard...


Next batch of beetroot that will be planted once the broccoli are finished...


The Sugar Snap Peas, Butter Lettuce and Tomato plants have sprouted.


Beautiful head of Broccoli, almost ready to harvest.

Luscombe Street Update - Week 16-17

A quick update for Luscombe Street - it was a quick visit this fortnight.  A quick watering with seaweed solution and picking of spinach, radish and lettuce and I was off!

Allium Bed






Root / Fruit bed


Legume Bed


Brassica Bed

Hawthorn Garden Update - Week 18 Mega Mushrooms

A few pictures of three mega mushrooms that we harvested mid-August!  I forgot to check the shed for a couple of days, and these beauties had grown in that short time!  What a nice surprise and a yummy addition to dinner :)




Hawthorn Garden Update - Week 14-15

My spring and summer seeds have arrived from seeds2freedom this week!  So guess what I spent my day doing this weekend?  Planting away!

It is so exciting that its almost time to think about summer tomatoes, cucumbers and capsicum.  I can't wait.  Oh and basil too!  I ordered quite a few varieties of tomatoes to try this year.  I'm not sure how they will all go, but it will be interesting to see.

Seeds2freedom are a great online store that sell heirloom varieties of seeds from their farm in Tasmania.  You can have a look at their website here.

Listed below are the varieties that I have sown this weekend;

Basil Genovese (Ocimum Basilicum)
Sugar Snap Peas (Pisum Satiuum)
Capsicum California Wonder (Capsicum Annum)
Cucumber Lebanese (Cucummis Satiuus)
Indian River Tomato (Lycopersion Esculertum)
San Marzano Roma Tomato (Lycopersion Esculertum)
Cherry Tomato (Lycopersion Esculertum)

 Cut up milk carton to create labels


So many toilet paper rolls!


 All planted and labelled ready to go into the hot house...


Tomato seeds to be planted


 The thrifty funnel!


Seeds all sorted, planted and ready to grow.


I have tried to be as thrifty as possible with sowing seeds this season, using toliet rolls where possible, and cutting up a milk carton to make labels for them all.  A really handy gadget was an orange juice bottle that I cut up to use as a funnel to fill up the TP rolls with soil!

Luscombe Street - Week 12 - 13 Update

We continue to have a LOT of rain, which has meant that I haven't had to head out to the plot that often to make sure things are going ok.  With being so busy with other things this makes life very easy!  I headed out to the plot today and harvested a heap of veggies which was great - the spinach is going so well, along with the butter lettuces that I planted a fair while ago now.  They seem to have been a bit slow through the depths of winter, and now that the days are starting to get longer they're doing really well! 

Today's wonderful bounty! Butter lettuce, spinach and radish.


Root / Fruit Bed


Legume Bed


Brassica Bed


Allium Bed

Hawthorn Week 12 / Luscombe Street Week 11 Update

Sorry - I forgot to post photos of Hawthorn from Week 12!  Trying to catch up I'm afraid :)

This week brought on the first harvest of radish from the Luscombe Street garden!  I was incredibly excited, and just couldn't help myself.  I ate the radish straight out of the patch!  Delicious :)

We're in the depths of winter, so things are going at a bit of a slow pace, but all is going well and everything is looking very healthy.

Legume Bed


Brassica Bed


Allium Bed

Root / Fruit Bed

Radish!!!

Radish and Carrots growing along...


Butter lettuce seedlings that have sprouted


Sprouting broccoli, spinach and kale


Spinach, butter lettuce and spring onion


Garlic, spinach, spring onion and lettuce




The Hawthorn Planters - Broccoli, snow peas, nasturtium and various seedlings


The Hawthorn Planters - Beetroot

Tuesday, July 24, 2012

First Mushrooms for Dinner!

So exciting...I went out in the dark to spy on the Mushrooms last night, and my golly, they had grown out of control!  I couldn't help myself, and picked away ready to prepare them for our meal the next night!

Tonight was the night!  We had mushroom risotto with lovely steak, along with baby spinach from the garden.  There really is nothing like eating a meal grown in your own backyard :)


Swiss Brown Mushrooms, freshly picked and stored in an egg carton, covered in brown paper bags, in the fridge...would have loved to have eaten them that night but we waited until tonight to cook these gorgeous morsels up!


So fresh and yummy!

Hawthorn Garden Update - Week 13

After a few busy weeks doing all sorts of non-gardening related fun stuff, it was wonderful to have two full days to dedicate to the Hawthorn Garden this weekend just gone.  It was so action packed that I didn't have time to pop past Luscombe Street!  So it was one of the first weekends that wasn't drizzly or raining which was great - we had made stencils to put on the planter boxes about a month and half ago, so got out the black paint and stenciled away so that the paint would be dry before the rain returns early this week.  I thought it would be a great idea to have the containers numbered so that I can take note of the plants that have been in each container season by season, making managing crop rotation that much easier.  Corny I know, but we have also put C & D for Claire and Dan on the bottom of each of them - well we made them together so I thought that would be nice :)

The worm farm is going full steam ahead, so much so that it has reached the time that a new tray be put on top of the initial tray ready for the worms to be transferred and the first lot of worm castings harvested.  You can see below how much matter the worms have worked their way through since setting them up a couple of months ago.  I'll leave them there for about two weeks to move on up into the new tray before taking the old one away to use.

We relocated the containers on the weekend into what will be known as the 'Spring' configuration - all containers lined up in a row on the eastern boundary, so that they receive the most amount of north and western sun during the season.  I love how they all look stacked up in a row, and it means that we have more space to use during the warmer part of the year.

All of the veggies in the containers are doing really well.  We continue to pick from the baby spinach a couple of times each week for evening meals, and the snow peas are blooming away.  Whilst we haven't picked any peas yet, we're almost there, and hope that they will continue to provide yummy peas through Spring.

The mushrooms have also just gone crazy over the past week - we're just about to harvest a whole heap of Swiss Browns!  Honestly, you see a little shroom coming up through the ground and within 3-5 days its big enough to eat.  Just amazing!  The broccoli continues to flower and has been bothered by a few aphids here and there, but nothing too crazy.  I have just blasted them off with a hose whenever I have seen them munching away on the yummy new flower growth.

The beetroot is growing really steadily, and will be ready to harvest in the coming few weeks which is great because the next batch of seedlings have been taken out of the hot house and are hardening up ready to be planted in two or three weeks time.  The garlic is also going great guns!

We also spent some time finishing off the three herb pots, made from scraps of the timber we used for the containers, that can be moved from container to container when required as companion plants.  It was really important that they could be moved, should the plants need them, throughout the year.  So we have a pot with mint, a pot with sage and another with lemon thyme.  Useful as companion plants, and for additional herbs for cooking!  We might look at making a couple more during the year depending on the types of good and bad pests we begin to attract to the garden.

So all going very well in the Hawthorn Garden.  Its great to be at a point now where we're harvesting what we're growing, and being so proud of the work that has gone into the garden over the past couple of months.


Mushroom!


Lots of Mushrooms!


New tray placed on top of the inital worm farm


Worms eating away the last of the scraps in the lower tray


Beautiful containers all lined up in a row :)


 Looking back the other way toward the new Potato bags!

 
Beetroot are kicking on - this also shows the stencilling on each container


Beetroot!



Broccoli is flowering!  Have had to flick off the odd aphid but they are doing pretty well.




We finished off the small herb planters - companion planting boxes that hang from the containers via hooks and can be moved when necessary

 
Garlic and prostrate rosemary
 

 Baby spinach continues to thrive.  We pick and eat from this container once or twice a week.


Potatoes!  Bags were bought at Bunnings after a sad failed attempt to obtain recycled hessian bags from local fruit and veg shops.  Apparently they aren't receiving veggies in hessian bags anymore???  At least we can use these from year to year, and they have a little peek-a-boo flap on the bottom for early harvesting!


The next batch of Beetroot are on their way.  Parsley is still growing away, and the random seeldings (not sure if Fennel or Warrigal Greens!) are growing away as well.


Pumpkin seeds have been sown ready for planting mid Spring


And I almost forgot....we have potatoes growing in the backyard now too!  After heading down to our local green grocer, I realised that not many producers are using hessian bags anymore to store their vegetables...which baffled me!  I would have loved to have reused something to grow the potatoes in, but I eventually gave up and went down to Bunnings to buy a couple of specially made potato growing bags for the 6 'seed' potatoes that had sprouted in the bottom of the cupboard.  Yes, I think people recommend that you buy seed potatoes to grow at home, but these were ones that I had bought from CERES, that were grown at their market garden organically, so I thought would be fine to use for growing at home.  The bags actually have a little peek-a-boo hole at the bottom of them so that during the season, whilst you are piling up the compost in the bags as the sprouts grow, you can harvest new potatoes from the bottom of the bag.  Pretty neat!  They seem so easy to grow, so it will be interesting to see how they go :)

Oh, and the first of the Spring / Summer seed planting has begun with pumpkin seeds that I had saved earlier in the year from a CERES pumpkin going into the hothouse this weekend :)  Exciting times!  I can't wait for Spring to come along!