Sunday, February 14, 2021

Mid February Update

My to do list says that February 15th is time to plant some of last month's brassica starts into the garden. I put one out there (under a dome) a couple of days ago. We'll see if it survives.

I don't think I'll be able to plant things into the garden this weekend. 

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
The other thing on the list for this weekend was to start tomatoes and sweet peppers.This is a little early, but I want really strong starts come early May, when it's time for them to go into the garden. And I'll probably give a few away, too.
 
These are on a heating pad, under a dome, inside the greenhouse. I'm looking forward to these, too.  

Choices this year: 

Slicing Tomatoes:
• Brandywine for flavor, even though they're low producers. Indeterminate.
• Cherokee Purple, also for flavor. We'll see how they produce. Also indeterminate. 
• Delicious. I hope they live up to their name. Indeterminate heavy producers.
• Legend: Determinate. For in the greenhouse, where indeterminate gets out of control pretty quickly.

Cooking Tomatoes
• San Marzano. Is there any reason to try anything else? Indeterminate, heavy producers. 

Cherry Tomatoes
• Chocolate Cherry, because it's yummy. 
• Unlabeled red cherry tomatoes from previous years. 

(I'm planning to restrict cherry tomatoes to pots this year, particularly hanging pots.)

Sweet Peppers
• Poblano. I've never grown these before. Looking forward to it. 
• Big Jim. For roasting on the grille. 
• California Wonder: just your basic bell pepper. 
• Big Ol' Bell. Not sure what this is; seeds from online somewhere.



Monday, February 1, 2021

February Tomatoes

I'm still getting cherry tomatoes from a 2020 plant. They're pretty good especially for fresh tomatoes in February. 
My goal is to have tomatoes from a 2021 plant before the 2020 plant is done. 
 
This is my leading candidate. I don't know what variety this is, since it's a weed; I suspect that it's a cherry tomato of some sort. 

Saturday, January 30, 2021

The End of January

 Mid-January, I ran into a fellow who explained that he was going to start his brassicas mid-January, and put them out into his garden mid-February under protective cover. 

That sounded like a good idea, so I joined him. All the brassicas I could think of, and a fair bit of lettuce as well. Some of it is pretty small. Some of the starts How are a couple of inches. 

Clearly not ready to go out quite yet.

This is going to be interesting. If I'm not careful, I might actually learn something new!

Last weekend, I let one seedling bad to get a little dry, and all of my Scotch Bonnets got dried out in wimpy. So I watered them, of course. 

Then I plant a bunch more. By that time all the wimpy ones had turned around, We're going to have a good harvest.

This weekend, I realized I had no red habanero peppers. So I harvested one of the last ripe red Habaneros, took the seeds out of it, and planted them. 

I've got a dozen red Habaneros coming, if it all goes well.

I also picked up some poblano pepper seeds this weekend and planted a dozen poblano peppers. (Poblanos are called ancho peppers when they're dried.)

I've been looking for something that is not as spicy as some of the peppers, something that I can cook with, that I can grill with. This looks like it might be that answer.

Saturday, January 16, 2021

Winter Mulch

Neighborhood cut down a tree, and was chipping up the branches. I decided it was the right time to mulch the garden.

Last year's mulch had mostly composted except the top inch. 

The front two beds needed more depth. I scraped off the top inch of chips, added an inch of fresh compost and another inch of well-mulched chips before adding a couple of inches of fresh chips on top.

All other beds got a topping of fresh chips over their existing chips; between 1" and 3" depending on the bed. 

It's going to be interesting to see how seeds and plants do in this environment.

Sunday, January 10, 2021

Peppers Update

Middle of January. Hot peppers are doing pretty well. Ghost is very successful. Lemon drop is very successful. Have a few Scotch bonnets a few Jamaican scorpions. Got a fair number of miscellaneous Chiles for sharing; should not be quite so hot. Average size, between 1 inch and 3 inches.
Also pruned back last year's potted peppers.

Wednesday, December 23, 2020

Christmas 2020 Planting

On December 23rd, I planted more.

- purchased Ghost pepper seeds. 
 
- purchased Jamaican Red Hot seeds. [A little research suggests that these are actually a red Scotch Bonnet.]
 
- purchased yellow Scotch Bonnet. [I've recently learned that these are twice as hot as habaneros. Half the heat of Ghost.]
 
- Ed Hume chili variety pack. ["Included, depending on availability, are cayenne, Hungarian wax, serrano, habenero, hot cherry, and other hot chile types."] I'm thankful for more moderate heat in the pepper mix. 
 
- also started some spinach and lettuce, and some flowers for in the greenhouse.



Sunday, December 6, 2020

December 2010: the 2021 Garden Begins

First week of December, planted some peppers.
- Ghost peppers from seeds left over from dehydrating.
 
- Lemon Drop from dehydrator seeds 
 
- Purple Serrano from fresh peppers 
 
- Ghost peppers from very fresh peppers 
 
- Fresno peppers (jalapeƱo variety) from seeds I'd saved. 
 
- Habanero from seeds I'd saved 

Fresh Ghost pepper seeds sprouted immediately. 
 
Fresh Serrano and saved Fresno also sprouted quickly.