Wednesday, October 28, 2009

Sandhills & geese amidst impending storm

The sandhill cranes and Canada geese have been gathering the past few weeks in the cut barley field west of our house. I like pretending they're gearing up for a mass liftoff in advance of tomorrow & Thursday's coming storm. The storm's initial clouds and darkness are hovering above the mountains in the image.
Lots of sandhill cranes have been circling overhead on a daily basis and can be seen & heard frequently. I'd guess they'd be heading south soon; maybe this storm will push them a little more.

We put bird feeders out two weeks ago and have been attracting the usual feathered critters - gold finches, sparrows, red-headed blackbirds. The squirrels are back too now, since they have food to try to obtain. Mountain chickadees are coming to the suet as well.

Sunday, October 25, 2009

Not so fast with the brusselsprouts.....

I'm still able to squeeze a few more brusselsprouts out of my plants - picked probably about a pound or so today. I think the slight purple hue that some of the little sprouts have is due to the frosty temperatures we've had some nights.

We got a great moisture-filled snowfall & rain storm a few days ago - over 1.25" of moisture sank into the dry-as-bone ground. All of the snow still hasn't melted.

Leaves are now off the trees; they were helped by the wet snow. I've raked up most of them & stored them in my several leaf bins, ready to be used for the next compost session!

One winter or late fall task is to move three of my raised beds in the vegetable garden away from the 6'-high-tall privacy fence that separates my garden from the neighbor to the south. The fence keeps those three raised beds snow covered and full of cold or frozen soil into late April & early May, which is too late when I could be planting seeds/lings in them. Moving them means I'll have to rearrange my drip irrigation tubing that spends the summer out in the garden.

Tuesday, October 20, 2009

Onions

Finally harvested all of the remaining onions, carrots, and brusselsprouts. I ended up with about three milk crates (size to the left) full of Walla Walla onions. Some were as big as an infants' head. I learned after the fact that Walla Wallas are not good storage onions, so have given some away, may dry a bunch, and will try to use the rest.
My carrots taste great - just the way carrots should taste. Their appearance may be a bit off-putting (little spurs jutting out, pimples, more) but their flavor is such genuine CARROT.
For next year I'll have to rethink growing brusselsprouts - cabbageworms are such a pain, and it's essential to keep after them continuously to avoid holes and little worms burrowed into the sprouts. They don't seem quite as drawn to cabbages, so maybe I'll just grow a few of those next summer and give b-sprouts a rest for a year.
I ordered a shipment of planting garlic that should be arriving soon; ordered more than last year. This year's garlic turned out very well, just not enough.
I suspect I will change what I plant next year quite a bit. I also need to move all of my raised beds away from the 6'-tall privacy fence that shades them from the south; the soil in those beds stays cold too long, because it's out of the sun into the growing season. Should have thought of that when I set them up......

Thursday, October 8, 2009

Harvest & storage of carrots

Last year I dug a shallow hole out in the dirt sunroom floor in which to store some carrots. It bore no resemblance to a root cellar, though that was what I was striving for. What a joke. This year I'm trying something else. My Organic Gardening Encyclopedia (Rodale Press) recommends storing carrots in bins or boxes, and layering them in peat moss, then covering with straw. So I'm trying that. I haven't harvested all my carrots & onions yet, but the carrots I've dug up so far are going in the bin. Then I'll either store it in the cold spare room inside the house, or keep it out in the garage. As for the onions - since I opted to grow Walla Wallas, and they're not a great storing variety, I've been giving some away. The additional 20-30 I have I'll try to use up, or will chop them up and dehydrate.

I haven't come across the monarch chrysalises yet; I assume they've gone to that stage since the caterpillars disappeared a few weeks ago. Guess they could have been munched by a bird.

I was getting intermittent raspberries through last weekend, but no more.