Showing posts with label garden. Show all posts
Showing posts with label garden. Show all posts

Tuesday, June 22, 2010

Garden Tour June 2010

The chickens are not quite 4 months but are gorgeous dinosaur creatures who slowly tear up any vegetation we offer and who we love to feed. We'll get back to them later, but this is a long post sharing the new passion Cara and I share - raising food on our little urban homestead.

Cara has always had a lovely flower garden and grows wonderful herbs as well as lots of the flowers we dry for hand-laid paper notecards.

The last few years she has been sharing more of her space for tomatoes, peppers and tomatillos. We enlarged it a little last year and grew a few cucumbers as well.

This fall we tried a fall planting and it worked out very well. Cara's rhubarb is the large leaves at the far left. Behind the red brick on that side are broccoli, Savoy cabbage, and kale.

This year I made a major addition and planned some significant food plantings. We are working hard and having a ball - and it all ties in so well with the chickens!

April garden

May Garden
The rhubarb in its new home on the left, beans on right.

The tomatillo structure with bird bells.

Broccoli and squash, Swiss chard at very front. Cara is trying some sorrel and also Calendula, which has an edible flower. We love growing greens and have harvested a bunch of spinach and lettuce all through the winter, growing under glass on the deck.

The tomato jungle in sunlight, with oregano and sage in front left.

So now in June we have this fantastic array of beautiful and edible plants! How do we do it? COMPOST! Compost and seedlings is how we do it economically. Below is our seedling area - Dori's old basketball court.

We also have a chicken garden for sunflowers, mint and fennel .

Chicken sunflowers behind letterpress shop (and chicken run).

We compost every scrap, I collect leaf bags, and now we have chicken manure to work with! I can't wait for next season - and with all our container gardening, new plastic shelters, and deck gardening, all seasons are good.

We are starting to get a little serious about urban agriculture - we are trying to get seeds from the beautiful onion seed head below.

Below are our leek seedlings, which just went into giant deck pots and look great.
With our partial shade, I have to go vertical where I can. Thus, I love those upside down tomato bags. They are tricky to start - more on these another time
The Malabar spinach on our deck is the perfect blend of aesthetic and food value. That's what we're about these days. More about the chickens, who should be laying by September, soon.

Wednesday, September 17, 2008

Sustainable Agriculture in the Triangle

Farm Tour!

native plant area at Piedmont Biofuel's research garden

farm intern explains a Japanese farming technique

intern displays volatile component of biofuel production

biofuel separators

Piedmont Biofuels honor system tank

Dew Dance Farm

Dew Dance garden, with heirloom naturally colored cotton on right.
Below, Laura Young at loom.


Lakeview Daylily Farm


koi pond with turtle and heron protection

Weston Farms koi barn


Double T Farm


Hilltop Farm, Willow Springs, NC

Hilltop Farm horses


Covenant Community Garden, Fuquay-Varina, NC


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September 22, 2008 - September 24, 2008 ELP Food Tour Conference 2008
NCSU campus

The Environmental Leadership Program (ELP) invites you to "The Politics of Food," a national conference on how America grows, distributes, buys, and eats its food.
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October 31 - November 2, 2008
Anderson, SC

Wednesday, September 3, 2008

Tomatillo Roast!

brick barbeque with bike

unlit

papered

lit
burning

trashwood fire
dying

Walmart firelog!

almost ready

roasting

slow roast

smoking

done!

parsley puree

puree plus broth and lime juice

chill

serve

serve with beer

NOW the fire is truly ready!