Wednesday, June 27, 2012

Let there be FRUIT and VEGGIES!

Lots of flowers and fruits have showered the victory garden with fragrance, life, and growth.  Here is an update about the growth and the mouthwatering fruits.

lots of green in the victory garden

Fuyu is new to the victory garden but that does not mean she is not ready to produce.  This season we have two persimmons pushing out of Fuyu's newly grown branches.

Fuyu is caring for two persimmons!
The zucchini and the yellow squash are pushing out fruit faster than I can pick them.  I will definitely be making lots of pickled and bread & butter veggies this season.  Last season, I showed everyone how to blanch and freeze veggies.  But this year I want to consume less energy during the winter months. Freezers and refrigerators take up lots of energy even though they keep our food fresh and cold. Canning fruits and veggies are the best way to reduce the energy you use all year round.


The tomato plants are looking good and have reached three feet in height. I am experimenting with corn as a support structure for the tomatoes even though we have red cages for support.  I chose our one and only Big Mama tomato plant and started tying the large tomato stalks to the supporting row of corn.  I planted a single row of corn in the garden bed right behind and between the tomato plants. The corn is still close enough to the corn rows to pollinate with the large corn crop and produce ears of corn.  As our Big Mama plant grows I will continue to use green gardening tape to tie branches to the corn stalks for support. 

Corn is a great support structure for vertical gardening.  Corn not only helps reduce costs for buying support structures but also saves you time if you decide to make your own. As you can see below, the tomato plants have doubled in size and are expected to grow more in July and August.  Let's hope for a great harvest without the ATTACK OF THE KILLER JULIET TOMATOES.
June 10, 2012 - two Juliet tomato plants
June 10, 2012 - Big Mama is loving the sun
June 10, 2012 - three Early Girl tomato plants
June 26, 2012 - Big Mama (left) and Juliet in cage (right)
The eggplants are filling in nicely.  The top left plant is the oldest plant from last season. As you can see the plants grown from seed this season are quickly catching up. I hope to see flowers on all of the new eggplants within the next few weeks.

eggplants
The bell pepper plants are smaller than I hoped for but they are doing well. They were unaffected by the alien invasion a few weeks ago.  I am also hoping to see a few bell pepper flowers peak out in the next few weeks. Keep your fingers and roots crossed.

bell peppers surrounded by bitter melon (right) and beans (top)
The bitter melon plants are loving the weather and the vertical garden.  The plants have reached the top of the netting and are filling in nicely.  Flowers peaked through the vines and leaves two weeks ago and have now pushed out baby bitter melons.  Don't they look cute?


Even our cucumber like the garden beds and have begun the vertical climb up the netting.  I have spotted many baby cucumbers and found two that are two inches long.  Mmmm, I can already taste those crisp dill pickles. YUM!


The beans are pushing out more and more pods daily.  Our youngest crop of burgundy beans is starting to mature and should flower in the next few weeks.  The one and only garden bed, shown below, will be dubbed The Bean Box. There are over twenty burgundy bean plants in the garden bed and my family is hoping of a big harvest.  Unfortunately, large bean harvests will bring more bean robbers. The VG authorities will be notified of the increase in beans this year and will hopefully put out more patrols.  We caught the bean robber last year but I have a feeling that he will be back.

June 26, 2012 - Bean box is filling in
A typical June harvest for the victory garden is comprised of sugar snaps, blue lake beans, burgundy beans, scarlet emperor beans, zucchini and yellow squash. I am currently using Frisbees to hold items I pick in the garden.  I also use old pots/containers and strainers too.  Remember, I am only using reusable items this season.  I know I will be pulling out the large basket soon since the July harvest will be double or triple in size. So far my harvests have grown leaps and bounds.  In two weeks, the victory garden has shown me just how fast our harvests will increase in size.

harvested on June 13, 2012
June 27, 2012 harvest
Just imagine what a July and August harvest will look like.  Our June 27th harvest, pictured above, is my largest harvest so far.  The harvest includes 5 squash, 3 zucchinni (one medium two small), lots of sugar snaps, and a handful of each kind of bean (burgundy, blue lake and scarlet emperor).

Chewy Nhỏ (left) and Solo Nhỏ Xíu (right)
You might also notice a new face. Meet the newest inhabitant to the victory garden, Solo Nhỏ Xíu.  He is related to the notorious Chewy Nhỏ, bean robber.  Chewy was catch and sentenced to 18 minutes in the dog house for his bean theft in 2011.  The authorities will keep a close eye on Solo and his convict brother Chewy this season. The authorities have stated, "Chewy Nho is still a danger to the bean community and security will be tripled this season."  I hope for Solo's sake that he does not follow in his brother's footsteps and stays out of bean trouble. Here is a brief history of last season's bean theft:

Sunday, June 10, 2012

The sugar to my snap! The sugar snap.

Sugar snaps are easy to grow and even easier to eat.  I cannot help it but I eat them while I am picking them.  They are great in salads, soups and stir-fry.  You can plant the seeds in the ground or start them inside in a pot.  Either way, sugar snaps are easy to start, transplant and grow.  The plants like cold weather but do well in heat too.

June 7, 2012 harvest

Sugar snap are great climbers. This is why they are an excellent choice for vertical gardening. Sugar snaps can grow as high as 7 feet.  My stalks are currently at 5 feet and still reaching for the sky.

sugar snaps are now above the netting

Sugar snaps have curly tendrils that hold on to any form of netting. I use a nylon netting to hold up the sugar snap stalks.  The tendrils hold onto the nylon and help keep the stalks from falling over.  Sugar snap tendrils are very strong and skinny.  As you can see in the picture below, one sugar snap was squeezed by a tendril.  The strong gripping tendril left an indentation at the bottom of the pod.

sugar snap and tendrils

I also recommend choosing a netting that has large holes. The netting I am using has four inch holds. This allows me to reach through one side and collect the pods in the middle of the plant.  Lets look at the evolution of the sugar snap this season in the victory garden...

March 16, 2012 - sugar snap sprouts planted indoors

April 12, 2012 - sugar snaps (right bed) transplanted

April 27, 2012 - sugar snaps tendrils are attached and growing
May 12, 2012 - sugar snaps going vertical
May 21, 2012 - sugar snaps are climbing higher
June 10, 2012 - sugar snaps are a foot above the netting

Two weeks ago, I planted two more rows of sugar snaps in the main garden and a few seeds in Herb Row. In the main garden, I plant rows two to three inches away from the current row of plants.  The new sprouts will still climb upward and will now use the first row stalks and the nylon netting as support.

May 21, 2012 - flower (left) and pod pushing out (right)

I am using a triangular prism support for the sugar snaps in Herb Row.  My mother made this support out of bamboo sticks, three metal gardening sticks and metal wire.  She used it for many years to support her bitter melon plants. I continued to use the support primarily for bitter melon.  I have maintained the prism over the years using additional bamboo sticks and green gardening tape.  As you can see below, the bitter melon plants have taken up nicely in the garden bed and no longer need the prism support.

bitter melon have started to climb... go go go go go