
Tuesday, November 17, 2009
Monday, November 16, 2009
Getting Ready for Winter
Things with the garden have been interesting lately, especially since it has spent quite a bit of time under a layer of snow.When Brian and I went to St. John for Brian and Jessa’s wedding in early October, the garden went through its first fall freeze. Anticipating the cold, Brian picked every last fruit (mainly the tomatoes and peppers) in the large, immobile containers. The entire week that we were away, temperatures hovered around freezing. Luckily, our friend Nathan stayed at the place and took care of our little ones like a good uncle would :)
He brought in the smaller containers – tomatoes, zucchinis, etc – and covered the larger ones with plastic every cold night. For light freezes, a tarp or blanket can make all the difference – even more so when your plants are snuggled in the ground instead of in containers. The fruits we picked have continued to ripen indoors, supplying us with wonderful tomato sauce ingredients well into November.Since early October, most everything else outside has died – with a few exceptions.
The broccoli is better than ever. All season, we felt that we wouldn’t repeat broccoli, particularly considering our space limitations. The first round
of broccoli heads was insignificant and slow to develop. However, since cutting off that first round, the broccoli has flourished, we’re now working on our 4th or even 5th round of broccoli and it is tastier than ever. The broccoli leaves – such a great way to beef up a stir fry – have lost their bitterness and are delicious. Even the arugula we planted half way through the season has taken off with the cooler weather. Kale, known to improve in taste with a light freeze, and chard are also still going strong.We just had our second significant storm, and just the day after finally building our first cold frame. At the moment it is keeping our compost warm, I’m hoping to plant spinach and more
arugula in it soon. People say that you can’t grow food in a Colorado winter without heat. I don’t believe them. More on the coldframe in my next post.Sunday, October 18, 2009
Aquaponics in Denver
http://www.denverpost.com/ci_13586527
Denver's aquaponics project aims to turn "food desert" into an oasis of health
By Colleen O'Connor The Denver Post
Posted: 10/18/2009
A dilapidated greenhouse in Denver's Elyria-Swansea neighborhood could soon sprout one of the nation's newest trends: inner-city farming using state-of-the-art technology to grow crops and fish in a single symbiotic system that mimics nature's water cycle.
This would solve a problem for the neighborhood, which lacks a full-service grocery store — if the Denver City Council can hammer out a zoning variance to allow Urban Organics to set up its greenhouse- to-table operation at East 47th Avenue and York Street, north of Interstate 70.
"This neighborhood is a food desert," said Paul Garcia, who lives in the neighborhood and is deputy director of the Cross Community Coalition.
"There's no access to fresh produce — no nearby grocery store. The idea of being able to grow and distribute fresh produce in this particular part of town is so encouraging for the residents."
Urban Organics is the idea of real estate developer and broker Paul Tamburello and local food activists, including Ashara Ekundayo, a principal at Blue and Yellow Logic, a Denver startup focused on diversifying the green economy to include all races and income levels.
Ekundayo, founder of the Pan African Arts Society and a longtime social activist, became interested in the food-justice movement during a year-long fellowship at Green for All, a national organization that trains leaders in low-income communities or communities of color to bring the green economy to their neighborhoods.
During the fellowship, she learned of the work of Will Allen, a sharecropper's son and former basketball star who won a 2008 MacArthur Foundation Genius Grant for his Growing Power, a nonprofit urban farm in Milwaukee.
His concept is rooted in the belief that the unhealthy diets of low-income, urban people — linked to diabetes and obesity — can be tracked to lack of access to affordable fresh fruits and vegetables.

For the rest of the story: http://www.denverpost.com/ci_13586527
Saturday, October 17, 2009
Ain't no power like the power of the people...
Power Past Coal:A Bike Ride for Clean Energy and Climate Justice
Date: October 24th, 2009
Location: Broadway and Canyon, at the Boulder Bandshell
Meet-up Time: 9:30a.m. for coffee and bagels
Ride Time: 10:00a.m. sharp!
October 24th marks the "350" global day of international climate action, which calls for reducing the amount of carbon dioxide in our atmosphere to 350ppm. Here in Boulder, we'll come together to celebrate bike culture and demand a decarbonized world, based on local solutions, sustainable economies and democratic communities. We'll move through town in a festive bike parade and bring people power to the Valmont coal plant in East Boulder. The ride will finish in downtown Boulder and join the main 350 rally. See you there and spread the word!
Bring Bikes, Banners, Boomboxes, Noisemakers! Your helmet and some water, too!
www.350.org
If you have questions or want to get involved with organizing, send an email to: bike4climateaction@yahoo.com
Saturday, October 10, 2009
October Harvest Party
Brian harvested the seeds from our sunflowers - they're delicious! While so many of sunflowers were sacrificed to the squirrels this summer, they were worth planting for just that reason - they protected the rest of the garden from that most persistent pest for most of the season. Several times we saw at least three different types of bees on the sunflowers' faces at one time (one variety I'd never seen before).The garden is going through a tough transition right now - we've faced below-freezing temperatures for most of the week, and four inches of snow today. Luckily, the harvest hasn't quite ended. Speaking of harvests...
The next monthly Harvest Potluck will be on Sunday, October 25th at Betsy and Matt's house (2537 Bluff - near the corner of Bluff and Folsom) at 2pm.
Hope to see all the regulars! If you've never been - it's a local food potluck/party, join us.
Tuesday, September 8, 2009
September Harvest Party
3605 Martin Drive
Boulder, CO 80305
If you haven't heard of the harvest parties yet, but want to come - Ask me!
Hope to see you all there.
Sunday, September 6, 2009
Chez What?
Making the Dough
First, start with the pasta dough. Here's an easy recipe which makes about a pound of fresh pasta:
2 1/2 cups of all purpose flour (semolina is a good choice, too)
3 happy chicken eggs
Yeah, that's it. Feel free to throw in some salt, herbs, spices, etc. I've tried a little olive oil. You'll need a big bowl, a clean countertop dusted with flour and a plate with a damp cloth. You'll also want your ravioli filling ready to go at this point - that recipe follows
Grab the big bowl, and pour in the flour. Form a pool in the middle of the flour and break your three eggs into the pool. (Save your egg shells for adding calcium to the garden.)
Slowly break the eggs, blending them into the flour until the forming clump is well mixed. Add a little water if it's very dry, add a little flour if it's really sticky. This is the time for adding those optional ingredients.
Now on the countertop, knead the dough. Once it's consistent, form it into a mound and cover it with the damp cloth. Wait at least 15 minutes. One recipe recommended a full hour.
In order to press the pasta into sheets, you'll use a pasta press if you're lucky and a rolling pin if you want a work out. The press is worth it; it makes prettier pasta (including fettuccine or spaghetti cuts) and it cuts at least an hour out of the prep time. Use either the rolling pin or the pasta press to make your sheets. Dust the sheets with flour.
Ravioli Filling
Pesto-Squash-Goat Cheese filling
Mix the following:
- Cilantro pesto
- Squash puree. Saute squash with garlic and then puree it
- Goat cheese. Other cheese probably equally as delicious
Eggplant Puree filling
Mix the following:
- Pureed eggplant, garlic and onions. Lightly saute the vegetables first.
- Chopped arugula and/or basil
- Pine nuts
- Goat cheese.
Now you're back with your pasta sheets and your ready-to-go filling. Grab a basting brush (or something to smear egg batter) and a small bowl with egg batter - just one egg will do. Brush a manageable piece of sheet with egg batter. Drop *small* spoon fulls of your filling. While you're getting the knack for this, space the filling quite a bit to give yourself some room for error. Feel free to reapply some egg yolk around the filling (this will help seal the first sheet to the second). Brush a second sheet, equal in size to the first, with egg yolk and carefully place it (eggy side down) over the filling-covered sheet. Now, carefully press the top sheet around the mounds of filling, being sure to push the air out before sealing the raviolis. Cut your ravioli however you like and then dust them with flour.
Boil the ravioli for about 4 minutes and enjoy!
Saturday, September 5, 2009
Wednesday, August 26, 2009
Be Inspired
In the meantime check out this post from the Denver blog, "Urbavore's Dilemma." It's a good one.
http://blogs.westword.com/latestword/2009/08/urbavores_dilemma_earthlinks_h.php
Monday, July 27, 2009
(Eggplant) Sex and the Garden
Getting your first order of seed packets is pretty exciting and a little overwhelming. When our seeds arrived this past spring, we peeked inside some of them (who knew fava bean seeds were actually whole fava beans!?) and anxiously read the descriptions of others, promising us “sweet, tender leaves” and “intense, rich tomato flavor.” All we had to do was put the seeds in some dirt and sit back and wait.
Well, the seed packets also seemed to indicate that things would not be quite that easy. In addition to some basic watering guidelines, there were instructions for things I hadn’t even thought of. “Slightly acidic, calcium rich soil with a pH between 6.0 and 7.0”? “Control beetles with rotenone or pyrethrum”? As my confident optimism was quickly diminished, I began to wonder if we bit off a bit more than we could chew.
Fortunately, we put the doubts aside and went ahead with our experiment. However, from time to time problems arose that moved us to go back to the seed packet and learn about an unfamiliar term or process. We had such an experience recently. Our eggplant has been looking strong and producing lots of beautiful flowers. Those flowers – which ideally bear shiny, purplish black fruit – were looking pretty, but simply dying and falling off without the payoff. We fumbled for answers within our limited knowledge base, until a friend (thanks, Kacie!) told us it might be a problem with pollination and, alas, we would have to figure out what exactly that means.
While pollination can be quite complicated – when one is, for example, trying to create hybrid varieties – the basics of it are pretty intuitive and is something most of us know a thing or two about: sex. When one flower is very in love with another flower, something magical happens. This all should sound pretty familiar, except that plants, unlike humans, need the help of wind or birds or bees (pollinators), to move their special parts together. One good reason to have flowers in your garden – aside from looking pretty and making Kate happy – is that they attract pollinators. Some plants produce ‘perfect’ flowers that have both male (stamen) and female (pistil) parts. Other plants produce separate male and female flowers or even separate male and female plants.
For some plants and depending on your purposes, this is more or less important. Spinach for, example, produces separate male and female plants meaning that you need to have multiple plants – some of each sex – for pollination to occur. However, for many gardeners, pollination is not that important for spinach. Since we eat the leaf, we don’t need spinach to go to seed to harvest it. However, in the long run, pollination is essential to the survival of plants species and, ultimately, the non-human and human animals that eat them. For this reason, the disappearance of honeybees around the world (i.e. colony collapse disorder) is an especially troubling phenomenon.

In the case of eggplants (along with their brethren tomatoes and peppers), the plants generally produce perfect flowers that have both male and female parts. They are, in other words, self-pollinating. Because we are interested in eating the plant’s fruit and the fruit contains the plants seeds, pollination is necessary regardless of whether you are interested in saving seed.
So, what to do in the case of those pesky eggplants – the drama queen of the garden, according to Carolyn – that produce flowers, but no fruit. If the wind and bees aren’t playing matchmaker, then humans can step in and fill the role. Fortunately, being cupid for a stamen and a pistil is a little less awkward then between two people – all it takes (well, we’ll see if we actually get some eggplants) is moving a small clean paintbrush around the inside of the flower. If all goes well, the flowers special parts will touch and we’ll see some baby eggplants in the coming weeks.
~Brian
Thursday, July 23, 2009
Harvest Eve
The first of the monthly Harvest Parties is this Saturday! For those of you who haven't heard, a group of friends (and friends of friends) are getting together monthly to celebrate what bounty our Boulder foodshed can provide. The first is at Caitlin's beautiful edible garden at 5162 Holmes Place. It's a local food potluck: if you can make it, plan on making a meal with mainly local ingredients - from your own garden, a neighbor's or with food purchased at the farmers market. Colorado booze is also more than welcome :) Come ready to eat Boulder - the party starts at 5:30pm. 
For some inspiration, I bring you a snippet from Barbara Kingsolver's story (Animal, Vegetable, Miracle) about growing her own food, with her family, for a year. I imagine her own motivations are not so far from many of those in attendance this Saturday...
"We hoped a year away from industrial foods would taste so good, we might actually enjoy it. The positives, rather than the negatives, ultimately nudged us to step away from the agribusiness supply line and explore the local food landscape. Doing the right thing, in this case, is not about abstinence-only, throughing out bread, tightening your belt, wearing a fake leather belt, or dragging around feeling righteous and gloomy. Food is the moral arena in which the ethical choice is generally the one more likely to make you groan with pleasure. Why resist that?"
Saturday, July 4, 2009
Landfills or Gardens - A Post article
Landfill Worries Cloud Hope for New Orleans Gardens
By Kari LydersenWashington Post Staff WriterSaturday, July 4, 2009

Urban gardens were key to helping New Orleans's Vietnamese population return and reestablish their close-knit community just weeks after Hurricane Katrina.
The gardens, which cover nearly every inch of open space in the Versailles neighborhood of eastern New Orleans, provided fresh produce long before grocery stores reopened and kept alive a farming tradition that residents brought from their North Vietnam villages more than three decades ago.
Now local church and development leaders are trying to launch a 30-acre urban farm to let elderly gardeners grow more and earn more selling produce at a popular Saturday market. The vision includes free-range livestock, aquaculture and playgrounds for gardeners' grandchildren. But leaders fear that their dream will be impeded by a legacy of Katrina: a nearby emergency demolition landfill that opponents think could release arsenic or other contaminants into the soil, water and air.
Officials with the state and Waste Management, which ran the now-closed landfill, note that air and water tests have found nothing above safe levels. Community leaders say that may be the case now, but they are upset there are no mandates or plans for ongoing testing to detect contamination that may emerge.
"This farm is part of the community's resilience," said the Rev. Vien Nguyen, pastor of Mary Queen of Vietnam, a Roman Catholic church that is spearheading the urban farm. "We fended for ourselves all this time, and if Katrina happened again, we could do it all again. But we want to know we have healthy conditions for the farm."
Check out the rest at: http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/07/03/AR2009070302436_pf.html
Harvesting Homegrown Salads
The garden, now over fifty containers, is growing well. We’ve had a bit of bad luck, but for the most part it seems that our efforts are paying off.After several attempts to grow lettuces, we have finally decided that the first batch of soil we used was no good. Unfortunately, it took success from the ground garden below the deck to convince us that our container lettuces weren’t going anywhere – nearly three months after our first attempt! We’re pretty sure that the problem was too much mushroom compost. Knowing that lettuces need lots of nitrogen, our first batch of soil was probably about 45% mushroom compost (it should’ve been more like 25-33%). It also might have been the poorer quality top soil we had been using originally.


Besides these few problems, things are going very well! We’ve had a few wonderful salads harvesting beet greens and the lettuces from the ground garden below. With a little help from our friends – thanks Laurie and Charlie! – we have enjoyed homegrown kale, chard, collards, arugula and other greens. Nasturtium leaves, too (pictured at left) are delicious! Somehow, they taste like blue cheese – who knew?Happy Independence Day, everyone!
Wednesday, July 1, 2009
McMansion Farms
Check out this Washington Post article about farming among the sprawling mansions of Loudoun County, Virginia...
The Farmer and the Lawn
Ex-CIA Man Stakes New Career on a Few Acres




Wednesday, July 1, 2009
Set among the rolling green hills of Loudoun County, Jim Dunlap's farm hasn't changed much since the 1780s. The original fieldstone farmhouse, designed by William Penn, is still there, albeit larger after two additions. So is the stone smokehouse and a spring house. There are peach trees, raspberry bushes and vegetables. If Isaac James, a former owner and the great-grandfather of outlaw Jesse, were to visit, he would see just one real difference: SnowBear Farm is now the only farm in sight. The property is surrounded by huge suburban mansions with wide, empty lawns.
Of course, these days it's more surprising to find a working farm than McMansions in Loudoun. But Dunlap, a retired CIA operations officer, wanted to farm here. His little piece of suburbia is perfectly situated for a small farmer just starting out: The land is fertile, and the location, just 55 miles from Washington, puts him within striking distance of lucrative urban farmers markets, where prices and demand are high for produce grown without pesticides or chemical fertilizers. "We need to take a lot of this land that's used for pet horses and giant lawns and find ways to grow food on it again," Dunlap said. "My work is an experiment to figure out how we can do it."
Local-food advocates salivate at the idea of creating farms near the city. So do small farmers, who can earn a good living meeting the growing demand for local products. But suburban and exurban farming remains an anomaly. Every year in the United States, more than 6 million acres of agricultural land, an area the size of Maryland, are lost to development, according to the American Farmland Trust, a nonprofit organization that supports conservation. The pop of the real estate bubble hasn't lowered home and land prices enough for new farmers to get into the market. Case in point: Though home prices in Loudoun dropped steeply in 2008, the average detached house still costs $482,000.
Dunlap didn't set out to turn back suburban sprawl. He just wanted to farm. Throughout his life, personality tests such as Myers-Briggs had told him that he was well-suited to the profession. He's analytical, content to work alone and generally an introvert (though he's not shy about discussing his mission). After retiring in 2005, he hiked the Appalachian Trail. On the path, Dunlap decided there might be something to the farming idea and decided to plant crops on part of his 11 acres.
Turns out the wiry 55-year-old liked it. An engineer by training, Dunlap sees every obstacle as a problem to be solved. Storage? He built his own 10-foot-by-17-foot refrigerated room. Celery? "It's the weirdest vegetable to grow," he said on a tour of his fields. "But I've never had truly fresh celery, so we'll try."
Check out the rest of the article at: http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/06/30/AR2009063000924.html?hpid=artslot
Tuesday, June 30, 2009
Guerilla Gardening
I don’t mean to imply that all guerilla gardeners carry a confrontational approach to their hobby. In fact, it doesn’t have to be illegal: many people ask permission before they turn up soil situated on someone else’s property. Frequently, churches and other quasi-public institutions are happy to have someone volunteer their time to turn a lawn into a productive, aesthetically pleasing provider of food. It’s a no brainer, after all, that people tend to like gardens. The volunteer nature of guerrilla gardening, furthermore, fosters a sense of community and service. It’s hard to think of something more wholesome and goodhearted than neighbors getting together to turn a patch of weeds into something lovely and useful.
However, some gardeners do emphasize the political nature of the act. After all, even here in The Republic of Boulder (baaa!) the wait lists for community gardens are prohibitively long. Brian and I got rejected for a plot and if we weren’t able to spend hundreds of dollars on container materials we’d be out of gardening luck. As a result, many people feel that it is a civil responsibility to see that neighborhood and city space is put to good use. When so much land is dedicated to green deserts (read: pesticide-maintained lawns), industrial pursuits and roads, people have a right to some small portion of space for food-production purposes, no? Of course, we’ve heard appropriation defended on similar grounds of “public domain” before. If someone put an oil rig in my backyard (I’m looking at you, Garfield Country) and said it was the best way to ensure productive use of the land, I might have to plug that rig with a carrot (that is how you disable oil production, right?).
Once again, the (in?)justice behind guerilla gardening comes down to that fundamental question: Who owns the land? Who gets to decide what our neighborhoods and cities look like? Who gets to deny or permit access to productive land? Who gets to determine the nature of “productive”? While gardeners exclaim, “We do!” the victims of guerilla gardening – poor souls inflicted with vegetable gardens where their precious patch of weeds once flourished – are fighting back.
Last year in Boulder, one man was threatened with a $2,000 fine PER DAY for planting a vegetable garden in the right-of-way between his property and a public street. The threat came after a neighbor complained about the nuisance. Check out the Daily Camera article about the gardening ordeal at: http://www.boingboing.net/2008/07/10/boulder-man-faces-20.html
Speaking of guerrilla gardening, Brian and I gave it our first shot about three weeks ago. Behind our unit (the spot you see when you lean over the South side of the deck, and pictured below), there was a wonderfully sunny, horribly weedy patch just writhing for a bit of care and attention. We knew that turning this patch into a garden was a risk: at any time the HOA could demolish our hard work because we don’t own the land. However, we decided to give it a try. We wanted to feel our shovels dig into actual ground. We thought – once the garden starts producing – it would be a wonderful way to connect and share with our neighbors, who are encouraged to share the fruits of our labor. Our efforts have so far surpassed our expectations. We went about 8 months hardly meeting a neighbor and in one day we made friends with many of them! In the few hours we spent turning the soil, every neighbor that passed expressed enthusiasm and support for the project. Was the act vandalistic? I’m not sure, but it definitely was adorable!

To learn more about guerilla gardening, check out these resources:
- Google Image search for “Guerilla Gardening”: http://images.google.com/images?hl=en&rls=com.microsoft:en-us&q=guerilla%20gardens&um=1&ie=UTF-8&sa=N&tab=wi
- Guerillagardening.org
- The Huffington Post article: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2009/03/26/illegal-guerrilla-gardeni_n_179404.html
Friday, June 5, 2009
Monday, May 25, 2009
Gaining Ground
On our return from Utah, Brian and I had two enormously productive days in the garden. It finally is a garden! Every last herb, vegetable and fruit has been planted - except for the zucchinis and squashes, which prefer at least 70 degree soil before planting.
We started by planting the fava beans, snow peas and shelling peas. Peas and beans grow well together. They're not the biggest fans of soggy, cold spring weather. But this is Colorado. In my three years in Colorado, "soggy" doesn't happen - until this week. Since the evening after our big planting, the Front Range has been inundated with wet storms. There was even a tornado watch in Denver - just 3o minutes away; how bizarre.
Our trip to the desserts of Utah reinforced this water dilemma for us. For one thing, it was just so damn hot and dry! In the middle of Utah we came across a very small town called Orangeville (it hosted the closest grocery store to our bouldering destination of Joe's Valley). This tiny town, which finds itself between the desert and Utah's arid mountains, appeared to be primarily an agricultural town. Next to orange cliffs and barren plains were bright green, irrigated fields. In place of rains, these farmers water their crops with the rivers flowing out of the mountains above. Even so, how can it makes sense to settle a desert and produce food which is obviously transported elsewhere? What sort of water use does make sense? While I'm trying to figure it out, I'll gratefully accept the gift of rain.
In the other large pool we planted six tomato plants and four basil plants. Right after transplanting the sun was very intense. In order to reduce scorching and shock, we shaded the pools with sheets, as you can see. We might have let the plants enjoy the sun if we knew about the clouds and rain which would soon settle in. In our two other large, deep containers we planted the beets and carrots.
Sunday, May 10, 2009
"Urbavore's Dilemma" - Homegrown Food in the News
According to The Westword's website, "Something strange is going on around Denver. Home owners are replacing sod with vegetable beds and building chicken coops by their garages. A power player is turning prime downtown real estate into a miniature farm, and a developer is planning a subdivision based around farmer's markets. Citizens are fighting for their right to raise honey bees, hens, dwarf goats and pot-bellied pigs. The urban homesteading movement is re-imagining, yard by yard and meal by meal what it's like to live in Denver -- not just to save money but to help the environment and enrich the country's food-production system."
Check out the series at: http://blogs.westword.com/latestword/2009/05/urbavores_dilemma_down_and_dir.php
Waiting Out the Down Time
In the meantime, the garden is slowly coming along. At this point, we have 7 long containers planted with greens (green and red leaf lettuce, mesclun mix, mache, arugula, kale and spinach). It seems that most of these didn't do well after being transplanted - especially the lettuces. Last week, Betsy and Ashwin helped me reseed, and those brand new little guys are just starting to pop up. Since they won't be transplanted, hopefully they'll do a bit better.
Some smaller containers are planted, too. After getting a strawberry seedling from our friend, Shannon, we were inspired to grab a few more: enough for three hanging baskets and some squirrel distraction (we're considering planting a strawberry or two down on the ground to sacrifice those to the squirrels who may fill up before reaching our garden). The garlic chives are looking good.
A good three weeks ago, we planted our whiskey barrel with some flowers. Ashwin and Amy (another ENVSer) seeded sunflowers well before the packet suggested (it recommended waiting until the last frost to plant sunflowers). Because it was a beautiful day and I generally sacrifice good, patient planning for immediate fun, we went ahead and tried. Finally, about two weeks later the sunflowers popped up (8 out of the 9 seeds, actually). A week later they're about three inches tall. The sunflowers should eventually reach 9 feet in height.
Pests are already becoming a major concern. I've already mentioned the squirrel problem. They've ripped out a kale plant and every few days rummage through our containers looking for seeds. A fellow gardener and scientist (so she knows what she's talking about!) told us that peeing in your garden can help keep squirrels away. As our garden is not so much a garden, I hesitated on this advice. However, after Betsy's, Ashwin's and my reseeding efforts were promptly destroyed by the damn things, I've since been trying this technique out. Yes, watch where you step! Since then, squirrel appearances have diminished but not altogether disappeared. As a secondary measure, every time I see a squirrel out there I run after it - with broom in hand. Sure, they'll leave, but they don't seem nearly scared enough. Still trying to work this problem out.
Wasps are trying to resettle the hollow, hot walls of our deck. Through the many holes you can see the remnants of last year's wasp cities. It's pretty spooky. Ashwin and Betsy and I went around duck taping every hole we saw to politely suggest that the wasps try a different location this summer.
Tomorrow, Brian and I are heading to Utah for some fun. We'll be moving the still-mobile garden over to Charlie's for safe keeping. By the time we return, we'll have passed the last average frost date and then things will really start progressing. We'll plant the three kiddie pools and every other container. I can't wait!
Since I'll be road tripping, there will be another break until my next post, but keep checking back because I'm going to continue the blog. For those of you who don't know, this blog was the idea of my science professor, Sharon, who suggested that I cover my garden deck via a blog for my final science project. In addition to being the coolest grad school final ever, it's been a lot of fun sharing the process with all of you. Thanks again for the great idea, Sharon! And thanks to everyone else for your enthusiasm and support. I also love, love, love to hear about everyone else's gardening efforts - keep sharing your experiences with me.
See you soon!
Thursday, April 23, 2009
Charlie's Place
Charlie's got more than cold frames going on. He also has a large, well established garden. While it doesn't look like much right now, in a few months this space will be full of life - and food. I've already mentioned that my favorite tomato came from Charlie's garden. He picks some interesting things to grow like Napa cabbage, many pepper varieties and tomatillos. I look forward to some swapping!
Charlie's seedlings are looking good, too (left: several varieties of peppers). He's kept them inside under a grow light which hastened their growth compared with our flats which experience less consistent, less intense light up in the loft. 
















