Wednesday 27 July 2016

Starting the orchard

As the summer progresses I am starting to see what limitations the cool climate here has on the garden. None of my findings were unexpected.
Of course the salad greens and brassicas are doing well as are the carrots, beets and peas.
The beans and summer squash are big enough to harvest though a little later than I thought. Next year I'll try growing them under plastic a little longer into the summer.


Tomatoes are flowering like crazy but no sign of fruit. I'll have to see if they make up for it in August. Looking forward to that greenhouse in the future.
The Italian and Holy basil never did grow very big. The Holy basil went to flower early on and while it looks very pretty hasn't given me many leaves to harvest.


The garlic is harvested. Considering that the garden was newly built last fall and the soil not particularly great I got a pretty good harvest.
We still continue to have lots of crab on the table and the odd fish. Looking forward to discovering some of the great fishing holes around here.



I bought a couple of apple trees last week. I now have an early apple called Early Free and a mid season apple called Gala. Even though they are on some kind of dwarfing root stock I'll have to keep them pruned regularly to keep them at the 6' height I want. I planted them hedge style - only 3' apart as research shows this is supposed to help keep them smaller.


The 3 blueberry trees I bought bare rooted in the spring are settling in well. They are Superior,Northland and Polaris.
So I have made a start with the orchard. If the gardens gets built in time I may add a plum tree or 2 this year.


  The potatoes are growing well in their grow bag as I keep adding soil to it.
The ones in the garden are already starting to die back so I think this grow bag idea is working. The somewhat dry conditions that they are growing under don't seem to bother them. Though I won't know for sure til I empty the bag at the end of the season.


I saved these marigold seeds from a friend. The flowers are small and the leaves are fine. Not sure what kind it is but it has flowered well and seems to like this climate. Next year I envision a border of them instead of the odd plant I scattered through the garden this year.


 Another new plant I grew from a friends seed is edible chrysanthemum. It has done well and I really like the taste of the leaves in a salad or stir fry. The flowers are looking good also and don't seem to have changed the taste of the leaves.


The Shirley poppies are blooming and blooming. They are so delicate looking and yet so tough.
I like that.

Sunday 3 July 2016

All is well

Back in BC and all is well in my garden.
The deer stayed on the right side of the fence and there was enough rain to keep things growing. The cool weather veges thrived though the basil is still sulking and will probably do so for the rest of the summer. I can see a greenhouse is needed here if I want to be successful with warm weather veg.


The poppy seeds I sprinkled around last fall are growing and blooming.


The lettuce in the last few weeks have gone from seedlings to fully formed heads so lots of salads on the menu.



Peas, cabbage and collards all doing well.
The first round of pak choi is flowering. Fortunately the seeds planted a month ago are almost big enough to harvest, and in a few weeks I can harvest the pak choi seeds to save for future crops.



Lots of scapes on the garlic for cooking with. In a few weeks I'll see how the garlic crop did.

I am growing potatoes in a grow bag and in the ground to see which gives the bigger harvest. Both seem to be doing well above ground, so time will tell about what is going on under ground.
Now it is just a matter of starting seeds regularly to keep the harvest going both into the fall and through the winter for spring harvest when we return from our winter escape. It's all in the timing...something I'm learning this first season in this new climate.