Booyah
April 24, 2008 at 5:45 am | In Uncategorized | Leave a CommentWeight Watchers has officially ended, and while I’m keeping up with the points system on my own, I’ve had to create my own weekly weigh-in. I’ve been taking cycling Thursday mornings at the gym, and they have a good scale there, so I figure that’s official enough. I had a good week this week. I’m down to a total weight loss of 12.8 pounds. Yay!
I’m a real gardener now!
April 22, 2008 at 5:33 pm | In Cool-weather gardening, Gardening, Lettuce | 1 CommentRecipe to try
April 21, 2008 at 1:45 pm | In Cooking | Leave a CommentThis is really just a note to myself:
Try plump pea dumplings as soon as possible! My dear husband will probably turn up his nose at them, but then again, he might really like ‘em! Ooh, if he doesn’t want peas, maybe I could try edamame…yum!
Garden update
April 21, 2008 at 10:33 am | In Cool-weather gardening, Gardening, Lettuce | Leave a CommentI’m excited to announce that both my neighbors are thrilled at my garden proposal! I didn’t even have to play that I’ll-give-you-produce card, although I definitely will share if my garden is successful. I’m in full planning mode and think I have it all figured out. I haven’t taped my ‘lil mock pots to the garden space drawing yet, but I’m confident I’ll be able to have all I want, and maybe even more.
I say maybe more because one of our friend’s favorite vegetables is carrots, and I think I might just have to grow carrots. You know, to be hospitable to our guest. Not for me at all. I wouldn’t possibly enjoy growing carrots. Growing carrots for our friend’s benefit is a good excuse, anyway.
My original Deer Tongue lettuce sprouts are coming along. I took a picture and I’ll post it later. My Meslun mix/Deer Tongue pot hasn’t sprouted yet, but I only planted those seeds on the 17th. My cabbage plant looks like it’s thriving, too. It has one leaf that is turning a bit yellow. I’m not sure what that’s all about. I hope it isn’t foreshadowing something awful to come. The center leaves keep growing and growing, though, so it seems happy overall.
Junior took the dog out last night and when he came back in, he asked if spiders are good for my garden. I answered yes, but in a very nervous tone. He said, “well, that’s good because there are spiders everywhere out there.” Gee, that’s great. Just fabulous. I know in my head spiders are good because they snack on other pests, but I can’t help but get the willies when I think about them. I sneaked a peek at my containers this morning and didn’t see a sign of a spider anywhere, so maybe it’s just a nighttime thing and I don’t have to actually have any contact with them. Ew.
Here’s a warm fuzzy thought to leave you with: We almost bought fresh green beans at the grocery store yesterday. They looked sort of ok, but we ended up not picking them up because I took more satisfaction in knowing my purple beans will be tastier and fresher and just all around better. Yay! I can’t wait!
Also, someone just told me I’m lookin’ skinny.
It’s official. I’m obsessed.
April 15, 2008 at 7:51 am | In Gardening, Herbs, Lettuce | Leave a CommentThe Prairie Gardens jingle has never been quite so true for me: I just can’t wait to garden!
I’m really obsessed. Seriously. All I can think about is gardening. I’ve been keeping a close eye on my cabbage plant and lettuce seeds. So far, so good. I’m a bit worried about some windy/stormy weather that’s in the forecast for the week; my plant might have to spend a day inside. I don’t know, though. What do other people do? I guess plants in the wild survive wind. I’m being a little overprotective…
We measured the areas we have to work with in terms of where to place containers. Junior is going to draw me a diagram and I’ll move around little pieces of paper that represent pots until my arrangement works. I think we’ll end up encroaching on some common areas, but our two neighbors are pretty relaxed, so I’ll talk to them about it before committing to anything. My plan is to bribe them with produce.
If we work out the space issue, my plan is:
- Three pots of tomatoes (Early Girl, Tiny Tim, and one more TBD)
- One pot lilac peppers
- One pot purple-podded pole beans (yes, purple!)
- One pot that’s currently the cabbage and lettuce (it will become something else once it’s too warm for the lettuce)
- Three or four pots herbs: cilantro, basil, lavender, and maybe parsley. (I might forgo the parsley. I could comfortably do without that if needed. I could, I suppose, forgo the lavender, too. But I don’t wanna.)
That’s nine to ten pots! I know that’s ambitious, but my heart is set on it. Keep your fingers crossed it works out for me.
Spurt of gardening knowledge
April 13, 2008 at 9:15 am | In Cool-weather gardening, Gardening, Lettuce, Peanut | 1 CommentThe Common Ground Food Coop had a gardening workshop on Saturday, and I attended with a few of my friends from work. It was a great resource! While I know to expect some spectacular failures with my garden, either this summer or in the future, the workshop was so inspiring. It focused on organic vegetable gardening, and it made me more excited to just try gardening.
I realized what my seed-starting problem is. No surprise here, but my herb seedlings aren’t getting enough light. While I’m not giving up, I’m set on buying herb plants at the store and using those. Maybe next year I’ll try starting from seed again. When I do that, I’ll buy a florescent light and place that two inches above the seedlings. I learned it’s important-both when starting seeds and choosing plants-that the seedlings/plants aren’t too stemmy. If the plant is a bit tall and the leaves are all at the top, it means the plant is reaching for the light and isn’t establishing good root and leaf systems. The flourescent light will help this for the seedlings, and now I know what to look for when buying plants.
In terms of growing plants outdoors, I think I have pretty good sun exposure. My plants will get mostly south-western sunlight, and my back porch isn’t shaded, so exposure to those 6-8 hours of daily sunlight will be a breeze. I’ll put taller plants on the north end of my patio (or stoop, or glorified slab of concrete, or whatever it is) so they don’t shade the shorter plants. Shade is nearby, so I can easily move my containers during a heat wave.
I left the workshop armed with information on making my own compost (I don’t see that happening) and organic pesticides. I think my main battles will be with slugs, aphids, rabbits, groundhogs, and maybe some other bugs I haven’t thought about. That’s right, I learned that groundhogs will destroy my garden. How convenient for them, then, that they live in the banks of the creek right in my backyard. Ugh. I’ve been researching ways to deter groundhogs, and I think I’ll try two things: A pinwheel since groundhogs apparently are timid-yeah, right-and will be scared away by the motion, and sprinkling Epsom salts on my plants (and reapplying as necessary after rain). I’ll look into the Epsom salt thing a little bit more to make sure that wouldn’t harm my plants. To battle rabbits, I’ll try bloodmeal around the base of the plants. I’ll use crushed eggshells to deter pests and go from there.
The most exciting news is that I won a savoy cabbage plant as a door prize. I never win things! My little plant is so cute. The book says cabbage container gardening isn’t worth it since one plant only produces one head of cabbage, but the leader of the workshop demonstrated a great technique. We discussed how lettuces are cool weather plants and that this is a good time to plant seeds. I copied her demonstration: I planted my cabbage plant in the center of an 8 1/2 inch pot and sprinkled Amish Deer Tongue lettuce seeds all around the cabbage. I accomplished my very first companion planting! Granted, this weekend is a bit too cold, I think, considering it’s downright wintry out there, but my weather.com homepage tells me this week will be better to keep the plants outside. I learned a lot about lettuce, and I’m excited to add that to my garden this year. I know the lettuce will be done by early summer, but I’ll try to start some more-maybe mesclun mix or a combination of two types of lettuce-for a fall crop.
The first picture shows my gardening supplies. Of course my gloves and spade are purple.
The second is my planted cabbage. Hopefully the lettuce seedlings will come up soon!
Peanut is posing by the beginning of my container garden. Junior is holding her because she is always intent on bolting after rabbits.
Finally, there’s a picture of me, Junior, and Peanut. Again, Peanut is honing her rabbit-hunting skills. The area above my head is the bank of the creek, where the groundhogs live.
Not so Hoo HA!
April 11, 2008 at 12:03 pm | In Uncategorized | 1 CommentWell, I gained one pound this week. One stinkin’ pound.
I’m not too bummed out about it, though. I feel great and I went down a size in jeans this week, so that’s the important thing. I figure my small gain is due to weight lifting or something. I wasn’t doing that before, but I added that in this week. Maybe that has absolutely nothing to do with it, but I’m not going to let the weigh-in get me down. I’ll have better news next week.
Gardening notes
April 7, 2008 at 7:16 pm | In Gardening, Herbs | 2 CommentsI read more of The Bountiful Container tonight and want to jot down some notes:
- I’ll grow either orange or lilac peppers and buy plants at Prairie Gardens to plant when the nighttime temperature is 55 degrees and the daytime temperature is 70 degrees. I’ll look for dense and compact plants, plant them according to directions and my book, and remember to move them into the shade during heat waves.
- I’ll grow two types of tomatoes: Early Girl and Gold Nugget. I’m especially excited about the Gold Nugget variety; they sound delicious. I’ll look for plants that are stocky with rich, green leaves and not a lot of stem and plant at the same time as the pepper plant.
- I’ll have to investigate fertilizers a little bit more, but I’ll look for a balanced blend and stay away from those with added nitrogen.
- I’m pretty sure my herb seedlings aren’t going to fly, but I’m not giving up on them yet. I’m very confused on the issue of covering them with plastic. The book says to keep ‘em covered until the true leaves form; the woman at Prairie Gardens said the plastic is only needed until they sprout. I think I’ve just completely screwed up my current seedlings, so I’ll buy plants if needed and try again next year.
For the future gardens of my dreams, I’ve decided a blueberry bush is a must. I’ve always loved blueberries and I’m so enticed by the description in the book. It seems like a blueberry bush needs a larger, more permanent container, so I’ll wait until we live somewhere a bit more permanent and then indulge. I can’t wait!
SBS
April 7, 2008 at 1:21 pm | In Uncategorized | 2 CommentsSBS is my very own made-up acronym for Saggy Butt Syndrome. That’s what I have going on right now. Not that my butt itself is saggy (quite the opposite, thank you very much!), but all my pants are. I really need to go shopping for new clothes. That’s a good thing, especially since the reason is that I’ve lost weight, but it’s also a pain to know your clothes look incredibly bizarre. Jeans look especially odd when you are able to tighten up one more hole in your belt, resulting in the ever-so-lovely bunching up of the button and zipper area. Very nice. It’s so in this season.
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