Posts Tagged ‘string beans’

The garden takes care of itself

Thursday, August 6th, 2009

Out of town for two weeks. A neighbor waters the garden. What a surprise when we get back: In the deer-protected garden, an overgrown plot with half a dozen ripe tomatoes and dozens of over-ripe green beans. To say nothing of weeds. The zucchini is thriving and appears to have a baby zucchini on it. What a thrill to harvest the tomatoes, even if two have been started by slugs or small animals unknown to me.

But the beans! What can you do with the puffy, tough over-ripe harvest? I open a few to take out the beans–could these be planted for another crop of beans? over-ripe-beans1[LJ says use them as you would dried beans. They take less time to cook--between, say, 25 and 45 minutes depending on how long they've been on the vine.  Just simmer them in water to cover by 2 inches with some aromatics and a little olive oil for flavor. Like dried beans, they can go in soups and stews. You also can dress them in vinaigrette while still warm for a nice  salad.]

Up in the herb garden, the mint is poking its heady stems out from under the hydrangeas and threatening to overtake the chive and parsley. I pull some of it from its roots. Some one has to take charge here. The basil is a castle in the air. It, too, needs a pruning, but not from the roots.

The pot garden is faring better. Nothing overgrown here. The tomato plant is hosting two teeny weeny green tomatoes. The zucchini appears to be bearing the smallest of fruit. But the leaves look healthy all around. They have survived my absence–thanks to a caring neighbor.

What of Les Jardins garden? She, too, was away for a few weeks. Her raised beds have gone to pot–nothing salvageable there.  She calls it a disaster! But her tomatoes in a pot are glorious–rich and full leaves and plenty of starter tomatoes.

Pots seem to be the preferred way to go this wet year.

A rain break from the garden

Saturday, June 6th, 2009

We in the mid-Atlantic have just survived a Noah’s boat-like epxerience: three dark days of rain–pouring rain and flood warnings. Les Jardins warns me: Leave the garden be. Not only is the soil too wet to work but picking string beans–if any are showing up yet–could spread a fungus. She’s not sure about snap peas [which are starting to show up] but suggests not touching them either until the garden dries out a bit. We have two days of sun forecast.  Maybe by the end of day 2 we can get out there and muck around the garden. At least put some seeds in the ground.

Meanwhile, I have a zucchini plant growing in a pot. zucci-in-pot1

I plan to keep it there until July 1–the day on which it is supposedly safe to put zucchini in the ground and not have it attacked by the dreaded zucchini borer. It is flourishing so far. It certainly liked getting very wet–the pot has good drainage. Les Jardins suggests that those who are limited to pot gardening could try a bush-style zucchini plant in a pot. No need to stick to tomatoes and herbs.

Planting String Beans

Tuesday, June 2nd, 2009

You can’t beat the taste of a freshly picked string bean–still warm from the sun and its life on the plant. And you can’t beat the good it does for your soil–locking in nitrogen and keeping the earth rich and healthy.

Two weeks ago I put the beans in the ground, marked the row with some twigs and checked it out a week later. Nothing. But now–after a week of rain and mist and cool weather–they are up and growing and looking like they’ll be big producers.stringbean-plant1

I plan to seed another row in another week or two, to keep the harvest coming all summer long.