Posts Tagged ‘tomatoes’

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.

Deer-proofing the garden–and bunny proofing it, too

Tuesday, April 21st, 2009

This is my deer and bunny-proof fence.deer-fence1

No chemical deterrents for me–just eight, 5-foot tall poles [plus a telephone pole] and yards and yards of chicken coop wire, which was rolled from one starting point [the telephone pole] to an end point [telephone pole] where three nails act as an anchor to close the “door.”  We are not handy people but my spouse and I managed to fashion a “door” by stapling a slat of wood to the end of the wire and using that as a sturdy base for closing the circle.

My deer-proof pen is a pain in the neck. Who wants to have to unhook a mass of wire from a telephone pole in order to check on whether the snap peas are anywhere near producing a pod or to dump fresh compost on the tomato bed-to-be.  But there’s no other solution. I know those deer love to gobble up my garden, especially the tomato plants. Last summer, whenever a tomato plant sent shoots through the chicken wire, the leaves were nibbled to the nub by morning. The first year of the fence, when the hub and I amortized its cost ($30 or so) into our tomato yield (a poor harvest), we figured our tomatoes were coming in at $3.50 a piece.  But now we’re into year three of the fence and good crop or poor, we’re doing a lot better.

We took the fence down the first year–furled the wire around the posts and tucked it into the garage. But setting it up the next year was awkward and difficult. Now we leave it in place–a dramatic wintry object in a snow storm.

Hurdles aside, our fence works. The deer come by and sniff–we’ve seen them in early morning or at dusk–but so long as we keep the tomato plants to the center of the plot and not along its edges, our crop is safe. And, since the chicken wire is set snug to the ground, the bunnies can’t get in for snacks, either.