Category Archives: Cold Weather Growing

Sage Advice

Sage advice: don’t plant more sage than you need. I’ve cut enough to last a year and it’s only May 10. The plants (sprinkle seeds, neglect thinning) over wintered in a high tunnel. I’ve been harvesting it since late March or early April.

sage herb

Remember to thin seedlings.

Maine Seed Suppliers

Originally appeared in Quoddy Tides newspaper.

Maine Seed Suppliers

Are your seed catalogs coming in the mail yet?  Mine are here!  A lot of folks comment on how early catalogs arrive.  After all, the ground is frozen and nobody’s going to be planting a garden for months.  Why do we need catalogs so early?

I start leek and onion seeds in early February. The tomato, eggplant and pepper seeds for the seedlings going into the high tunnels in late April are started in late February.  Farmers and some gardeners need their seeds early.  Ordering early makes it easier to get the varieties you’d like to grow.  I waited too long to order leeks and onions last year.  Who knew there was an onion seed shortage last year? Me! But I didn’t find out until my order came back without those seeds.  The leeks I wanted to grow were sold out and I had to settle for another variety.

Seeds can be ordered from Maine companies.  Most of the seeds sold in the world come from one supplier, Monsanto. There are seed companies that offer seeds they’ve grown in their trial gardens and from growers right here in Maine.

Johnny’s Selected Seeds in Albion is Maine’s largest and best known seed company. Rob Johnson is in the process of selling Johnny’s to his employees. Johnny’s offers seeds, garden tools, books, seed starting supplies and more. They put a lot of time and effort into research and development of new hybrid varieties that suit our climate, taste good and produce well. Their 120 acre farm and trial gardens are open to the public at certain times. I visited their display at the Common Ground Fair in September and enjoyed talking with them.  Mum and Great Grampa John, the people who taught me how to grow vegetables regardless of how much I protested, carried around the Johnny’s catalog until it was dog-eared and worn out.  When I place an order online early in the morning it’s usually in my mailbox the next day.

Fedco Seeds is a co-op located in Clinton. They’ve spent 15 years building relationships with local seed growers. Their catalog is coded to clearly show where they purchased the seed.  The catalog paper is recyclable newsprint but you won’t want to recycle it too soon.  It’s full of information.  It’s hard to beat Fedco’s prices, especially if you place a group order with friends.  Group orders earn discounts based on order total. Don’t expect a quick turn around on your Fedco order.  Ordering is limited to specific times of the year because most of the folks who work at Fedco are at home working on their farms and homesteads.  Don’t wait to order until the last minute. It has always taken at least two weeks to get my order.  You’ll want to keep this in mind and plan accordingly. Fedco offers heirloom, hybrid, open pollinated, organic and eco seeds.  Eco is their label for non-certified organic seeds.

Pinetree Garden Seeds is located in New Gloucester.  This company is a seed supplier.  Pinetree purchases seeds from all around the world.  One section in Pinetree’s catalog is devoted to container gardening, a method of growing that will work well in small yards.  The number of seeds per packet is large enough to supply a home gardener without there being so many you’d have seeds to store for the following year.

Allen, Sterling and Lothrop’s website provides information needed to successfully plant your seeds.  Directions for direct seeding (directly in the garden) and starting seeds inside are given for each seed they offer. The directions include how many seeds you should plant per inch and the correct planting depth. They also include yield amounts such as 28 pounds of beans or 60 pounds of beets (no wonder that basket seems so heavy) per bushel. Allen, Sterling and Lothrop is located in Falmouth. Ordering through their catalog and website is simple.

There are more seed companies in Maine.  You can look for The Maine Potato Lady, Maine Seed Saver Exchange and at your local feed and hardware stores for more seed choices.

Next month I’ll give you suggestions on what to do with the winter squash and rutabagas put away for the winter. Mine will be showing signs of decay by the first of February.

Diplomat broccoli seedlings

Vegetable Seedlings

The seedlings from seeds I started a few weeks ago are ready to be separated and moved to individual containers. These plants will be transplanted into a high tunnel next month with the possible exception of the leeks. They’ll probably go into a low tunnel outdoors. The plants are under grow lights during the day. I turn the lights on when I get up and off before going to bed. I’ll write a How-To as I work with the seedlings this afternoon.

Bush slicer cucumber

Great for containers

Astia zucchini is great for containers and small spaces.

Astia zucchini, small enough for containers and small spaces.

little jade cabbage

Little Jade cabbage from Renee’s Garden

Butterhead lettuce

Butterhead lettuce from Renee’s Seeds

diplomat broccoli

Diplomat broccoli

opalka tomato

Opalka paste tomato

tatsoi kale

Tatsoi on the left, kale with fringed edges on the right

Bleu de Solaize leeks

Bleu de Solaize leeks

snow pea, pea pod, when to plant peas

When to Plant Peas in Zone

When to plant peas in zone….pick a number. Here’s an important rule to remember:

Never (never, seriously) plant anything (anything, I mean it) based on the USDA Hardiness Zone. Ever. Here’s why.

THIS is the information you need.

We’re going to assume for today’s How To that your soil has been prepped and ready to go. Peas are a cool weather crop so they can be planted early. There’s no need to wait until after the average last frost date. You can use a meat thermometer to check the soil temp.

  • Start planting as soon as the soil temp warms to 45* as long as…
  • …as long as the soil is well drained. If you can squeeze water out of the soil or it stays in a ball when you squeeze it, it’s too wet. Wait for it to drain.
  • Plant each seed about 1″ deep and 2″ apart. Don’t fuss with measurements. Peas aren’t that fussy.
snow pea, pea pod, when to plant peas

Snow pea pod with blossom

Don’t worry if there’s snow in the forecast. It don’t usually last long if the soil is already 45*. Multiple nights in the teens* can be hard on peas so I suggest covering them if possible.

I plant my fall peas in early July. The first expected frost is around the middle of September here. Frost won’t hurt them. Peas produce best in cool weather. The summer heat won’t hurt production as long as it’s starting to cool down at night by the time the pods are forming.

1020 tray, seed starting

Seed Starting

I’ve started a few seeds here and there but nothing remarkable. Steve brought in a 3.8 cu ft bale of ProMix for me yesterday (I have an arm in a sling, limited in what I’m supposed to do.) before he left for a snowmobile ride. My plan: fill all of the trays, pots and six packs I’d need, soak them and let them set while I sorted seeds, then get all of the seeds planted before he got home. Then I’d clean up the mess since I’m doing this in the kitchen rather than the roofless greenhouse (Thanks Nemo, you sucked.) and be ready to cook supper when he got home.

My accomplishment was sorted seeds and this:

1020 tray, seed starting

1020 tray. It’s 10″ x 20″ inches.

One 1020 tray with 3/4″ of ProMix and two kinds of seeds. The ProMix, stored in the roofless greenhouse where no heat collects, was frozen solid. The bale is shrink wrapped with heavy plastic making the bale solid. It took two hours for the top of the bale to thaw. I planted Revolution bell peppers and Opalka paste tomatoes and called it good. I retreated to the couch to read. Steve brought the stand in this morning. I put cardboard down as an insulator underneath the heating pad.

High tunnel

The seedlings will be transplanted into one of the high tunnels.

The bale has thawed and ready to be used this morning. Steve is ice fishing on a new pond and I’m playing in the dirt…I mean I’m starting seeds. I have a long list of what I’m starting today but most of them will have only a few seeds. It’s too early to start them for outdoors planting as we’re still three months from the last average frost date. These seedlings will be transplanted into high tunnels in mid to late April, depending on the amount of sun we get and the temperatures.

Here’s the list and a little info on some of the varieties.

Opalka  (paste tomato) and Revolution  (bell pepper) are in one tray. I need more than a few of these plants, and they both benefit from a heating pad. The seedlings don’t look alike so I won’t confuse them. I can’t put two kinds of tomatoes in one tray; I screw up when I’m transplanting to six packs and mix them up every single time if I start them together.  “A butterfly! ummm….what end of the tray did I pluck this from?”

Butterfly Rudbeckia Cappuccino

Photo by Renee’s Garden. Butterfly Rudbeckia Cappuccino.

Unless noted, seeds came from Fedco. For full disclosure, all seeds from Renee’s Garden were sent to me as a media package. They give me seeds, I write about them. I don’t give them my approval just because they were given to me. If I didn’t like them I’d say so.

*Johnny’s Seeds
**Renee’s Garden

  • Bleu De Solaize Leek  A lot of people start them in January or February. I don’t like cutting them back several times before transplanting outdoors. It will be late April or early May before they can be transplanted. I’ll direct seed in a high tunnel later this week and compare production at the end of the season. New to me.
  • Little Jade. Baby Napa cabbage. ** Seeds from last year’s media kit.
  • Diplomat broccoli *
  • De Cicco broccoli (48 days, it will be out of the high tunnel before the hottest summer heat)
  • Kolibri purple kohlrabi
  • Shuko pac choi (A favorite for stir fry)
  • Tatsoi
  • Kale Mix (I’ll start more in the summer for fall transplanting into a high tunnel for the winter)
  • Snow Crown cauliflower. Cauliflower is a little more tender than the other brassicas. It will be fine with the warmth of the tunnel, and will be out in about 50 days before it’s too hot inside. *
  • Rhapsody butterhead lettuce. ** I’ll direct seed leaf lettuces later in the week. **
  • Brush Stroke pansy. Pansies are some of my favorite flowers. I’ll move the seed tray to the high tunnel in a week or so. They prefer cool weather.  New to me.
  • Helen Mount Johnny Jump Up. Also being moved to the tunnel. I’ll randomly plant these around the homestead. They’re self-seeding perennials.
  • Starlight echinacea ** Left from last year. I tried some, like them and used the last of the seed today.
  • Cappuccino rudbeckia. ** Left from last year.
  • Broadleaf Sage
  • Greek Oregano **
  • Lavender Hidcote **
  • Lemon Balm
  • Panorama Red Shades bee balm
  • Bush Slicer cucumber. ** Great in containers. The first cucumbers I picked last year were these, grown in a hanging basket on the back porch.
  • Astia Zucchini ** A bushy plant great for containers and small spaces.
  • Super Bush tomato. **Another container plant. Super Bush survived three frosts last year. The leaves looked terrible in the morning and just fine by noon. Nice slicing tomato, determinate that maxed out at 3′ tall. The stems are thick and strong, needs little staking. I put one dowel in the container.
  • Chianti Rose tomato. ** An heirloom. It’s a big “beef stake” type. It will be grown clipped to twine in the high tunnel. It maxes out at 7′ so I won’t be chasing it to the 13′ peek to drag it back down.  New to me.
  • Stupice tomato. ** Another heirloom. It is early, cold tolerant and great for containers. New to me.
  • Juliet tomato. My garden wouldn’t be complete without Juliet. It’s the first tomato to ripen. Juliet is a grape. It’s excellent eaten alone, dehydrates well, and is my fantastic in sauce. I wish there were a large paste tomato that tasted exactly like Juliet. It’s wild, suckers like crazy and will grow to 20′ long in the high tunnel if I let it. It’s worth the work. I’ll climb the ladder to grab the top and bring it back down to clip to twine.
  • Sunset Mix sweet peppers. ** Heirloom. “…elongated plump peppers are perfect for pizza, salads or roasting.”
  • Early Jalepeno. I’m not a hot-food person…but I’m starting to appreciate it. I can eat a Jalepeno popper now. A few years ago I wouldn’t try one. I like these best when they’re red. The plants branch out and reach 4′ to 5′ tall in the tunnels. I have to stake them to keep them upright.

I didn’t start a lot of seeds today. They fit on two shelves on the plant rack. I’ll start the majority of the seeds on April 1. Direct seeding in the garden depends on the weather. The ground is usually dry enough by late April. Remember, when the package says “as soon as the soil can be worked” you should be planting those seeds. Soil that “can be worked” doesn’t drip water when squeezed in your hand. I’ll talk more about that later, and about seeds I plant while there’s still frost in the ground.

I’m going to give away some of my favorite seeds. I’ll have Juliet tomatoes, Ministro cucumbers (49 days to maturity!) and a few others. Watch for a blog about it later this week.

New in the Garden This Year

Nothing improves my mood when an Arctic cold front moves in better than putting together the seed order. I’ve looked at the Fedco Seeds catalog several times in the weeks since it arrived in my mailbox. The first thing I look for when I open the pages is the list of new varieties. Variety keeps the garden interesting. It isn’t often that a new-to-me variety will replace an old-time favorite but it happens now and then.

slicing cucumber

Cucumbers growing up strings in the high tunnel.

With the poultry settled in and enough firewood lugged to last a day, I started marking the catalog with red pen.

First up in the New This Year category is Ministro. It’s a slicing cucumber that made me take a second look. Forty-nine days. 49? That’s three weeks earlier than my go-to slicer, Marketmore. It’s monoecious, meaning it has male and female flowers. It can be grown in the high tunnel without adequate pollination being a concern. Can this get any better? Yes. It’s thin skinned. It will damage easier than Marketmore but it’s a good trade off. I’ll be careful when I put them in the basket. And there’s more. Ministro is hardy. I expect it to tolerate cool fall weather and continue producing into October.

To keep Minstro producing so late in the season I’ll transplant seedlings into the tunnel in July. Cucumbers have a tendency to wear themselves out. If this isn’t a great tasting cucumber I am going to be very disappointed.

Zucchini is one of my favorite veggies on the grill. It’s also a favorite of the chickens, ducks and turkeys. Golden Arrow sounds like it’s going to solve the problem of too many overgrown zucchini going to the birds. This variety grows on an “open” plant; it doesn’t have dense leaf cover to hide the vegetable.

Golden Arrow needs 46 days to maturity. Transplanting seedlings that have their first true leaves will take a week or so off that time.  Plants average 10 zucchini. It lacks the gourd gene that makes zucchini bitter. The only downside I see is a mention of it being susceptible to squash bugs.

Eastern Rise winter squash is on my list. It’s under my 100 days to maturity limit without season extenders needed, and it grows in cool conditions. Flavor develops long after harvest, not until December, but it holds in storage through February according to the description. We eat a lot of winter squash soup. Eastern Rise sounds like it might give butternuts a bit of competition with its nutting flavor.

Bleu de Solaize leeks were on my list of things to grow once before. If I remember right, I killed them by missing the tray when I watered seedlings. I’ve thought about them off and on since and decided this is the year to try again. I’ll start the seeds in early February and transplant them into the north corner of the high tunnel. It’s coolest in that corner. They’re supposed to do well in cool ground. At 110 days to maturity, they’ll need the extra time.  Bleu  de Solaize is a French hairloom with a fat, medium long shank. I’ll start some of the seed later and transplant them to the main garden outdoors with the intention of over wintering under straw. This variety is a good storage leek.

Last on the list from Fedco is Rossa di Milano onion. Redwing is back ordered until later after the time I need to start the seed so I’m trying Rossa. It needs 114 days to reach maturity. It tolerates a cool climate so I’ll transplant the seedlings out as soon as possible.

This is a red onion that is either sweet or medium hot depending on where you read the information. It sounds interesting. It’s shaped like a buttercup squash without a button. The top is flat and is four to five inches across.

 

Tops that don’t fall over should be pushed down. It’s slow to dry so it will probably have to have some time on a wire bench in a high tunnel. Rossa di Milano is a long-term storage onion which is good news as we eat a lot of onions.

 

Now that the cold front has moved out and the temperature is our typical mid-20’s during the day, I’ve put the catalogs away. We’re ice fishing (great fishing) and getting ready to prune the apple trees. I need to snowshoe into the woods to look for an apple tree Steve found last year, and see if it needs work.

boc choi dill seedlings

Fedco Seeds Order 2013

Here’s the 2013 Fedco Seeds order. I order the majority of my seeds from Fedco for several reasons.

  • It’s a cooperative, not a conglomerate
  • Monsanto
  • They buy from/support small seed growers, some of them Fedco staff
  • Maine business: local starts at the beginning, not at the grocery store.
  • Staff is wonderful. And funny. Helpful, informative and are folks who are just like me and maybe you
  • Best prices I’ve ever seen, and I’ve looked at hundreds (some repeats, different years) of catalogs in the last 25 year

I’ll eventually move some of this list into new blog entries. One will be varieties that are new to me, seeds I’ll plant in February and March in the high tunnels, varieties I grow only in high tunnels, and who knows what else might cross my mind.

boc choi dill seedlings

Boc choi and dill seedlings

This isn’t a complete list of everything I’ll grow this year, it’s just the order from Fedco. I’ve ordered from Renee’s Garden (A media kit so I’ll be writing about that order, too.) and will order from Johnny’s (which is not owned by Monsanto). I have some seeds in stock.

204 – Provider Bush Green Bean
265 – Indy Gold Bush Wax Bean
577 – Fleet Bicolor Sweet Corn
680 – Painted Mountain Ornamental Corn
710 – Coral Shell Pea
818 – Oregon Giant Snow Pea
1234 – Cross Country Pickling Cucumber
1302 – Ministro Slicing Cucumber
1407 – Golden Arrow Zucchini
1504 – Saffron Summer Squash
1611 – Zeppelin Delicata Winter Squash
1633 – Eastern Rise Winter Squash
1655 – Blue Hubbard Winter Squash
1672 – Galeux dEysines Winter Squash
1687 – Waltham Butternut Winter Squash
1702 – Wee-B-Little Pumpkin
1710 – Diablo Pumpkin
1713 – Lumina Pumpkin
1716 – Jarrahdale Pumpkin
1718 – Winter Luxury Pumpkin
1719 – New England Pie Pumpkin
1727 – Rouge Vif d’Etampes Pumpkin
1740 – Cheese Pumpkin
2108 – Early Wonder Tall Top Beet
2310 – Harris Model Parsnip
2378 – Purple Top White Globe Turnip
2398 – Laurentian Rutabaga
2425 – Bleu de Solaize Leek
2447 – Whitewing Onion
2490 – Rossa di Milano Onion
2498 – Walla Walla Sweet Spanish Onion
2510 – Space Spinach
2728 – Red Salad Bowl Lettuce
2980 – Lettuce Mix
3220 – Tatsoi
3260 – Shuko Pac Choi
3303 – Tendergreen Broccoli
3338 – Falstaff Brussels Sprouts
3352 – Golden Acre Cabbage
3375 – Ruby Perfection Cabbage
3410 – Snow Crown Cauliflower
3469 – Kale Mix
3471 – Kolibri Kohlrabi
3764 – Early Jalapeno Hot Pepper
3837 – Revolution Sweet Pepper
4135 – Opalka Paste Tomato
4207 – Juliet Tomato
4418 – Genovese Basil
4530 – Bouquet Dill
5152 – Helen Mount Johnny-Jump-Up
5211 – Crackerjack Mix African Marigold
5305 – Brush Strokes Pansy
5355 – Carnation Rose Poppy

Self-Seeding Vegetables Bring Yearly Rewards

Originally published in Lancaster Farming on May 26, 2012

 

Self-seeding vegetable seedlings have been a nice surprise in my garden each spring.

Most gardeners who have grown tomatoes have missed one or two during fall clean-up. When that happens, you’ll find a clump of seedlings commonly called “volunteers.” If the volunteer seedlings are offspring from hybrid plants, you won’t get the variety of the parent plant. If you start with heirloom varieties, also known as open-pollinated varieties, and keep them from cross pollinating, your volunteer seedlings will be the same as the parent plant.

This spring I have beautiful red lettuce seedlings in the grass in front of a high tunnel. I don’t know what they are but it’s pretty. I hope they taste good because the lettuce I planted in rows has been eaten by slugs.

Onions, leeks and scallions (alliums) are easy to let reseed. These are biennials that will overwinter, break dormancy in the spring and put their energy into producing seeds. The flowers are beautiful in shades of white, pink and purple. They require little care other than weeding and watering.

The seeds are located in the flowers. When they’re almost dry and ready to collect, bend the stem over a bag or bowl and tap them in. You can sow the seeds in the fall to give the seedlings a head start, or wait until spring.

I let my onions grow where they fall and thin as needed. They do well in the spot they’re growing so I leave them there year after year. Each spring I amend the soil with a high nitrogen fertilizer and let them do their thing.

Beets are another biennial that will self-seed if the beet root survives the winter. I let one or two overwinter in a high tunnel. The plants get big and fall over so they’re in the way. But for a short time, I don’t mind stepping around them. The beets I’m growing become woody when they’re 3 inches in diameter. They’re hardy and germinate while the ground is still cold. They make tasty pickled beets.

Radishes are one of the simplest vegetables to self-seed. The radish root will probably split as the seed stalk begins to grow. Don’t pull the radish, it will be fine. The flowers are small and pretty. They stand out in the garden and attract pollinators. Each pod on the stalk has seeds. The pods are edible and taste a little milder than the root. Leaves are edible, too. They’re great in salads. You can shake shake the seeds onto the ground, pull the spent plant for the compost pile, and the seeds grow. I haven’t found that any of the varieties of radishes I grow need cold stratification.

Pumpkins, zucchini and squash are my favorite self-seeders. It’s fun to watch them grow and figure out what the parents might be and what they’ll look like, how big they’ll be and whether they’ll taste good. If they aren’t worth eating, they’re at least an interesting fall decoration.

Cross pollination occurs between varieties in the same species. It took me weeks of carrying around a cross between a zucchini and a winter squash and asking, “Do you know what this is,” before someone had an answer. Until then I had no idea the two could cross.

Cucumbers will self-seed if you leave them on the vine to ripen. We pick them when they’re long and slender and typically green when we’re going to eat them. If you want to let them self-seed or want to save seeds, let a cucumber grow. It will turn from green to yellow and possibly to orange depending on the variety. This is the third year I have seedlings resulting from the original seeds I planted two years ago.

Carrots are biennials I let self-seed, but it’s a longer process than the other plants I use. The plant resumes growth, sends up the seed stalk, flowers and is pollinated, and the seeds are collected from the flower. I tend to forget about them, my enthusiasm for seed collecting waning later in the season. I’m seldom disappointed when a hybrid reverts back to the parent until it’s a carrot. They’re good, but they’re not as sweet as I like.

If you want quick results, start lettuce now, don’t cut it and let it go to seed. You’ll have seedlings by fall.

Good luck!

Extending Your Homegrown Harvest

Originally published in Lancaster Farming on April 14, 2012

Do you remember spending several days on a project, cutting pictures out of magazines and gluing them to poster board?

You carefully wrote a caption under each picture, trying very hard to not make a mistake so that you didn’t have eraser marks on your poster. There were hours spent pouring over “three sources” for information, and properly citing those sources.

I remember a lot of these projects. By the time I was done, my projects were so big I either struggled to take them on the school bus, or my mom felt a little pity for me and drove me to school.

It’s not like that anymore, unfortunately.

In spite of making a lot of changes in text, there were no eraser marks on my presentation. I served as my own source. I missed the paste and glue, Mum’s old magazines and a pair of scissors, colored pencils and Magic Markers.

I spent several days learning how to use PowerPoint, browsing through folders of my digital photos, taking new photos, resizing said photos, and inserting them into a PowerPoint presentation.

When I finished the 21st century version of cutting and pasting, I had a presentation called “Extend Your Homegrown Harvest — Grow Your Own Veggies February to December.” It was a little bit disappointing. Seven megs of information should require more space than a folder on a thumb drive.

It was worth my time and energy and, in the end, turned out to be a pretty good presentation, if I do say so myself.

Last Saturday I gave my presentation to a fantastic audience at the Bangor Garden Show. I was surprised by the number of people who came to see the show. I have wonderful family and friends who came out to support me and lots of people who were interested in learning how to get a head start on the growing season.

They took notes on the back of my handout and in notebooks they brought with them. One person dozed off while I was speaking, but she was awake and taking notes when I looked in her direction a few minutes later.

I started out with the big stuff — high tunnels — and compared the snow outside Feb. 7 with what it looked like inside with spinach growing, bare ground and beds ready to plant. The additional warmth and lack of snow give overwintering plants a tremendous head start.

We moved on to smaller hoop houses, more appropriate for a backyard garden and much easier to build. You can grow anything in a hoop house that can be grown in a high tunnel. We looked at the “skeleton” of a hoop house made with PVC conduit to see how simple a hoop house can be.

Neighbors joined the ribs to the purlins and ridge pole using wire ties, then wrapped the connection with duct tape to keep the ties from rubbing holes in the greenhouse poly. It’s important that everyone see how simple this really can be.

For those looking for a smaller project because of size, need or zoning restrictions, I brought 10-foot pieces of electrical conduit bent into ribs that are 4 feet and 6 feet wide and no more than 4 feet tall. These sturdy ribs can be stuck into the ground to stand on their own or clamped to the frame of a raised bed for additional stability. A line of these ribs, placed 3 to 4 feet apart, form a low tunnel. Low tunnels are covered by spunbond material or greenhouse film.

I seriously thought about bringing pre-cut boards, brackets, screws and a cordless screwdriver so that I could build the frame for a raised bed. Now that it’s over, I wish I’d done it. It would have been a great way to show everyone how easy season extension can be.

Build the frame, fill it with soil and compost, plant. The soil in a raised bed warms earlier than that in a flat garden. If you add a low tunnel over it, you can extend the season by a month on each end of the growing season.

If you add a cover to a raised bed, you’ll have a cold frame. Cold frames are great for seed starting, overwintering plants, growing in the ground and in pots. Cold frames and raised beds can be any size that suits your needs. I recommend making them no wider than 4 feet, so that you can reach the center of the frame or bed from both sides.

I hope everyone found something useful in the presentation. I certainly learned a lot while putting it together.

Bangor Garden Show

It’s almost time to leave! I don’t speak until 5 pm but need enough time to walk through the displays and vendors and see some of the demos. The Power Point presentation is on a thumb drive in my pocketbook, hoops are leaning against the Jeep, props are waiting to be loaded into a bag and, oh wait! I can’t forget that thing that most of us keep in the fridge. It’s one of the simplest, most productive tools in season extension…

After The Rain Farm

Robin Follette
Previously Published in Lancaster Farming newspaper.

ALEXANDER, Maine — Route 9 is a busy highway. It’s the main route used by chip and log trucks traveling to and from Woodland Pulp and 18-wheelers carrying goods to eastern Maine. Canadians on their way to Bangor use Route 9, as do the majority of tourists entering and leaving the area.

A few miles before Route 9 meets U.S. Route 1 in Baring sits a small farm. It’s out of sight for most drivers traveling 60 to 70 miles per hour. If you know it’s there, you might catch a glimpse of a low tunnel through the trees on your way by.

The Carters move the cover off a pod they use for season extension.

Just when you think you must have gone past it, the driveway to After The Rain Farm appears. You drive past a neighbor’s home and follow the driveway away from the busy highway and into a different world. The noisy trucks are barely heard. The wide road is replaced with a narrow gravel driveway, soft in spots because of recent snow and rain. On the right, those low tunnels you might have seen from the road are protecting a very early planting of peas, cabbage and kale. Nearby, apple and pear trees, grapevines and strawberry plants are waiting for spring. Spring is about a month late this year. They grow a variety of vegetables, fruits, herbs and flowers.

After The Rain Farm is home to Ted and Liz Carter. They’ve lived here since 1979. Liz is an artist and homeschooled their two children. Ted taught first grade for 31 years before retirement.. They started a “full service” CSA in 1996.

“We let ourselves into homes, put food on the counter and in the refrigerator and flowers in the vase,” said Ted.

“At the time, CSA was enough for us,” Liz said.

Ted was still teaching. The CSA worked well for them through 2003, when they decided it was time for a change. That year, they operated the CSA and became vendors at Sunrise County Farmers Market in Calais.

“The market in Calais was doing well and we wanted to support it as it was growing,” Ted said.

A cold frame is used to extend both ends of the growing season.

After a year of running the CSA and attending a farmers market, it was time to make a decision.

“We liked CSA, but we can’t do both. We were stretched too thin,” said Liz. Ted still had a full-time teaching job at the time, so they decided to stay with the farmers market. They returned to the market in Calais in 2004, but took 2005 off when Liz was diagnosed with breast cancer. The Carters returned to the farmers market in 2006 and are still there. In 2010 they became members of Machias Valley Farmers Market, their second market.

“Machias has been very accommodating,” Ted said. “It’s open Friday and Saturday. We’re there on Friday because it works with when we have vegetables to pick. We’re usually the only ones there. People stop on their way to Hannaford (grocery store) and get what they want. Then they pick up the rest at Hannaford. The customers are dependable.

“We’re limited to two markets because it takes so much time to pick and clean the vegetables. We’ve upped our production by 50 to 60 percent to add the Machias market,” Ted said.

The Carters enjoy farmers markets very much. They both went to market in the beginning, but soon realized one of them needed to stay home to work in the garden. Liz continued to attend the market, while Ted worked in the garden.

“Farmers market is like a garden party. You get to hear other people’s stories. They tell you about their gardens. It’s a sense of community. People are visiting while they’re waiting in line,” she said. Ted goes to market now. “He’s good at sales,” Liz said.

“I enjoy the personal interplay at market,” Ted said. “I’m a social being. It’s gratifying to know people are eating our food.”

Ted and Liz work together as well as separately in their day-to-day farm work. “We dovetail,” said Ted. He organizes seeds, chooses most of the varieties, starts seeds, manages succession planting and works outside in the garden and high tunnels. Seed starting begins in late February or early March. The last succession is seeded in August. They work together when needed.

Liz adds and deletes varieties on the seed list depending on their popularity and how well they produce. She tends to watering the seedlings. “She’s the one who notices what’s happening,” Ted admitted. “She notices plant health and pests.”

Liz laughed and added, “I’m the one who comes in and says, Oh my God! Did you see the potato bugs or the flea beetles or the sick plants or whatever I find going on.”

Ted retired at the end of the school year in 2009. “Our customers made it easier to retire,” he said. “They told me how much they loved our vegetables and how good they taste. There’s a lot of gratitude.”

Liz and Ted have found a rhythm in working together. “I don’t go into Liz’s world,” Ted said, smiling. “She grows the herbs and flowers. I don’t know what they are. I was pulling them up when I was weeding.”

Liz no longer interplants herbs and flowers in the vegetables. “I’d plant something and go back to check on it and it would be gone. He thought he was weeding,” she said.

Liz’s hard work in the herb and flower gardens shows even in mid-spring when few plants are growing. The farm is beautiful.

There are several challenges to face each year. Ted was quick to say the weather is the biggest challenge of all. If you don’t like the weather in Maine, wait a minute. It will change. In a two-hour span, the sky cleared a bit and the sun peeked out. That was soon followed by heavy rain, a temperature drop that brought heavy snow and then a steady sleet that pelted the poly covering the high tunnel.

Liz planted the first seeds on March 31, the day before the April Fool’s Day nor’easter. They placed low tunnels over the rows to give the seeds protection and a little added warmth. Steam escaped the low tunnel recently when they pulled back the cover to show rows of 1-inch-tall seedlings.

Season extenders are used to start the growing season in late March and continue into May. By November, they’re ready for a winter break. The greenhouse used for seed starting is attached to their home. They harden plants off in cold frames they’ve built. There are high tunnels and solar pods in use.

The soil is another challenge. They have a small mountain of aged horse manure that would make any gardener envious.

“There’s never enough compost,” said Liz. “We’re always working to improve the soil.”

In addition to the aged manure and compost, they use cover crops and foliar sprays of compost tea and an amendment called MPM from Lancaster Agriculture Products in Pennsylvania.

“Cancer made us step it up,” Liz said. “The soil will help heal us.”

“We’re dependent on the top 6 inches of soil,” Ted said. “We have to take care of it. If not, we’re in trouble. So we make the soil the best we can.”

“Two markets is perfect,” said Ted. “A week between markets is too much. The beans get too big, so we pick them and drop them right there on the ground. A second market a week means nothing goes by. We’re at our limit now with two markets.”

There’s room to expand the gardens. After a working visit last year from Mark Fulford, a soil scientist, they have started using strip tilling in a new area. They’re expanding the barn to build an apartment on the top floor to provide residence for two interns, preferably a couple. They’re hoping interns, or possibly journey people, will like the area and want to stay at the end of their internship.

“A motivated couple could start their own garden here and add a third market a week,” Ted said.

The apartment will be ready by the beginning of the 2012 season. The Carters are eager to share their knowledge of growing and love of farmers market.

Let the season begin!

Let the season begin! The growing season – not spring. Spring refuses to begin. Just when the ground was alllllllllmost bare, it snowed. The snow won’t go away. That’s ok though (I keep telling myself this). There are greens growing in the high tunnel and seedlings under lights in the house. Something’s growing!

In trays, six packs and 5 x 5′s:

  • Tomatillos
  • Peppers – Jalepeno and Revolution
  • Broccoli – Arcadia (using old seed to experiment with early planting times under Agribon and 6 ml poly low tunnels)
  • Tomatoes – something similar to Big Beef whose name I can’t remember and am too lazy to look for, Juliette, Sun Gold, Jet Star, Super Bush (container)
  • Herbs – German thyme, Greek oregano, lemon balm, sage
  • Flowers for the new gardens – Veronica, Bee Balm, Victorian Posy, Bergamot, French lavender, Pixie Sunshine Zinnia (container)
  • Greens – tatsoi, boc choi, Swiss chard
  • Little Prince Eggplant (container)

Some of the plants I’ve chosen for flowers are herbs.

The peppers, tomatoes and tomatillos are going to be planted in the two larger high tunnels. The greens will be under low tunnels. The flowers and herbs will be moved into bigger pots as necessary until they’re planted outside. It’s a pretty good start. The rest of the seeds that are started indoor will be seeded around the first of April.

The lettuce in the high tunnel is tough. I’m going to pull it on my next tunnel work day. The tatsoi looks like it might bolt soon. The boc choi, kale and lettuces are doing well.

If you have spring, please share!

The Start of the 2011 Season

When I said I hadn’t posted much because there’s only so much to say and repeating it would be boring (or something like that), many of you messaged to say you’re not bored. So, here we go again. It’s the start of 2011. Things are different here this year. The only thing I’m going to do on the borrowed acre of land up the road is find out what the owners would like planted for a cover crop. I’m one woman. I can’t do it all.I don’t want to do it all. I’m over it.

Everything will be grown here on one acre. I have three main goals this year:

  1. Get as early a start outside as possible in order to have a bit to sell to locals. The freezes in Florida and Mexico are causing fruit and vegetable prices to soar. I wasn’t going to do this but I feel like it’s something I need to do.
  2. Put up enough fruits and vegetables to last my family 18-24 months. I’m at the mercy of the weather, as always. The weather is so bizarre now that I want extra put away in case 2012 is as  unpredictable. My sister won’t be having a garden this year so I’ll be growing for her too.
  3. Grow enough extra for one school for the Farm To School program in the fall.

If I have extra in the summer I’ll sell it. I’ll be selling seedlings but not nearly as many as in previous years.

In between all of this I have a bi-weekly column and occasional report to write for Lancaster Farming.

It’s supposed to be 30*+ on Wednesday and Thursday this week. I’ll be in the tall tunnel Wednesday and the long tunnel Thursday. I’m waiting a few days to decide what I’ll be doing on Friday.I hope the potential snow turns out to be sunny and warm.

Coming up – a 2011 To Do list, info on a couple of workshops I’ll be teaching and an update on Ava.

Garden Problems

UNCLE!

I surrender.

I am only one woman.

One.

Just one.

I work alone.

Mother Nature is kicking my ass. She has an army. She has insects like flea beetles and striped cucumber beetles. She has diseases like late blight that flies in on the wind before early blight arrives. That, Mother Nature, was just plain bitchy and I haven’t forgiven you for that one. Mother Nature has rain and she’s bi-polar (sorry, I don’t do PC) about it. One year she tried to drown me and the next she withheld rain so that me and my garden would dry out. Mother Nature has snow. Three winters ago she threw 10′ of snow at me and I fought back. I shoveled every bit of that damned snow. I cleaned out around two high tunnels and cleared the greenhouse. “Take that!” I yelled. Two winters ago we bought a big snow blower. “Bring it on!” I yelled. She withheld. This winter I said, “Whatever, but please be kind to the wildlife.” She’s mean. She dumped 16.5″ of snow on us on December 6 then 4″ of rain on December 13 (which was not a Friday). Roads washed out, people lost their homes and I offered fly fishing in the garden. Climate Change should have brought Midol for Mother Nature.

Last year DH said “You plant an acre in pumpkins and I’ll run the tiller over the top to take care of the weeds til the vines start to fill in.” He turned over the acre+ and I planted. And he didn’t go back up there for two months. By then it was too late. Weeds and lack of rain were too much. It’s hard enough keeping up with one acre of intensively grown vegetables by myself is enough. I need to plant a cover crop on the second acre this spring so that it’s in good shape if someone uses it.

I’m working out my plan for this year. I’m thinking about strip tilling. I see it in blogs I read. If I use this method this year I won’t be doing it quite the same way. Rather than tilling a strip in the grass I’ll be filling the strip with white clover.

I’m going to plant the acre and spend more time writing. I’m having a great time writing for Lancaster Farming. I’d like to spend some of my writing time with fiction. We’ll see.

I should get the poultry taken care of for the day. It’s going to snow soon. They need fresh food, water and straw. The rooster needs to be done away with (bastard attacked me Sunday night, off with his head!) but that probably won’t happen today, unless he comes after me again. After chores, I’ll switch laundry around, start the dishwasher, bake a few potatoes for fish chowder and settle in to sort through the notes and literature from yesterday’s trip to the Maine Ag Trades show. I have a lot of writing thanks to the show. Maine’s new commissioner of agriculture will be announced today. He seems like a good person for the job but it’s a shame Seth Bradstreet is being replaced. Seth did a great job. He listened to the small farmers and he had a plan in place to deal with Jack DeCoster when problems started coming up. Gov LePage didn’t ask me for an opinion but I wish he had! :)

Show ‘n Tell on the Homestead

Broad breasted white turkeys

Broad Breasted White Turkey

There’s not a lot of time for writing right now. How about some Show ‘n Tell?  Let’s start with the turkeys. They’re now 8.5 weeks old and growing like crazy. They live in a turkey tractor with a fenced in yard. When we move the tractor the turkeys get a brief chance to roam. They love dill and cabbage.

Juliette tomatoes, how to prune tomatoes

Juliette Tomatoes

sungold tomatoes, how to prune tomatoes

Sungold Tomatoes

I prune suckers from the tomato plants until they’re so high I can’t reach. The cherry tomato plants are 11-12′ tall now. It won’t be long before I’m picking the tomatoes on a step ladder.

Jet Star tomato, how to prune suckers

Jet Star Tomato, in need of pruning

Jet Star tomato, how to prune suckers

Jet Star tomato, how to prune suckers

I’ll spend the rest of today digging the garlic. I’m about a quarter of the way through. Tomatillos need to be picked and readied for delivery to Bank Square Pizza in Eastport. Bushels of tomatoes will be picked for pre-orders going out for delivery tomorrow morning. Fall planting has started. It won’t be long before it’s time to pull the tomato plants from the tunnels. I hate that day. Perfectly healthy plants will come out to make room for the fall/winter plants. I learned my lesson two years ago when I didn’t do it soon enough and didn’t have much growing in the tunnel that winter because plants didn’t establish themselves well before going dormant.

The pumpkin field is a failure. We haven’t had enough rain to keep the plants going. I’m thinking through some ideas on what to do next year. I’ll get it figured out.When I till it under I’ll plant a cover crop to help protect the soil and add a little green manure. It will most likely be winter rye and maybe a legume mixed in.

It’s time to turn under the spent beans. They finished up early this year because they started so early. I won’t have them for Farm To School. I’m doing a lot of shuffling for the schools for the first six weeks of the contract. Not fun. The last planting of broccoli is done and going under too. I’ll replant that field with broccoli, peppers, eggplant, etc. with winter rye as a cover crop.

I’m writing for Lancaster Farming now. I submitted the first article a few days ago. LF covers Maine to Virginia and is looking for more news in Maine. I’m VERY excited to be writing for them. I’ll do a little reporting and write a column. My winter plans are solid now that I have a new paying job!

A Cold Day on the Homestead

I’m cold. It’s cold. Moving between the warm greenhouse and the 39*, windy, cloudy outdoors makes me cold. So here I sit, with a cup of hot raspberry tea, doing something highly unusual these days – blogging. I’m good at blurbing but not so much at blogging anymore.  I spend a lot more time doing than writing this year, a most welcome change.

Friends came over last Thursday to help us cover high tunnel 2. It took 90 minutes to do both ends and the top, great time for a very windy day. Also on Thursday, the runner ducklings and buff orpington chicks arrived.

Tunnel 1 has been full of greens all winter. It’s between seasons now as I baby along spinach and tomatoes at the same time. The spinach is coming out this week. The peas, spinach, beet greens, various other greens and lettuces, radishes and turnip are up outside. The garlic looks great in tunnel 1 and outside but I’m not sure what will happen with the plants in the tunnel. The ground didn’t freeze. The plants look fantastic but when I poke around in the soil I don’t find any bulbs. I’m leaving it in and working around it until it’s time to be harvested.

Rhubarb is ready to cut. I’ll take strawberries out of the freezer for rhuberry jam and pie. I’ll freeze what I need and send the rest as it’s ready to a local restaurant. If the frost doesn’t kill the blossoms the next two or three mornings we should have a ton of cherries in late summer. The three trees are covered with blossoms. The apple trees are also covered.

I’ve started so many seedlings again this year that they’ve overflowed to high tunnel 3 plus an additional 190 six packs of cold crops outside on a bench. The second greenhouse isn’t going to be ready for use this year. Our to-do list is longer than usual and has more big projects than usual.

It’s not going to get warmer outside today so I suppose it’s time to go back out. It’s a 30 second walk to the tunnel…I probably won’t freeze between here and there…probably. :)

Updates

These are updates pasted in from the farm’s facebook page. It’s so easy to add a blurb in seconds over there that I’ve neglected the blog.

February 20
I hooked up 300′ of hose and watered the large high tunnel. I usually can’t use the hose until April because of the snowbanks on the north side of the house where the faucet is located. Love it! 40* and sunny. I had the door open to circulate air in the tunnel. Garlic’s up and doing well.

February 23
37* (unusually warm), snow, sleet, freezing rain, flog, rain and sunshine today. I set more traps in the newly planted tunnel today. Something’s digging holes in the freshly turned soil to find the seeds I planted. Voles? Mice? We’ll see.

February 24
I’m attending a Farm To Cook meeting this afternoon. Farmers and school cooks are getting together network and learn more about the Farm To School program. I’m very excited about this. This is our Kids Menu.

February 27
The Farm to Cook meeting was great. I’ll be working with a local elementary school and a university!

We registered for a high tunnel workshop to be held in late March.

March 1
Jetstar tomato seedlings; going into a high tunnel in April.

Boc choi and dill seedlings.

March 7

We’ll be at the Washington County Food Alliance meeting this afternoon. 1-4 pm @ Whitneyville Hillgrove Community Hall. Members of the Alliance represented us at the Hall of Flags in our state’s capital last week.

Washington County Food Alliance is working on building agricultural infrastructure in Washington County (Maine). Part of the problems food producers have are laws that make no sense. A farmer prepared this pamphlet for legislators at the Hall of Flags last week. It was waiting for them when they got to their desks Thursday morning. This link opens to a pdf file.
(note: Legislators were open to hearing about these bad laws. The juice law will be rewritten next year.)

March 11
The ducks started laying last weekend. Duck eggs are my favorite for baking. I found this snake skin amongst trays in the seedling house this morning. The 128 tray above this one wasn’t nestled in and left just enough space for a small snake to slide in. A 128 tray is a tray with 128 cells.

March 12
I picked up two more schools in the Farm To School program after a long conversation with the superintendent.

An Excellent Winter!

It’s an excellent winter to be a four season farmer. It’s warm! We’re regularly in the high 30*’s and 40*’s and some parts of the state are hitting 50* now and then. We have about 4″ of snow not counting the dusting we’re getting this morning. The largest high tunnel is planted and thanks to a small snowbank behind the house and warm temps, the seeds are well watered in. I ran 300′ of hose yesterday from the outside faucet to the tunnel and soaked everything. I’m normally not able to get to the outdoor faucet until some time in April. Once I patch a very large hole in the small tunnel I’ll fill it with beet greens. We could still get a lot of snow. March is typically our snowiest month. When it snows in March though we know it’s not going to last long.

I’m hoping to know the outcome of the high tunnel grant by the end of the week.

We spent a full day at a working retreat for Washington County Food Alliance last week. We got a lot accomplished and left with to-do lists and visions for the future for food producers in Washington County. I feel like we’re a lot more organized on one hand and beating our heads on the wall on the other hand. There’s so much to do to build farming infrastructure in this county.  Maine is a huge state. All of the other New England states would fit inside Maine’s borders. We have only 16 counties. Washington County covers a huge area. So much to do…

Steve is ice fishing with Jon today and Taylor’s still asleep. She’s been on vacation this week. She went to Bangor to the basketball tournament game for her high school’s boys team. They lost so that was the end of tournaments for them. She had an orthodontist appointment Thursday. Other than that, she’s been holed up at home working on one of her college classes and hanging out. Her employer is closed for the week so she’s had a real vacation.

The first of the tomato seedlings are up and growing.

This week brings a skipped school day to shop for a prom dress and shoes (being an awesome kid comes with advantages like a mom who lets you skip school and takes you shopping and out to lunch), a Farm To School meeting, a best friend’s birthday luncheon and sunshine. It’s a good week!

What a summer

I didn’t realize I hadn’t written in a month.

Seriously.  What a summer.   August was nice so what’s left of the garden is producing well. The tomatoes that haven’t been wiped out by late blight are doing well and ripening.  The potatoes didn’t fare as well. It killed all of them but I think they had a chance to produce well. We’ll see soon. I’ll start digging later in the week. The eggplant is gorgeous. (I started this several days ago, the Red Pontiacs are fine.)

The meat chickens are remarkable. They’re smart. Raccoons killed three the first night in their pen so we moved the chicks into a lobster crate and kept them on the sun porch over night. They quickly learned to come to the front of the pen and wait to be put in at night. In the morning they started flying up to the edge of the crate, jumping down and putting themselves in the pen.  They’re friendly. I wish my dumbass layers were this friendly. If the butcher will take them the meat birds are going out to be slaughtered. I remind myself every time I see them that they are not pets.  They’re always on the move and growing well. They came from Welp. I’ve been very pleased with their birds both times I’ve purchased them.

Three of the four coons have been trapped and killed. We have a male and two kits so far. The mother is still out there.  Nasty nasty animals.

Animal count : two bears, a  young moose that meanders through even if I’m outside, raccoons and the latest, coyotes that yapped 200 yards from the house. The coys were here two nights ago. The kitchen door was open and the screen door wasn’t locked. The dogs heard the coys and all three went after them. I didn’t hear them last night.  A flock of turkeys passes through but aren’t doing any damage yet. The poults are young and small for this time of year.  The bears have disappeared. Someone told me the problem bear was shot but I don’t know that it’s true. There are plenty of apples for them now so they shouldn’t show up again.

Taylor’s back in school and working. Her coarse load is wicked this year. She’s taking a college history course, trig, CP chem, honors English, advanced art and more. She’s making good money at Nook & Cranny. She earned enough to buy herself a very nice laptop that will be delivered tomorrow and more school clothes.  She’s an excellent shopper. She paid $106 for $262 worth of clothes from her favorite brand name.

We’re working on the new greenhouse. We’ll have ribs up and baseboards on this weekend.  I’m ordering baseboards and wiggle wire today.

I still love the tractor. Steve’s used it for some town work. He’s donating the equipment and his time to save the town some money.  I’m getting the weed seed bank under control and making the ugliness of this year’s growing season disappear.

I’ll be supplying a new wholesale customer next year. I no longer go to farmers market.  I have enough poly to make 1,250 sq ft of low tunnels for the winter.

I’m making the transition from full time farmer to full time writer several months earlier than normal. I usually spend six weeks writing full time in the winter. I’m doing that now. The first children’s book is waiting to be put into an envelope and sent to publishers. The weather is too nice to figure that out right now. The ten day forecast is incredible. Clear sky, warm to hot days, cool nights, low humidity.

A New Hoophouse!

I bought a 1600 sq ft hoophouse this afternoon.  When I called about it a few days ago I’d missed it by a couple of hours.  The seller kept my name and number just in case and fortunately for me, just in case happened.  It will be delivered in a few hours! This brings our covered space up to 2,800 sq ft (not counting the seedling house).  I think that might be enough.  I’ll spend part of next week planning what to plant, the layout and  crunching some numbers to see what I might be able to come up with for a true profit in the first year.  It will pay for itself easily. Here’s the ad:

Greenhouse is all disassembled at this time. Included in this package are the hoops, purlins, drive legs, Poly covering, poly pipe with watering drops, several wire top benches and an amount of concrete blocks for support of the benches.

With delivery included, $1,400.  I was expecting to pay $3,500 for 1,000 sq ft. As soon as the broccoli, cauliflower and cabbage are done I’ll pull the plants and we’ll start building.  It will go up as two houses rather than its original 88′ house.  I’ll fill the houses with cold weather greens for the winter and tomatoes and eggplant next summer.

We secured financing for a tractor right after it was sold yesterday.  It was sold pending financing.  Being able to say “I have cash” helped me get the hoophouse today.  I’m hoping the same sentence lands the tractor in a few days!