Category Archives: Greenhouse, high tunnel, hoop house

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.

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

seedlings, propagating seeds

Seedlings!

Most of the seeds I planted last Sunday are up. The leeks were hold overs from last year because they’re back ordered from Fedco. I’m running out of time so I tried it knowing they probably won’t germinate. Allium seeds lose viability fast. If the fresh seed doesn’t come today I’ll order from Johnny’s and have them Monday or Tuesday.

It’s 24*, windy and only partly sunny at 8:40 am. I look to my left to see the seedlings and remind myself that spring is coming.

seedlings, propagating seeds

These seedlings popped up over night.

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.

The 2013 To Do List

I had a klutzy moment last week. I’m not seriously injured by my left arm is hanging out in a sling for six more days (we’ll see…). I’m not supposed to be using my left arm “at all” by orders from my FNP. Typing one-handed is rough. I want to tell you about BOW’s Winter Skills weekend, my Cooking Wild Game class, a class I’ll expect to be teaching at the community college and a lot of food articles I have half-written, but for now I’m hunting and pecking at the keyboard. Here’s my 2013 To Do list.

  • Find that apple tree Steve saw in the woods a couple of years ago
  • put up a new tree stand?
  • Find a bear baiting site away from the house?
  • turn small high tunnel into grape arbor and support for long-vining gourds and pumpkins
  • plant bittersweet or kiwi at the garden shed
  • decorate garden shed
  • paint and put trim on garden shed
  • siding on back of barn; finish front of barn
  • siding on wood shed; finishing touches on metal roofing
  • new chicken wire on hen house pen
  • fence in softwood area for chickens or ducks; use cattle panels
  • replace gazebo at pond
  • prune lilacs
  • horseshoe pit
  • bean hole

I thought we’d be finished with the building projects at the end of last year.

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.

Thankfulness and Gratitude

At the end of the Thanksgiving weekend and beginning of the Christmas season, I have much to be thankful for.

It started with the makings of a Christmas wreath. It was 45* last Sunday afternoon. The air was still and the sky clear. I found a clean, empty grain bag in the shed and called to Ava, our English shepherd. “Let’s go tipping.” She, of course, knows nothing of tipping. She’s a dog. Ava is energetic and enthusiastic and will follow me anywhere. She’s a good companion in the woods. We walked to the back left corner of our open three acres of land, followed the grassy trail Steve keeps bush hogged, and onto another cleared trail. The second trail trail was made by a skidder in the winter of 1996/97 when our land, not ours at the time, was last logged. The ruts are deep and collect water, making small pools where wood frogs lay their eggs in the spring.

Ava explored while I walked from tree to tree, down the old rock wall that fell over long before we bought the land, snapping off the tips of balsam trees. I’m thankful for My Creative Diva’s interest in a how-to article on Christmas wreaths. This led me to thinking about the choice I made to give up market farming to pursue writing full time. It could have gone both ways, and thankfully it has gone well. I love what I do and I’ve had a good year. “Paying my dues,” is a phrase I’ve repeated many times in the past year. Without a college degree to prove my worth, I have to pay my dues. Mind you, I know a few college educated people holding writing degrees who can’t write a grocery list, but they’re worthy because they are educated. I’ve been paying my dues and I’m not for one second complaining. I’ve enjoyed the hard work.

Tipping is mindless work; snap the branch off in the right place with my right hand, pile tips on my left arm until I can’t balance them, place the pile on the ground. I go back to get them when I think I have enough to fill the grain bag. There’s a lot of peaceful time to think when I’m tipping.

I’m a little thankful that I miss being a market farmer. It means I enjoyed my work. I’m thankful that I still have two of the three high tunnels that I’ll continue to use to feed my family.

My land is nothing special, but at the same time, it is. I’m thankful that I can feed my family from my 45 acres. We have wild blackberries, raspberries and strawberries growing on our land. There aren’t a lot of any of them but I can make a batch of jam or jelly and eat the fruit fresh. The land supports cherry and apple trees that provide us with fruit, and apricot, peach and plum trees that will produce in a few years. I enjoy the wild mushrooms I pick each summer and fall. Snowshoe hare, partridge and bear give me opportunities to hunt on my own land. I can hunt for deer here but there are very few.

Even in dry years, my piece of land provides water. Natural springs dot a large portion of land close to the house. We can snowshoe to one particularly productive spring, lower a bucket through an opening in the four foot deep snow and pull up fresh, clean water.  We’d melt snow first, but I’m thankful for the option.

A large medical bill nagged at us soon after we bought the land. Steve borrowed a skidder. Talk about something to be thankful for—friends who have skidders and generously let us use one when needed. I learned to drive a skidder during the cedar cut. I’m thankful I didn’t hurt myself or break anything. I did turn the skidder into a unicorn when I drove over a 10′ log that somehow, through a series of magical moves as far as I can tell, speared itself to the front of the skidder and stuck up at an angle. Steve thought I’d probably driven the skidder enough and took over. I agreed. He cut cedar trees, sold them to a local sawmill and paid the bill in full.  Forty-two of our 45 acres are wooded. We can heat our home with wood from our woodlot if necessary.

Christmas wreath

This Christmas wreath has sprigs of cedar and pine wrapped in. It smells beautiful and will last well past Christmas day.

The balsam I harvest comes from wild trees I managed to supply the tons of tips I used to make thousands of Christmas wreaths. It’s been a good source of income at the end of the growing season, and one I can fall back on at any time. The cedar and pine I tuck into wreaths and the cones from the white pine trees I decorate with also grow here.

I’m thankful for all I’ve learned about nature here. I’ve learned wildlife tracks, habitat and habits. Dead trees provide homes for three kinds of woodpeckers that I can watch when they start peeking out of the tree in preparation for leaving the nest.

For our family and friends, our careers, the food on our table, warmth in our home, clothes on our backs, my 10 year old reliable vehicle, and the freedoms we’ve chosen, I am thankful.

Meat Chickens – Three Weeks Old

Ava’s charges, also known as the meat chicks, have been here for three weeks. They’ve grown from tiny yellow puffballs weighing in the neighborhood of two ounces to an average of 15 oz. Yes, I weighed a few. I was curious. They’re 20 days old as I write this and are growing well.

English Shepherd and Meat Chickens

Ava herds the chicks out of the tractor.

The chick starter I’m feeding the meat birds is powdery. I dislike it a lot but it’s the only starter available locally. By locally, I mean within 50 miles. The dust floats through the air and creates a film on everything in spite of the air purifier a few feet from the chicks’ bin. And, they stink. Before I had all of the newspapers under them changed they’d already pooped on the fresh papers. It was too cool at night to leave them outside. I’ve shuffled my poultry around to avoid a chicken and duck-killing skunk until I can catch it. Having the chicks in the barn wasn’t an option. I moved them to the enclosed sun porch.

Two days after moving them to the sun porch, I moved them to the small high tunnel. They’re outside all day every day with the exception of one rainy day. We got 4.5 inches of rain in 18 hours. During the day they chicks are on grass. They’re closed into the tunnel in late afternoon. They sun warms the tunnel. At sunset, I move them into the plastic bin, place the cover upside (so it can’t clip on and suffocate them) on top of the bin, and they’re toasty warm in the morning.

This is a lot of extra work. I probably should have ordered them a month earlier. Next year. I’ll remember this next year and avoid the constant chick shuffle.

At this point, extra work excluded, the chicks are still very easy to care for. I started with 26 and still have 25. The chick with black spots didn’t look good one morning and was dead a few hours later. It happens.

During the day I feed and water them, count them to be sure none have squeezed out, and walk away. These are meat birds. They’ll always be well cared for but they’re not pets. It’s important to be very clear in the difference between the barnyard hen that lays eggs and stays a few years, or maybe her entire life, and the birds that are here approximately eight weeks.

English Shepherd and Meat Chickens

Ava keeps the chickens safe from predators.

If you’re familiar with raising Cornish rock crosses or similar breeds in backyards, you’ve probably heard how gross, dirty, disgusting, fill-in-the-blank they are. I raised them that way the first year. I kept food and water in front of them all the time. They had room to roam but with unlimited food, they had no need to get up and move. They really were repulsive. The following year was better. I took their food away from them in the evening, leaving only their water. They were less disgusting. I made more changes the third year. I put up a portable fence around the tractor, opened the door and let them roam during the day. And roam they did because they were hungry. I fed them in the morning to help with morning chill. They were fed again in early evening to get them to go back into the tractor without having to be herded in by one of the farm dogs. They spent the day chasing grasshoppers, beetles and other insects. Just like “normal” chickens, they took dust baths. They behaved like the laying hens. I let them into the portions of the garden not being used. It’s a great set up. They scratched up grubs, ate weed seeds and deposited manure. As soon as they’re full feathered out, the tractor is moved to the garden when the soil is dry enough. They’re moved back to grass before rainy days.

Twenty five chicks have eaten 50 pounds of food in three weeks, plus whatever they’re finding on their own in the grass. They’re still too small to manage grasshoppers alone but a few chicks competing for the same one can catch it and pull it apart by fighting over it. It takes effort on their part but eventually the grasshoppers they catch become a meal.

Ava helps me in the evening by herding the chicks. She brings them to me to move into the bin for transfer to the high tunnel. She stays nearby and checks on them often during the day. When they’re old enough to be turned loose into a large area, she’ll spend several hours inside the fence with them. The rest of the day, she’ll be outside the fence to chase away hawks, eagles, late-migrating turkey vultures and anything else she thinks is a threat to her birds. I’ve corrected her twice for picking up uncooperative chicks to bring to me. She used to drag a mean rooster around by a leg when he didn’t cooperate. I stopped that habit but could see she was still tempted. He was mean so…well…off with his head. Problem solved then. I’ll probably have to remind her to “let it be” a few more times. She’s stubborn.

 

 

 

 

Revolution Pepper

Growing Peppers

One of my favorite foods in the garden is peppers. I don’t favor them because they’re one of my favorite things to eat. It’s just the opposite. When it comes to eating, peppers are okay. They don’t agree with me, something I try to not take personally. I love to grow them. There are so many shapes, flavors, uses, sizes and even colors that they never get boring. They aren’t fussy. Pepper seedlings don’t require drastic hardening off. Hold back a bit on water and move them outside to adapt to sun and breeze. Transplant them into the garden after the danger of frost passes. Peppers are more susceptible to cold early in the season than later, so don’t rush planting. Give them fertile soil, sufficient magnesium and calcium, water deeply once or twice a week, and let them grow.

We often have a killing frost in early September followed by several weeks of warm, frost-free weather. A sheet or other cover over the plants is usually enough to protect the plants from frost.

I always grow Revolution bell peppers. Their thick walls, heft and wide bottoms make them perfect for stuffing and freezing for winter meals. The pepper doesn’t disintegrate before the filling is thoroughly cooked. It’s excellent in salad, salsa and spaghetti sauce. If I’m using a bell pepper rather than a hot variety when I make and can spaghetti sauce, I choose Revolution. It holds its shape during the canning process. On the Scoville Heat Scale, Revolution is a 0. This one is not a hottie.

Revolution Bell Pepper

Revolution Pepper

Revolution requires approximately 72 days to maturity, a short amount of time for a mammoth sized pepper. Revolution is Phytophthora Blight and Bacterial Leaf Spot resistant. Grasshoppers and flea beetles like peppers but don’t seem to want to do enough damage to Revolution to kill the plants if you choose to avoid using pesticide.

Poblano pepper

Poblano

I was reminded last week of the heat some of the peppers I grow can pack. I weeded around and pulled a few Poblano peppers that had blossom end rot. I touched my finger to an open spot on the pepper and touched my finger to my tongue. Hot. Holy cow hot. I finished weeding the Poblanos then moved on to the Jalepenos and Serranos. I brushed a mosquito off my cheek. Instantly, my cheek stung. I hadn’t swatted the mosquito, just a light brush. I quickly realized the stinging sensation was burning. I’d been working with latex gloves to keep my hands from being burned while I worked with over 100 plants. My face didn’t have protection, and it did have a slight sunburn.

I raced back to the house, pulling my gloves off inside out as I ran. I soothed my skin with cool water, rosemary soap to break up the peppers’ oils, and aloe from an ancient plant I keep for such occasions. I will not make that mistake again. According to Scoville, Jalepenos are mild. They rate 2,500 to 8,000 units. I withhold water to my peppers. I want intense flavor for the Mexican recipes the peppers will be used in.

Serrano peppers

Serrano

Marilu Scott, owner of Bank Square Pizza/Mexcetera in Eastport, says it’s working. Marilu grew up learning to cook her authentic Mexican food from her grandmother. She said the Jalepenos are so hot they give her the hiccups. “That’s when something is hot.” I won’t be risking my mouth with the 10,000 to 23,000 unit Serranos I’m growing. I’m happy to grow them for friends but I’m too chicken to even touch my finger to a Serrano for a taste. I’ll base my judgment on my husband’s reaction.

The first of the hot peppers are ready to be picked. There are always a few that are two weeks ahead of the rest. I diced a small Jalepeno and stirred it into potato salad a few days ago. My husband and daughter love hot food so it was safe to not tell them about the pepper and wait for their reaction. It was a big hit. I’m going to try it with mac and cheese soon.

Jalepeno pepper

Jalapeno

We also like Jalepeno poppers. I don’t have a recipe for this one. It’s simple enough to use “this much” and “a little of that” when making poppers. I mix room temperature cream cheese with shredded Monterey cheese and a sprinkle of cumin. Use more shredded than cream cheese. Let the mixture set while you clean the peppers. Slice the tops off and scrape seeds out. Save the tops.

Stuff the peppers with the cheese mixture. If I’m doing a large amount of peppers I use a plastic bag fashioned into a pastry bag. When I’m making enough for one sitting I use a small spoon. “Glue” the cover back on using a bit of the cream cheese. I coat the poppers in bread crumbs before I bake them by dipping them into scrambled egg then rolling in spicy bread crumbs. If the peppers don’t hold the coating well, coat them again.

The seasoned crumbs I buy aren’t as flavorful as we like when we’re eating foods with big tastes so I add garlic and onion powder, a little paprika (another pepper) if I have it on hand, and dried oregano (all to taste).

Place the peppers on a lightly oiled baking sheet, spritz with olive oil and bake at 350 degrees for 30 minutes.

bobcat and jetstar tomatoes

Tomato Reviews

Tomato season should have some sort of national event. It’s cause for celebration. It takes months to get from the tiny seed to a ripe tomato. Planting, watering, transplanting to larger pots, transplanting into the garden, more water, weeding, staking and tying, pruning. It’s a lot of work. It’s worth it when that first tomato is ripe and ready to pick. This is the only time of year that I’ll eat tomatoes. I’ll wait, sometimes impatiently, for really good tomatoes.

Fedco offered new-to-me varieties this year. They sounded interesting. I’m always looking for something new to try in the garden to keep it interesting. I ordered the seeds and in the spring, transplanted a half dozen of each into the high tunnel.

Bobcat is a new favorite. This F-1 hybrid beef steak variety has a lot going for it. It’s an easy to control determinate that has done very well in the high tunnel. I wasn’t going to plant any tomatoes outside this year but had a few extras and plopped them in the ground. They’re not ripe yet but the sprawling plants are growing well. The tomatoes I’m picking average 8-10 ounces. The tomatoes are ripening evenly. I won’t need six plants next year. This variety, as is typical of determinates, is producing a lot of ripe fruit at once. They’re so prolific that I used them in the stewed tomatoes I made and canned over the weekend. A slice and a half is all you need to cover a sandwich. This is as close to perfect as a tomato can be.

bobcat and jetstar tomatoes

Bobcat and Jetstar tomatoes.

Vilms is an heirloom paste tomato. It’s a little more tart than I like for a paste tomato but still very good. I knew I had more tomatoes ripe than I had time to can over the weekend so I relied on the information I read and left them on the plant. The claims that Vilms holds well are true. Three days later, the tomatoes show no signs of over ripening or stress. A fun aspect of Vilms is its mismatched shapes. Some of the plants are producing pear shaped fruits while others are plum shaped. I thought I’d made a mistake by mixing up seeds of two varieties but that isn’t the case. I went back to read the description. Vilms hasn’t shown any signs of blossom end rot in spite of a very dry July that limited how often I could water without stressing the well.

Luci 2103 is a great F-1 hybrid variety for high tunnels. It lived up to Fedco’s claim of being able to replace Buffalo. The seeds are less expensive than I used to pay for Buffalo. Luci ripens uniformly, has strong stems that do well with clipping to strings, is easy to control to two main stems with pruning and not at all fussy. A few fruits cracked when I overwatered but that was my fault. I don’t think it would have cracked had I been paying more attention to watering and less to talking. I like Luci a lot but I’ll stick with Jet Star.

Casady’s Folly

Casady’s Folly is a huge failure. If I’d started growing heirlooms with this variety I probably would have given up the first year. I’ve already pulled the plants out of the soil and tossed them into the compost bin. Fifty percent of the fruits were small, about an inch long, and all but a few suffered blossom end rot. I’ve never grown a tomato as susceptible to blossom end rot as Casady’s Folly. When they’re full size and whole, they’re a pretty plum-shaped red tomato with yellow wavy stripes. They look appetizing in salad. This variety has thick skin. I don’t mind that quality in a paste tomato since they’re going to be put through a food mill. Unfortunately, the thick skin is tough. During a hot spell, the blossoms dropped, something I don’t often see in tomatoes. The flavor is great but this variety is too fussy to deserve a spot in my garden.

I grew my favorites this year, Jet Star is my all time favorite for a small, found, red, always dependable tomato. I like it better than Early Girl and other “choice” varieties. And Opalka, the paste variety I can’t do without. Opalka peels easily without being dunked in hot water. It’s meaty, has excellent flavor, is a large tomato at 3” x 5” and a heavy producer. If water stressed, it might have a little blossom end rot but that seldom happens.

Juliette is my dependable grape tomato that is excellent in salad and sauce. If it were larger and peeled easily it would replace Opalka as my favorite paste variety.

Tomatoes haven’t been planted in one of the tunnels for the past two years but they’re growing this year. An orange cherry tomato, smaller than most cherry varieties, is blocking a wide path in the tunnel. I stopped stepping over it and started walking on it when it was wider than my legs can reach. Abuse hasn’t slowed this plant. I have little idea of what it might be. I grew Sun Gold for several years but that’s a hybrid variety that wouldn’t grow “true” as a volunteer. The fruits are half the size of Sun Gold. This tomato isn’t prone to cracking. I didn’t plant it, don’t need it and don’t take care of it, yet it’s doing exceptionally well. I water it when I think of it by tossing the hose to it. I’ve over watered many times and not one tomato has cracked. My English shepherd, loves them. She’ll push vines aside to get to ripe tomatoes. It’s the only tomato she eats. I’ll save a few of them this year and plant them on purpose next year. They’re small but they’re very tasty and prolific. I suspect they’re not going to be easy keepers on string so I’ll probably string some and cage others for comparison.

 

 

Maine Sea Salt

Originally published in Lancaster Farming on June 2, 2012

When you pull into the driveway of Maine Sea Salt you park beside a house, what seems to be a garage, and four very long greenhouses. If it weren’t for the greenhouses and a small sign out front you wouldn’t know you’d just pulled into a business that is rapidly growing.

Tom Cook holds one of the salts made at Maine Sea Salt

Steve Cook became unemployed in 1998. He discussed options with Sharon, his wife, but nothing fit his personality. He remembered customers at his family’s lobster pound comment on how much better lobster tastes when cooked in sea water rather than tap water. That was the beginning of Maine Sea Salt. The first product Maine Sea Salt offered was a one ounce bag of salt used to cook lobsters. They expanded from the one ounce package to table salt and expanded again to add flavors. There are no artificial ingredients added; not even a drying agent.

The process is surprisingly simple. A tanker truck is filled with 8,000 gallons of ocean water at a nearby beach. At this time, the tanker pumps water into each of three solar greenhouses, also known as reducing houses. The greenhouses are covered with a double layer of six millimeter greenhouse poly. The ground is lined with high density black plastic that has been approved by the FDA for contact with food. The water is two to three inches deep at the beginning of the process. Sunshine and breeze go to work. There are no fans or other equipment involved in the evaporation process.

A reducing house at Maine Sea Salt.

When the water has been reduced by 80% it’s pumped to the third house to finish the evaporation process, and the greenhouses are refilled. It takes an average of 30 days to complete the process.

This process depends completely on the weather. If the days are cool, damp or cloudy the water evaporates slowly. Hot, dry weather is best and in Maine, there aren’t many of those days. The length of daylight peaks on June 23, the longest day of the year. The temperature inside the greenhouses can rise to 110* It slows significantly in October. When the water hasn’t evaporated adequately before the next tanker arrives, the fresh water is added to the greenhouse, pushing the denser, heavier water to the far end. The water doesn’t blend.

One thousand pounds of sea salt.

The sifter being used at Maine Sea Salt.

The Cooks have added natural flavorings to the salt they offer. Herbed contains thyme, marjoram, sage, fennel, and lavender. Dulse is a blend of dulse (seaweed) and salt. They also offer Garlic, Lemon and Peppered, all blended on the premises. They also offer two kinds of smoked salts, Apple and Hickory. Salts are smoked behind the house on a small scale where they can be watched carefully. Smoked Apple is lightly smoked and somewhat sweet. Hickory Smoked has a smokier flavor. Margarita Rimming Salt is offered in Natural, Cranberry and Lime flavors, and can be used in the handcrafted rimming board they sell.

You can purchase several flavored salts for the rim of your Margarita glass.

The process is simple yet labor intensive, and they’re about to add a lot more labor. Tom Cook has been busy building six new greenhouses since the middle of April. He hopes to have them complete by June 1.  They are 15’ x 200’, the same size as the four original greenhouses. Maine Sea Salt will be using a total of 30,000 square feet of space when the new greenhouses are put into use. Business is good and continuing to expand.

Tom Cook spent a month and a half building six addition 3,000 square foot high tunnels to be used as evaporating houses at Maine Sea Salt.

The tanker will deliver two 8,000 gallons loads and it will be split between four reducing houses. The water will be deeper and take longer to evaporate initially, but will be split between six houses to finish drying. They currently produce 20,000 pounds of salt a year and expect to double that amount.

Maine Sea Salt markets their salt at shows, stores and online. Their website is www.maineseasalt.com.

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.

A Spectacular Spring

This Cooper's Hawk is trying to kill my chickens.

It’s very cold today, around 34*. The wind has been gusting since last night; it kept me awake much of the night. I’ve carried in firewood twice already and it’s not quite 11 am. That said, it’s been a spectacular spring. We’ve had six or seven days in the 80′s already. The fire danger has been very high because of a lack of rain. We’re 3.67″ below average rainfall. Today’s expected 1″ of rain will help the grass green up and wet down the dry grasses and forest floor. I’m relieved to not have to watch for smoke. A neighbor goes for a ride several times a day so that he can sneak cigarettes; his wife doesn’t know he smokes. He and another neighbor throw their butts out the window. I’m grateful for the rain today, and all that’s to come in the next three days, too.

Steve tilled the first 2/10ths of the garden on April 14 and I started planting the 15th. I now have 450′ of row planted. When I went out to do poultry chores this morning I saw greens that have germinated. The soil is too wet to walk on without causing damage so I didn’t go into the garden to see what it is. I’m guessing it’s a lettuce or turnips.

The tomato plants are ready to be transplanted into the high tunnels but it’s still too cold. They’re here in the house, hanging out under the grow lights if they still fit, or sitting in the bay window if they don’t. Each time the overnight temps have been above 40* in the forecast it’s been short lived. Within a day or two, the forecast changes and 30′s are back in the long-range forecast. This is normal. Our overnight temps are supposed to be around this time of year. I’m more cautious now than I used to be about planting. I’m in less of a rush now that I’m no longer a market farmer.

I’m watching three male grackles eating seed I threw out for them. It’s raining hard. They must be very hungry to stay in this downpour. Rain rolls down their backs as though they are ducks. The female grackles and red winged blackbirds are here now but I haven’t yet seen any cowbirds. The cardinal came back a second day but moved on. I still listen for him and hope that he’s around.

A Cooper’s hawk has been trying to get to the Silkie chickens for four days. The dogs have kept it from coming in too low, and the chickens run for cover as soon as they hear or see it. Three of the Silkies are setting on eggs this morning. They eggs aren’t fertile, we don’t have a rooster. I’m going to move them to the barn this week and once they get settled and stop trying to get back to the greenhouse, will give them turkey eggs. If they hatch only a few of the dozen eggs I hope to give them, I’ll be happy. I don’t need a lot, just enough for Thanksgiving dinner and another for the freezer.

My Lancaster Farming column is due today and I need to get started on the final scene of the novel I’m writing in class ends this week, and I still have three assignments to complete. Good thing it’s raining. It’s easier to stay “ass in seat” and get the writing done when I can’t be out gallivanting across the country side.

Steve started tilling the one-acre garden on April 15, the earliest ever.

Early Planting

Steve started tilling the one-acre garden on April 15, the earliest ever.

While I have the row markers at hand, here’s a list of what’s going to be planted today. This is the earliest we’ve been able to work dry soil and by far the most seeds I’ve been able to plant in mid April.

Lettuce: Royal Oakleaf, Forellenschluss, Tango, Rouge d’Hiver, Black Seeded Simpson
Spinach: 7-Green that someone gave me to try
Mesculen: Wine Country from Renee’s Seeds
Roots: Laurentian Rutabaga, Purple Top White Globe turnip, Kohlrabi, Eyeballs (Those white salad turnips…I can’t think of the real name. They look like eyeballs when you pull and clean them.) and mixed in to mark rows via early germination, Purple Plum radishes.
Swiss Chard: Bionda Di Lyon and Ruby Red. I had Ford Hook out but put it back. We can’t eat THAT much Swiss chard.
Cilantra: Caribe
Beets: mostly for greens but I’ll pickle some beets, Early Wonder Tall Top
Peas: (talk about going overboard) Coral Shell, Sugar Snap, Alderman Shell, Oregon Giant snow, Cascadia Snap. I put one 8 oz package away for fall seeding and will put 8 oz of Coral Shell away, too.

There’s a stack of seeds to start in pots sitting on my desk. I have to evict the Silkies from the greenhouse and get them settled into the barn before I can move seedlings into the greenhouse. I need my house back. There are so many seedlings in the house that they don’t fit on my racks. I have 16 grow lights going and could use another six. The seedlings have spilled over onto the dining room table and even the dishwasher. Evicting the silkies is on my list for later in the week.

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…

The End is Near

9/10/2011 10:00 AM
By Robin Follette Maine Correspondent

The end of the “warm” growing season is near.

The average annual first-frost date jumps around so much now that I no longer know what it really is anymore. I’m sticking with Sept. 15. The 10-day forecast shows nights in the mid-40s.

There isn’t a lot left in the garden. Most of the extra bush beans I planted specifically to feed the soil are now … feeding the soil. Sometimes I get the “I’m done” bug and watch out garden, you’re going down.

Until the something-or-other on the three-point hitch came undone, I was a rototilling wild woman one afternoon. I called Steve, my husband, to explain to him what was wrong in hopes that he could tell me how to fix it.

“The blue one is hanging down, swinging back and forth.” He asked which blue one. I hadn’t noticed that all three are blue. He asked what was happening, or not happening. The tiller wouldn’t pick up. It turned, but I couldn’t lift it anymore. That was the end of tilling that day. I’ll never claim to be mechanically inclined.

My kitchen looks like a cannery. There are two roasters full of tomatoes in the oven, a pressure canner cooling on the sideboard, another canner heating up, jars of tomato sauce popping and salsa verde waiting to be put away. The countertops are lined with empty jars, boxes of shiny new lids and a bowl of rings, all waiting to be used.

I’m reasonably sure there’s a sink under the pile of dirty dishes in front of the window. I vaguely remember seeing the bottom of the sink for more than five minutes, though that was days ago.

The tomatillo jungle, a double-wide row of plants in one side of a high tunnel, will be pulled this week. I’m looking forward to that monstrosity being nothing but a bad memory. In their place, I’ll plant spinach, boc choy, turnip, baby beet greens and other cold weather greens.

I’m ready for the tomato plants to be, too. I have most of what I’m going to can put up. The cherry and grape tomato plants will stay in so that kids at a local elementary school can have them for snacks. I’ll save a couple of Jet Star tomato plants and two cucumber vines. The rest will be gone soon.

Opalka produced very well again this year, both inside the tunnel and outside. More cold weather greens will be planted when these plants are pulled.

Pumpkins, squash and gourds are my favorites. This year, thanks to aged poultry manure, I have beautiful pumpkins and gourds. Cinderella pumpkins are red and the warty Galeux is very warty. It’s a little too soon to be sure of what the seeded winter squash will do. They need more time than Sept. 15; I hope they get it. The winter squash I transplanted are just about ready to be cut.

For the first time ever, the watermelon have done well. They’re not as sweet as we’d like them to be because of extreme rain, but they taste good.

The onions are beautiful. I learned this year that I’ve not watered my onions enough. A very wet August finished off the onions beautifully. They’re spread out to dry now. Soon, the storage variety will hang in the dark pantry in mesh bags. The red onions will be eaten fresh and another variety will be sliced and dehydrated for use when the whole onions run out. The garlic is disappointingly small. I’m blaming the soil. The best garlic has been set aside as seed and will be planted in October.

The corn is taller than me this year. It’s nice to look out the kitchen window and see it standing there. I’m holding my breath, hoping it fills out before frost. I’m eager to have my fill of late-season corn and to cut the stalks for fall decoration. They’ll look nice bundled and sitting beside the great pumpkins on the back porch and out by the mailbox.

There’s still time for radishes, salad turnip, cold-tolerant lettuces, spinach and more out of the regular garden. When frost threatens, I’ll put low tunnels over the plants. They’ll be opened in the morning, closed in late afternoon and give me up to two months of additional growing time outside. Or maybe longer.

We’ll see how early the snow starts and if it stays or melts.
 

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.

It’s Hot

It’s finally hot. I’m not saying finally as in “I’ve been eagerly waiting for this.” I don’t like the heat and I’d be happy if it never went above 70* but after a cold and wet spring, it’s finally hot.

Marketmore cucumber

Marketmore 76 growing up strings in the high tunnel.

The morning’s work started out in the long tunnel. I put down a strip of IRT, burned holes and planted cucumbers and tomatoes. I rolled out another strip but left it for tomorrow because of the heat. It was nice to move outside to work. There are now three strips of IRT filled with vine crops and summer squash. When it cools down later I’ll go back out to plant more. If it weren’t for leaving the seed plate I need for the seeder I’d have put the purple, green and wax beans and the corn in before quitting at noon. Maybe that’s what I’ll plant tonight.

Taylor graduates in three days. Kristin and Matt will be here! I’m excited to see them. They won’t be staying long as they’re going to an event in Portland Sunday. I’ll take what I can get!

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!