Container Garden Mini Update — July 15, 2015

by A.J. Coltrane

The Lemon cucumbers are really starting to ripen. As for the Marketmores, we must have missed these monsters over the weekend:

150715 harvest

(Left to Right):  Six Lemon cucumbers (2.3 lbs);  The two of the four cherry tomatoes that didn’t get eaten before Picture Time;  Three Marketmore 76 cucumbers (3.1 lbs);  One National Pickling cucumber (0.7 lbs).  6.2 pounds total.

The big cucumber weighs just under 1.5 pounds. It was lying sideways on the wood trellis, hiding behind a leaf. I’m hoping that we can peel it and most of it will be usable.

As a group, the cucumbers are starting to look a little haggard. But then, August is only two weeks away, so maybe the cucumbers should be approaching the end of their run.

——–

For reference. Marketmore total weights each year, through July 15:

2013:  0 — none until July 18.   End of season total:  25,414g (56.0 lbs)

2014:  0 — none until July 28.   End of season total:  20,141g (44.4 lbs)

2015:  3932 g (8.7 lbs).       As a flat guess — the warm summer weather is causing the cucumbers to produce and age rapidly, and we’ll still see something around 40-55 pounds of Marketmores by the end of the year. The candle that burns twice as fast burns half as long. Accelerated Decrepitude.

 

Container Garden Harvest Update — July 12, 2015

by A.J. Coltrane

The first really good week — total production of 15.4 pounds, including the 12.2 pounds harvested tonight:

150712 harvest

(Clockwise from top left) — Marketmore 76 cucumbers (4.1 lb);  the first Sun Gold and Sweet Million tomatoes;  National Pickling cucumbers (the darker two, 1 lb);  “Calypso” pickling cucumbers (1.5 lb);  Lemon cucumbers (0.7 lb);  Tromboncino zucchini (4.7 lbs)

We have zucchini bread and a bunch of cucumber salads in our future. Also zucchini crisps, post to come.

—————–

Visit Daphne’s Dandelions, host of Harvest Monday.

Container Garden Update — July 12, 2015

by A.J. Coltrane

Previous post here.  July 11, 2014 post here.  July 14, 2013 post here.

Some of the lower (south-facing) leaves of the tomato plants are fried-looking from the intense June sun. It’s been (thankfully) a little bit cooler the last few days. An overview:

150712 overview

The basil got a super thorough haircut this week. I made a point to “open it up”, trimming out some of the larger leaves and “excess” growth in the interior:

150712 basil

The yield was one pound of leaves. This is about half of it:

150712 picked basil

We’re still well ahead of last year. Lots of things are ripening. The first Sun Golds:

150712 sun gold

Sweet Millions:

150712 sweet million

Raspberries:

150712 raspberry

Lemon cucumber:

150712 lemon cucumber

The Lemon cucumbers are sharing a box with two varieties of pickling cucumbers. The Lemon cucumbers are easily more prolific:

150712 lemon cucumbers

The tomatillos. People often mistake these for an ornamental — tomatillos aren’t mainstream:

150712 tomatillo

This “Yellow Bell Pepper” is the one plant that we purchased at the Master Gardener Plant Sale. There are a whole bunch of little fruits:

150712 yellow bell

The west facing Iko Iko peppers. The white stuff is diatomaceous earth. It’s intended to discourage bugs:

150712 iko iko

The east facing Iko Iko:

150712 iko iko2

Totally different… I’m not sure what to think.

The biggest King of the North:

150712 king of the  north

Below is the first pepper that the bugs have ruined this year. I cut it open, and nothing was inside. I’m guessing earwigs or stinkbugs, or… If anyone could tell me what what’s causing it I’d really appreciate it:

150712 king of the north2

Marketmore 76 cucumbers:

150712 marketmore

The Tromboncino. I think we’ll need to harvest the big ones to see new growth. As it is, they’re basically only making male flowers:

150712 tromboncino

Still no powdery mildew, so that’s nice.

What I’ll call the first “real” caprese of the year. It’s our basil with store-bought everything else. The garlic-cilantro balsamic is by Eleven Olives. They’re local. Highly recommended:

150712 caprese

EarthBox Mini Update — July 8, 2015

by A.J. Coltrane

Previous post here.

The Tromboncino zucchini had two large fruits on one vine, so I harvested the larger one with the idea that the other would get bigger, faster.

(Left to Right)  —  20″ Trombocino zucchini (853 grams, 1.9 lbs).  6″ Marketmore 76 cucumber (251 grams, 0.5 lbs).  Boy Cat looking for interesting smells.  Kitchenaid mixer:

150708 Tromboncino Cucumber

It feels like Marketmore cucumbers have been really “blocky” this year, at least so far.

(Picture taken at 9pm with natural light only, facing east. We just passed the solstice. I’m enjoying the late evening “bright” while it lasts.)

Container Garden Update — July 5, 2015

by A.J. Coltrane

Previous post here.  July 7, 2014 mini update here. July 7, 2013 update here. The 2013 post includes the “zucchini breakage disaster” and a picture of the raspberry plant when it was new.

This time I tried taking pictures at dusk. An overview from last night:

150705 overview

The peas in the front yard are dying from the bottom up. I think it’s too hot:

150705 pea plants

We left a few little peas on the vines to see if they’d get bigger. Everything else is in the colander. We’d been nibbling off of the plants — the total yield was maybe 50% more than this (it’s more than it looks like):

150705 pea closeup

Considering the late start, I’m fine with that output.

The basil was well overdue for a haircut. I cut out most of the flowers. The bowl contains 1/4 pound of basil leaves:

150705 basil

An attempt at a different camera angle — standing next to the “pretty flower container”, looking towards the zucchini:

150705 jungle

The “De Mipa” tomatillo is losing some leaves (note the yellow leaves on the right of the photo), but they’re all on the same position on each node (bottom center). The rest of the plant looks healthy. I’m guessing the plant is sloughing those off on purpose(?)

Cucumbers, Tomatillos, and Tromboncino zucchini. The nearer two trellises are 6′ tall, the rear trellis is 8′. The “De Mipa” is the sprawling tomatillo. The “Mexican Strain” is now growing over the top of the trellis. It’s a good combination from a space-utilization perspective:

150705 cucumber tomatillo tromboncino

Closeup of the Tromboncino trellis:

150705 tromboncino trellis

I’d pruned out a few of the worst looking “loser” leaves earlier in the day. Overall though, they’re still looking pretty healthy and there’s no sign of powdery mildew. The back-right Tromboncino is around 24″ long:

150705 tromboncino close

The determinate tomato plants are in full output mode. The Taxis:

150705 taxi

The Romas. A different cluster of fruits from last week’s picture, these are on the west side of the plant:

150705 roma

A big, fat Marketmore 76 cucumber that I found while poking around taking pictures. A fun surprise:

150705 marketmore 76

National Pickling cucumbers, getting there. 6″ is full size:

150705 national pickling

(For reference, the “Calypso” are full-sized at 3″ long.)

There are a bunch of Lemon cucumbers around this size. They will will double or triple in size before they’re ready:

150705 lemon

 

I think we’re about to get overwhelmed with veggies.

Container Garden Update — June 28, 2015

by A.J. Coltrane

Previous post here.  June 28, 2014 post here.  June 23, 2013 post here.

An overview picture:

150628 overview

We’re still ahead of last year. I’d attribute that to better weather, mostly. We also made a point not to cramp the plants quite as much this year.

We’re also learning as we go — in late June 2013 I was trying to nurse along lettuces. Now I save my effort for stuff that’s inclined to cooperate.

One thing that I noted in the 2013 post was the absence of predatory insects. We had lots of leafhoppers and some aphids. Now we have lots of predators, especially wasps and spiders. I’ve only seen a couple of leafhoppers. Hopefully that’s “equilibrium”.

The flower barrel is much happier lately — I threw a little fertilizer into the container, and we increased the plant density. I think there’s less direct sun hitting the dirt now, and it’s reducing the amount of evaporation, leading to less stress on the plants… That’s my theory for now anyway:

150628 flowers

The “late peas experiment” is going well. We’re now harvesting super sugar snap peas:

150628 peas

The pot of raspberries is doing well too. On a typical day we harvest 3-6 of them. It’s a nice little treat:

150628 raspberry

The basil needs a serious haircut. I’m guessing that will happen on Tuesday:

150628 basil

The King of the North are our biggest and earliest peppers again:

150628 kon1

And:

150628 kon2

The Roma tomatoes:

150268 roma

Tigerallas:

150628 tigerella

The tallest of the Tromboncino are now climbing over the top of the 8′ trellis:

150628 zucchini 1

A reverse-angle view:

150628 zucchini 2

 

We’re going to have a lot of zucchini soon. I didn’t get a picture of the 6-12 largish fruits at the bottom of the plants..

 

The First Tromboncino, And Laminated Flatbread

by A.J. Coltrane

The Tromboncino zucchini is now at the top of the 8′ trellis. This one was intended to be grilled for dinner. Note that the end never got a “bulb”. That either “happens sometimes”, or “it didn’t get pollinated”, or it’s “something that I did” that made it misshapen. It weighed almost exactly 1 pound, and it was still tasty despite the less-than-ideal shape:

150624 Tromboncino

Unfortunately, we ran out of propane shortly after firing up the grill, so I used the Le Creuset grill pan.

The “grilled” laminated flatbread was finished in a 450F oven on a baking stone:

150624 flatbread 1

Another angle:

150624 flatbread 2

A closeup of an end-piece:

150624 flatbread 3

Formula/recipe:  300g AP flour, 180g water (60% hydration), 6g olive oil (2%), 7g kosher salt (2.3%), 1/2 tsp yeast. Mix on low speed for 10 minutes. Let rise two hours. Lightly oil the workstation. Roll out thin. Brush with olive oil. Fold over. Rinse. Repeat.

Looking at it, I think I folded it about five times. The result was airy and crispy at the same time. Excellent!

(It’s sort of a sendup on Ming Tsai’s shallot pancakes, though I don’t think it was a conscious thing — I just wanted to see what would happen if I tried grilling a laminated dough.)

 

Container Garden Update — June 21, 2015

by A.J. Coltrane

Previous post here.  June 21, 2014 post here.  June 16, 2013 post here.

More beautiful, warm weather means more happy plants. The overview:

150621 overview

The basil is … sprawling:

150621 basil

The Sun Gold tomatoes:

150621 sungold

The Sweet Millions are at more or less the same stage:

150621 sweet million

The first little Jalapeno:

150621 jalapeno

One of the two Lemon cucumbers in the southeast corner is shriveling, but only the bottom leaves. It’s been going on for more than a week. If the top starts to go we’ll cut out the plant. This is the perfect example of why I don’t like to prune to one plant per hole:

150621 lemon

The earliest cucumbers — “Calypso”:

150621 calypso

The Tromboncino zucchini is well taller than the door. Still no sign of powdery mildew. The milk treatment is “working”. Or it’s still just early:

150621 zucchini

Zucchini flowers:

150621 zucchini flowers

The biggest fruit. It’s going to be dinner sometime this week:

150621 zucchini fruit

The tomatillos. They can’t be controlled. Or contained:

150621 tomatillo

The peas by the front door are doing their thing, finally:

150621 peas

Probably my favorite cartoon:

your-oeuvre-is-monochromatic

The Local P-Patch

by A.J. Coltrane

I wrote this about the local P-Patch on May 31:

As an aside:  We went to the local P-patch today to look around — Lots of peas, lettuces, carrots, and various types of alliums. Some tomatoes and tomatillos. One tiny little bit of corn, and one of beans. A little bit of squash. Not a cucumber in sight. The groupthink seemed almost monolithic in its decision making.

That doesn’t make any sense to me. Our cucumbers out-produce everything expect maybe the tomatoes. Maybe they’ll all plant cucumbers after the peas are done?

My guess is no. The food bank boxes are densely planted and well maintained. The other boxes, not so much. It might be because they’ve got so much space to play with, but to my mind they’re “wasting” a lot of it. There are “big” areas with nothing going on… Today is basically June 1st, shouldn’t there be something growing? (Or maybe it’s just me, and that having to deal with super finite space all the time has made me feel like wasted space = wasted opportunity. It’s really my problem, not theirs…. Nah.)

I went by again yesterday. There are still tons and tons of peas and lettuces. Much of the “wasted” space is now occupied by baby cucumbers and zucchini, as well as some smallish tomato plants. Beds like this are the exception:

150618 garden

There are some small squash or cucumber at the far end of the box. I think those are tiny broccoli(?) or some type of brassica in the front right. In the background you can see a tomato bed (#4) and a beet bed (#5). The beets look good..

I’m going to hazard a guess that in a couple of weeks all of the peas and lettuce will become short season tomato plants(?)

I clearly don’t get it.

Container Garden Update — June 14, 2015

by A.J. Coltrane

Previous post here.  June 21, 2014 post here.  June 16, 2013 post here.

Reviewing the pictures, this post is very similar to the June 21 post of last year. I even took pictures of most of the same things (Oregon Spring tomatoes, King of the North Peppers, the first Tromboncino zucchini.)

But I’m just now figuring that out, so here goes, starting with the overview:

150614 overview

Overall, I’d say we’re basically one week’s growth ahead of last year.

The basil — The mass is loosely the same as 2014, it’s just sprawled out:

150614 basil

The Tromboncino zucchini. They’re a little less than six feet tall:

150614 zucchini plant

The biggest zucchini. It’s around 4-5 inches long:

150614 zucchini

The tomatoes are trying to escape their cages. This one had to be coaxed back in:

150614 tomato

The Oregon Spring:

150614 oregon spring

It feels like we’re not seeing as many bees this year. Hopefully they’ll find the tomatillos attractive over the next few days:

150614 tomatillo

The biggest King of the North. I may hit them with diatomaceous earth sooner than later. In theory it should keep the earwigs from eating holes in the peppers:

150614 bell pepper

Because I haven’t done a picture of these in a while, the Marketmore 76 cucumbers:

150614 marketmore cucumber