I'm going to be a grandmother! Happy Mother's Day, Grace!
Happy Birthday Jason!
We miss you! But you are in our thoughts and hearts this year as we plant our gardens!
Row 7
My seeds arrived from this exciting new seed company! Row 7 was created by chefs and seed breeders to put flavor at the center of any seed development. They describe it as "a collaboration—a cross-pollination—based on a simple premise: we believe flavor can succeed where commodification has failed. That it can change how we eat and, in turn, how we grow." Can't wait to get these in the ground!
Oh what a beautiful morning...
Sunny, warm, and breezy...with the scent of spring everywhere. A perfect day to plant a garden!
Grow a garden...
...and think of Jason!
Gopher...mole...or vole...
or perhaps someone who is thinking about a putting green? As always, there are more questions than answers in this farming game!
Finally!
Here, John is starting to tackle the job of planting onions, leeks and potatoes!
My onions are really wanting to go in the ground!
I have 5 trays of onions and leeks waiting to be transplanted. These seedlings have had their third haircut! Hopefully next weekend, the weather will be more cooperative!
This can't be spring!
This past weekend we had it all...snow, sleet & hail!
Can't plant peas yet.....
...then we'll have to eat them instead. John made James Beard's recipe of pasta with peas and asparagus! Delicious!
Really.....?
Planting peas will have to wait! No planting today!
It's time to plant peas!
The trellises are in place, so we are ready to plant our peas next week. Peas use tendrils to climb the trellis. These thin, wiry structures along the plant's stem actually wave around until they come in contact with something they can grab onto. Once they've made contact (and in this case, with the netting) the tendrils curl and form coils, allowing the plant to pull on the support. Kathy LaLiberte, in her article on How Plants Climb, likens it to a rock climber in need of footholds in the form of horizontal supports. Peas enjoy the cool weather of spring and will be finished with their harvest and ready to be pulled out to make way for tomato plants at the end of May.
Vernal Equinox...
...or the first day of Spring! And it officially arrives at 11:15 AM. Here at Walnut Hill Farm, we are so ready for it! Bring it on!
The Rotary Botanical Gardens....
...are a gem. And it was here in Janesville, WI that I met in person my gardening mentor, author, and founder of both The Creative Vegetable Garden and The Flavorful Life Garden Club, Megan Cain. Her presentation was so enthusiastically received by a sell-out crowd at the Spring Symposium yesterday and we all left with dozens of new way to think about herbs and how we should be using them! Thank you, Megan!
Miss Rumphius and lupines!
One of my children's much loved childhood books was Miss Rumphius by Barbara Cooney. In the story, the town librarian sets out to make the world a more beautiful place by planting lupine seeds wherever she goes. This made me wonder if we could have some of Miss Rumphius' beautiful lupines on our farm. Have started seedlings in the greenhouse from seeds obtained on the "exchange" of the Seed Savers. We have Suzanne Ashworth to thank for sharing her purple wild lupine seeds with us!