Tuesday, August 23, 2011

What's Growing Today?

Flowers on bush beans planted from seed in late July!

More broccoli - I think this one's going to be big!

Marigold flowers on 'volunteer' plant
Baby 'Tromboncino' squash

Cosmos flowers planted by the wind!

New arugula seedlings

Pole beans planted from seed in late July

Pole beans


Monday, August 22, 2011

Feeding the Body

Today's delivery to Project SOUP!

Today we donated the veggies pictured below, plus the following:
- several pounds of pole beans both green and yellow
- a few cucumbers
- several small bell peppers
Sweet Banana peppers and LOTS of plump, spicy Serrano peppers

Small tomato harvest - A lot more have been cracking due to fluctuating moisture or finding other uses.

Lots of kale, collards, chard and bok choi

Parsley and sage



Wednesday, August 17, 2011

They Grow Up So Fast...

At the beginning of Spring I often have trouble understanding that the little tiny things we put in the ground will grown into huge, food producing plants. I don't know why this is, but it just is. Fortunately, Urban Farming requests pictures every two weeks to report how our little farm is doing. They may not start quite at the beginning of the season, but it's still quite a record.

Remember All-Church Work Day on May 22nd?


 
Then in mid-June I sent these pictures to the folks in Detroit. They were very impressed at how big everything was already!



July 7th: Plants explosion!


July 19 - Possibly the height of zucchini before they suffered from various insect infestations.



Yesterday:

Tuesday, August 16, 2011

The Ugly (or the 'less beautiful' depending on your mood...)

So I mentioned previously that we've been having some issue with some of the plants in the garden. This is expected and normal, but also frustrating, maddening... For example, look at these beautiful tomatoes! These were some of the very first big ripe tomatoes I pulled off our plants.


Flip them over... and not so pretty:


I had pulled many green tomatoes out of the garden with a similar issue prior to taking these pictures. And kept searching for other signs of late blight. There are many fungal diseases that can effect tomato plants, but late blight is the biggest and baddest of them all. Since I have Harry Potter on the mind, let's call it the 'Voldemort of tomato diseases.'

Two years ago when the summer was wet and cool and almost everybody had late blight in their tomato patches, my husband David and I pulled all but one of our dozen or so tomato plants up out of the garden. They were all infected and produced only blighted, nasty tasting fruits. So, when I first saw this happening to the tomatoes at First Church, I took a bite out of the better looking side of the tomato and waited to cringe. It tasted fine. Maybe even yummy!

Turns out this was just "blossom end rot" caused by lack of calcium (which can in turn be caused by over, under, or inconsistent watering). Thankfully, with some help from a crew of dedicated waterers (thank you!) and a change to cooler wetter weather, this problem seems to have all but disappeared.

That said, we've still lost some plants. You'll notice some empty cages at the front of the big bed and a plant soon to disappear from the small raised bed.

All the yellow pear plants seem to have been infected with 'Fusarium wilt' very early on. I noticed that these plants had branches that were particularly wilted and no amount of watering would help them. The wilting started at the bottom of a side of the plant moved upwards and then gradually overtook the whole thing. Yuck!



If you are interested in learning about tomato's many afflictions. I found that this website was particularly informative.

Monday, August 8, 2011

Feeding the Body

It's been nearly a month since I've posted anything on this blog. Time flies! So many big, beautiful things have been happening in and around the garden, but this is the time of year when big things can easily start to go wrong. Pests move in, days grow brutally hot and dry, plants grow ill.

I have had so many things I've wanted to share on this forum, I haven't known where to begin. Let's begin again with something beautiful and familiar!

This morning I harvested an amazing bunch of veggies to bring down to Project SOUP. There were cucumbers, many kinds of tomatoes, a little bit of broccoli, carrots, serrano peppers, green peppers, baby bok choi, parsley, sage and the usual pile of kale, collards and chard.





When we are able to bring vegetables down to the pantry early in the week, often they are the only fresh food available to clients at that time. When I arrived today, for example, there was a small pile of onions on the counter and when I left it looked like this:



Yum!

Tuesday, July 12, 2011

Zucchini Attack!

So, I went out to the garden to pick one zucchini I knew was going to be ready today and look what I found!


There are also, of course, more forming. If you have never planted zucchini before, believe every story you have ever heard about them. You know the ones where people are giving their neighbors so much zucchini that the neighbors stop answering the door? Things like that...

Last year, our plants were attacked by squash borers towards the beginning of the season, but it is my hope that we will soon be dragging truckloads of zucchini to the food pantry.

Today is a good start! One of these small babies will be sampled by husband and I tonight and the rest will go to the pantry later this week along with cucumbers and hopefully greens, beets, and lettuce as well.

Saturday, July 9, 2011

What's Growing Today?

There are many fruits forming in the garden!

'Cocozelle' zucchini
Big tomatoes of mysterious variety





'Gold of Bacau' pole beans


Cucumber

The last of the 'Sugar Snap' peas

Fully grown sweet banana peppers

Green cherry tomatoes are everywhere!

Tomatillos