Category Archives: Garden

Anything from any garden.

Kitchen Garden

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Radish thinnings and limes from our kitchen garden.

Our kitchen garden has been a long time in the making.  We overcame obstacles in the following ways:

  1. Thirteen years ago, we got a Victorian house with a kitchen door that opens directly into the back yard.
  2. Two years ago, we dug up a garden, planted it, and had the soil tested for lead.  It was 1700 parts per million.  The garden grew great, but we did not eat anything out of it. We learned from this garden.   We did see that whatever we planted grew very well during a Galveston winter.  (No freeze in 2011.)   We saw how five kinds of lettuce grew, harvested cilantro for the beauty of its vegetation,  and saw that I can actually grow dill.   Then we let it go to seed, after which we let the weeds take over.
  3. We removed seven cubic yards of soil removed down one foot, lined the opening with landscape cloth, and had good planting mix topsoil (three parts per million lead) added in time for a fall 2013 garden.
  4. We had some surrounding vegetation removed to permit more sunlight into the garden.
  5. We bought 20 packets of seeds locally, and ordered one more  package of seeds.
  6. We studied the seed packets for planting depth, and seedling emergence timing, amount of sun required, made a chart of the garden, and what to plant where.
  7. We executed this plan in one day in early September.  Radishes, famously easy to grow, started emerging in merely three days!  By now, two weeks later, even the last to emerge, sorrel, and chives, are sprouting.
  8. In the meantime we have already begun to enjoy our produce,  thinnings of everything to put into salads!

Prepared gardenOur garden ready to plant

Our garden one week after planting.Garden overall, one week after planting DSC00396

Radishes came up first.Radishes came up first. DSC00395

Two weeks after planting, you can see faint rows of green seedlings which have come up.Kitchen garden two weeks after planting

Our garden is growing very quickly.  Establishing roots and a growing plant look slow, but some of the seeds are the size of a grain of salt!

Our Bananas are Plantains

Our bananas proved to be plantains.  Here they are at their peak in August.DSC00369

Here is a different view of them at the end of September with a pink yardstick to help gauge their height.  As estimated here, the tallest plantain is currently 24 feet tall.  In September the plantains grow more slowly, because the amount of light has gone down, due to shortening days, and  decreased angle of the sun. Plantains with Yardstick DSC00456

Another view DSC00458

The plantains are are very slow to ripen.  It can take longer than a month for the green plantains to turn yellow, then black after the clump falls over, or is cut off of the tree.

They started to ripen three days ago.

Day one of ripening: just a few.DSC00416

Day two of ripening: a few more.Plantain plate

Day three of ripening:  even more.Some our plantain harvest on day 3 after they bagan to turn yellow  DSC00423

 

In a few days, when more are very dark, we will be able to make plantain bread!

Bananas are not Victorian!

Though bananas are not exactly Victorian, they are a nice addition to the yard of the present day  Gulf Coast Victorian home. DSC00369

These bananas are plantains.   grown in southeast Asia, and are grown in the New World Latin America.  This clump fell ever about two weeks after this photograph was made.

They thrive on the Gulf coast.  It took some of our 15 to more than 20 foot tall plantains (bananas)  two years to reach their present height, after they died down to the ground after a freeze.   Before and since then, they have flourished in our backyard.  This year they have produced at least ten large bunches of bananas.

These bananas are actually plantains.  Plantains do ripen.   In our experience the fruit from these trees is is slightly tart when they are yellow with a little brown on the outside.  This fruit does not brown inside quickly, and makes fantastic plantain bread when they are “overripe” , or very dark on the outside.