Wednesday, May 20, 2009

A Return to the Blog and the Garden!

After a bit of a blogging hiatus, I'm back. The past month was a flurry of out-of-town visitors, trips to Fillmore, yard work, and sewing, sewing, and more sewing. I really thought the Piddies orders would slow down as we get closer to summer, but apparently I was wrong. With lots of return customers and referrals from past customers, things in the Etsy shop are hopping. It's great news for our bank account, and bad news for the house & yard. Mainly just the house, because I'm dying to be outside, so that's where I spend every minute I'm not sewing.

The vegetable garden has been great fun this year, and we've been reaping a small harvest already of greens, radishes, and herbs. It's amazing what a few fresh herbs will do to wake up inspiration in the kitchen. The early part of spring was so cold that despite planting in early March, a lot of the plants are only now in full swing. This has thrown a wrench into what I thought were brilliant plans for planting the warm weather vegetables after the cool weather vegetables had been harvested, and I am now having to be a bit creative about where I plant things. Squashes and cucumbers are being nestled in amongst the radishes in anticipation of the radishes being harvested by the time the squash gets large enough to take up significant space. The peppers have been planted in the same bed as the tomatoes, which should work well considering the tomatoes are trained to grow on a trellis in the center of the bed, leaving the edges free for peppers. With any luck, it will still work out well and we'll have a nice variety of veggies this summer and fall.

Radishes, spinach, and lettuce in the closer bed;
herbs, strawberries, beets, and cabbage in the far bed.
Two other unseen beds hold tomatoes, peppers, carrots, and greens.


Young lettuce.

Ella and I planted our beans today. It proved to be so much fun for Ella that I found her repeatedly digging up the seeds we'd planted so she could plant them again...and again...and again. Sean's genius idea of giving her some small pebbles to "plant" worked like a charm, so hopefully the beans have been exhumed for the last time.

Planting (and replanting) Purple King beans around
the outer perimeter of the pea tower.

We planted two bean varieties today, both pole beans, and will plant the bush beans as soon as there is space in one of the beds - likely where the lettuces are now. My hope is that planting the Purple King pole beans around the outer perimeter of my pea tower will make double use of that space. The peas will have been harvested by the time the beans grow large enough to set fruit (I hope I hope). I also built two bean towers nestled in the spaces between my garden beds, using 6-foot poles, some small pieces of iron flower bed edging I haven't been using, and twine. They turned out quite lovely, and the ornamental Apricot Runner beans should be beautiful on them in a few weeks. The seeds for the Apricot Runners were some of the most gorgeous I've ever seen, and Ella had great fun playing with them before we planted them.

Seeds for the Apricot Runner beans.


Planting and laughing.


Peeking through the pea tower.


Ella so wanted to play inside the bean towers ("It's a HOUSE, Mama," she told me again and again as I was pulling her out from what looked to me like a twine prison) that I was inspired. What fun a little bean "teepee" would be for little ones! The bean towers I made on a bit larger scale would be great, and any quick-growing climbing vine would work well, provided it's not prone to cause skin irritation. Beans would actually be just about perfect, and probably a lot of fun to go inside the fort to harvest! I'm going to scout the yard tomorrow to see if I can find a good place to give it a try.

One of the bean towers, about 5 feet tall and
just under 2 feet in diameter.


An empty snail shell perched on the top of the bean tower,
head-on-a-stake style, in hopes
that it will strike fear
into the hearts of those slimy bastards
and make them
think twice about eating my tender bean shoots.


I'd love to hear from you about your own gardens! What are you growing, and how do you deal with limited space?

2 comments:

  1. Your garden looks good. We had some issues, I think ants stole a lot of the seeds we sowed initially! Now we have a little bit of everything growing. The tomatoes are still super tiny since we grew them from seeds. You and Ella will have to come over and play with the sandbox, pool, and swingset one of these days (when you're not sewing!).

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  2. What cute photos. Ella looks soooo excited. The bean hut sounds like a great idea! Let me know how yours turns out. That way you can get the kiddos to harvet the veggies without realizing it's actual work! I also love the snail shell - I hope it keeps those slimy bastards far.

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