Showing posts with label greenhouse. Show all posts
Showing posts with label greenhouse. Show all posts

Saturday, April 29, 2023

Tomatoes, Peppers & Eggplants...Oh My!

 Whenever I decide to do something, Bob says that I tend to go all in with it. Case in point would be starting tomatoes, peppers and eggplants from seed. I figure that I have the room, why not go for it? What's the worst case scenario? I'll be advertising my extra seedlings for sale on Facebook Marketplace. I'll be giving them away to friends. I already tried to talk my sister into taking some and she said no way. Final count on seedlings that have made it is 274 seedlings of 69 different varieties. I purposely planted some varieties heavy because I knew that they would be in high demand, like Prairie Fire.



I also have 39 varieties of peppers that made it and 10 varieties of eggplant. This is the very first year that I will have eggplant that survive from seed. Last year, I planted out around 50 varieties of peppers and the deer wiped them out overnight. Not this year. We got smart. We will be growing them in one of the greenhouses.



I have no method with the different colors of cups. They were just the cheapest ones I could find and they came in different colors.




They are lucky we're not fond of venison. If the truth be told, we think they're awesome and we don't mind them in the yard. We just devise ways around their nibbling nature to get a vegetable harvest. One of the things we do is toss carrots out in areas of our property that we don't mind them being in. A 25-pound bag of juicing carrots is like $10 at a restaurant supply store. It saves a lot of headaches.



Inokra Panigang is a Filipino pepper variety that I'm very excited to try.


Yes. We grow THAT, too.


This is a sweet pepper, bell style, variety that I got from Ukraine.





This is the only Black Hole Sun that I got to germinate. It's pretty healthy looking.


Heaven Oregon is the variety that I planted in honor of my friend, Conda Walsh, and her late husband, Steve. I hope to be able to send some seeds her way for next year so she can grow this variety.


Amy's Sugar Gem is the variety that I am growing to take the place of Isis Candy Cherry that I grew last year.

 
Wolverine is a sample pack that I received from an Etsy seller in Canada. It's a pretty striking looking tomato and I can't wait to see them on the vine.



So, my final pepper list for 2023 is 39 varieties:

Sugar Rush Peach
Blot
Peter Yellow
Elephant Ear
Erotica Orange
Corbaci
Sweet Ratunda
Ampuis
Black Square
Red Habanero
Ancho Poblano
Rainforest
King of the North
Korean Dark Green
Inokra Panigang
Gong Bao
Lesia Yellow
Greygo
Greek Pepperoncini
Peperone di Senise
Witch Stick
Jalora Jalapeno
Lemon Spice Jalapeno
Tabasco
Bridge To Paris
Coyote Teeth
Calabrian
Murasaki
Habanada
Lesya
Zapotec Jalapeno
Bohemian Baron
Pumpkin Spice Jalapeno
Hong Gochu
Tekni Dolmasi
Rezha Macedonia
Farmer Jalapeno
Chicago Sport
Peter Red

My eggplant list contains 10 varieties that made it through the transplant process:

Rosita
Violetta Luaga
Golub Sizokriliy
Louisiana Long Green
Antigua
Indoor Golden Eggs
Green Thai Frog Fingers
Laura
Pandora di Mazzarino
Casper

My tomatoes number 69 varieties. Those with an (*) by their name indicates a determinate or semi-determinate variety.

Phil's One
Phil's Two
Reisetomate
Prairie Fire
Taiga
Opalka
Stoney's Neighbor's
Pink Jazz
Maple Syrup
Cour di Bue Albenga
Queen of the Night
Mushroom Basket
Wolverine
Thorburn's Terra-Cotta
Orange Icicle
Korean Long
Indigo Blue Chocolate
Amy's Sugar Gem
Fleur de Reagar
Blue Zebra
Moonlight Mile
San Francisco Fog
Heaven Oregon
Julia Child
Clint Eastwood's Rowdy Red
DB Cooper
Dolly Parton
Hippie Zebra
Black Hole Sun
Midnight Roma
Butter Apple
Red Dumplin Winner Pink
Polish Nights
Cote d'Zebra
Glacial Zebra
Work Release
British Breakfast
Granny's Throwing
Zlatava
Surrendar's Indian Curry*
Sart Roloise
Everett's Rusty Oxheart
Butterscotch Paste
Arabesque*
Elita*
Cream Sausage*
Orange Fleshed Purple Smudge
Colonnade*
Midnight Sun
Fuzzy Blue Balls
Eros
Bakir*
Lava Flow
Marianna's Peace
Nature's Riddle
Bug Tussle Buttermilk Wonder
Rose
Inciardi Paste
Stripes of Yore
Yamali Blue
Yamali Green
Yamali Yellow
Campbell's 33*
KC 146*
Heinz 2653*
Heinz 1350*
Heinz 1706*
Heinz 1370*
Heinz 2274*

Hopefully, these will be enough to net me all the tomatoes that I need to go through the year.

Wednesday, January 25, 2023

End Of January Garden Happenings At Kelpie Kapers Farm

 I think a good start to 2023 would be to show you all what's going on around Kelpie Kapers Farm. First, I'll attempt to walk you all through what I plan on doing as far as getting a flock of laying chickens going here.



Bob put up the fence so that the cats could go outside last summer. They didn't really use that pen all that much, to be honest. They like to go out into the yard with the dogs and they seem to mind pretty well doing that, so that's what we've been doing these past several months. We are going to expand that pen. I'm going use 3 more of those fence panels to trellis tomatoes and other things on. I had planned on planting out 100 indeterminate tomato varieties, but I think that 80 should suffice and I can use the other panel for cucumbers and winter squash. Anyhow, that will leave 6 panels to build a chicken yard. The yard will be 20-foot long x 10-foot wide. We plan on putting the coop inside of it and we also plan on putting a bird netting or a tarp over the top to keep flying predators out. We just need to figure out a solution to keep them from going through the gap at the gate. We also need to figure exactly where we want to put this. I think having it partway under those fir trees will be a great thing for helping to shade it during the heat of summer, but I also have to think about the fact that raccoons do climb trees, so there's that to factor in, as well.




The rhubarb is doing quite well. I believe that I'll have a bumper crop of it this coming year. I have 2 plants. I'd love to add about 3 more, but I'll have to see if I can get these seeds to grow or not. I'm not going to buy anymore crowns. Bob covered it with a bit of soil.



See? It's healthy and thriving in it's blanket of straw.






There's the 2 rhubarb crowns enjoying their place. Now, I just need to figure out how to keep Rose from walking over them.


Here is one of the two beds that I planted out with garlic at the end of October. I plan on harvesting it sometime in later July or early August.

Here is the second bed of garlic. They are growing right along just fine. They even went through our 3 day deep freeze.



I poured a small amount of milk over the end of this log last spring. I knew what would happen and just look! So cool! I love having fungi grow!



Bob started doing some cleaning down on the terraced garden. On the next day that it's not raining, you all know where I'll be.



We have to add some serious amendments to these raised beds. That soil that we bought in bulk flat out sucked.



Here is the start of the first 20-foot long greenhouse. I'll be able to grow some serious crops in there!



We're not putting the cover on until winter's over, though. We don't want to lose this. We just need to figure out where to put the second one.



I plan on putting okra, melons, winged beans, cucamelons, butterfly peas and all my peppers into the pair of these greenhouses.



One frame up and one to go...as soon as we figure out where to put it. Bob is even contemplating parking his car over on the back side of the trailer and putting that other one alongside of that one. I suggested putting it out front. I'll let you all know where we decide.

Sunday, August 21, 2022

Mid-August Garden 2022

 Today was a slightly overcast morning and it was perfect for taking you all on a garden tour with me. This time, we went down to the raised beds, in the yard, to take a look. I saw a snake and scraped my foot on the rocks trying to run away from it. I really hate those things. It was down by my bean bed.










In this pot, I have Tongues of Fire bush beans. They looked great until about 2 weeks or so ago. Now they look like this, but they are producing. We're thinking that they are a product of getting bad soil.



These are my Chinese Red Noodle beans. They aren't looking so hot.



Tanya's Pink Pod bush beans. Again, not my best year for beans.



Here's another look at that pot of beans. They looked just fine and then, all of a sudden, they looked like this. The nasturtiums are the same story as the beans.



These are a variety that I'm growing out for Russell Crow called Senate Navy Soup beans. They are a bush variety. I may have to give it another go next year.


After I saw the snake down here next to the bean bed, I handed my phone off to Bob and asked him to take pictures. These are all pole bean varieties and they are thick enough that we can't really see the tags.



I know that these are Blauhilde. I bought these seeds from Nikitovka in Ukraine.



These are a variety called Fortex. These are a super long bean. Depending on how they produce in a week or so, I may have Bob go down and pick some for fresh eating.






All sorts of bean varieties down there. We seeded out well over 20 types.



My cucumber plants are starting to pick up down there in the bed. Finally.



I wasn't sure if this zucchini would produce or not. This is the starter plant that I bought. Everything is running about a month behind right now.


Bob took these pictures. You can plainly see that this bush will be loaded with zucchini.


I can't wait to roast some zucchini that I grew myself. This is the first year I've ever grown them.



My cucumbers are producing, as well. Bob's been winding them up onto the trellis that we put down there for them.



I'm not sure what this is. It's growing in the rocks. It's pretty, so we'll leave it. Knowing my luck, it's a weed. LOL!


This is our fig tree that we've been growing out from a cutting. It's doing quite well.



This is a Casper eggplant. I'm not even going to pretend that these eggplants look okay. They don't. I'm just letting them grow to see what they will do.



This is a Black Beauty eggplant. This one, though, turned out to be an ugly duckling.



This is Castelfranco radicchio that I seeded in last March. It's finally growing.



This is my Ichiban eggplant. There's not one thing about these to be impressed about.


Our rhubarb plants, however, are doing fantastically in their permanent home!



We bought these 2 hanging baskets at Lowe's for like $12 each. They are really pretty. They are a tropical plant and I am not sure what they are exactly. I just like them and the hummingbirds do, too.



One of the great things about living here is that, if I'm not going anywhere, I don't usually even bother getting dressed. There's not one single person, up here, that I need to impress. Anyhow, this is the aftermath of the snake escapade.



Here are my two full pots of okra. Okra will always have a place in my garden from now on.



These have been producing for a while now. Next year, I'm going to concentrate on 4 different varieties: Jing Orange, Star of David, Joanie's and Clemson Spineless. I'm determined to grow an amount that lets me pickle them and bread and freeze them for later use in the winter.



I have an okra plant sharing a pot with a Luffa Gourd vine.



In the back, I have a Siamese Bitter Melon vine and in front, I have a Minnesota Midget Cantaloupe. It's not ideal for these to be sharing pots, but I had very limited space for them this year and I was curious as to if I would even be able to grow a melon in western Washington state.



The cantaloupe moved off of the cup I was using to prop it up on.



Here I have a baby Tigger melon. There's actually several on this vine.



Baby Tigger Melons. I hope that these will mature because I'd really love to taste one.




I have Tigger Melons and Kajari Melons in the same pot. Again, not the most ideal of circumstances, but I was pressed for room and I wasn't sure if a melon, that originates from India/Pakistan would even produce or grow in our moderate, rainy western Washington climate.



Here is my pot of Cucamelons. I have four plants in this pot.



This was a late arrival. When I seeded out all the curcubits, this was the Table Queen Acorn Squash. Anyhow, when we planted everything up, it was in one of the cups that didn't look as if it would grow. It started growing, so we put it in it's own pot and it's growing amazingly well! We gave it some hydroponic micro-nutrients. We must have given it the right mix!



Here's a view of that acorn squash. It's growing right along.



Here is a baby cucamelon growing. My goal is to pickle some of these guys.



Baby Kajari melons. I can sit in the greenhouse and look at these all day long!



My row of cucurbits and okra. I'm very impressed with how well they are growing in here.







This is my deformed okra. LOL.






This is my Luffa Gourd vine. It hasn't flowered yet. I'm hoping it does. We plan on leaving this greenhouse up for as long as we can.



More baby cantaloupes. I have my fingers crossed. These are not a big melon, so maybe we'll get to taste one.




These are our grapes. 5 of these are Concord grapes that we started from cuttings. The other is supposed to be a green table grape that we bought off of Facebook Marketplace.




Now, onto the tomatoes. Holy tomatoes, Batman! If I can get all these to ripen, this will be my biggest harvest ever!




I have tomatoes of all shapes and sizes and colors. This is my very first year growing tomatoes from seed.




These are my Black Krims. They are probably my largest variety. They are my and Bob's favorite tasting tomato.


This is a Thorburn's Terra Cotta. I've never grown this one before. The tomatoes, when ripe, are supposed to be the color of a terra cotta pot.
I can't wait to try these.


This is our ...errr...volunteer tomato. We have no idea of when the seeds got put out there, but that sucker is growing up through some pretty skaggy looking wood chips. We decided to leave it there and see what it will do.
It's the little ...errr...volunteer tomato that could!


This is a variety called Russian Black. Our favorite tomato flavor profile are the black varieties.



Here are some Cascade Lava and a Dark Galaxy.



This is a Bulls Heart Red. The heart shaped tomatoes are really good for canning.



These are Prairie Fire, I believe. These are a plum shaped variety and are supposed to taste amazing. We'll see because I'm going to use these for canning.



These are more Prairie Fire. I have a couple of those plants out there in the tomato garden.



These are Red Dumplin Winner Pinks. I got the seeds for these from Tomato Jim Wyant.



These are pleasing to the eye. This is my perfect pair of Black Krims. I'm very proud of these.



This is a variety called Orange Jazz. I'm drawn to orange tomatoes for whatever reason. I ordered some seeds for an orange paste tomato from Baker Creek to grow next year.


These are called Julia Child. I can't wait to taste these.



These are Red Dumplin Winner Pink. I'm super curious about these. I bought the seeds from Tomato Jim Wyant like 2 years ago and I didn't do anything special, as far as storing them. They were my first to come up and were my most vigorous growers. Jim recommended these for canning.
I have 2 plants.


These are an unusual variety called Pink Fang. I got the seeds from Baker Creek. I'm going to see if they can well or not. They are supposed to sweet, so we'll see.



They tend to grow in clusters, which is pleasing to the eye.



These are a cluster of Prairie Fire.


This is a Dark Galaxy. I love the spots on it. I can't wait to see it ripe. This is one that I'm growing out for looks. If it tastes good, that will be an added bonus. If it's a good tomato for making sauce, I'll grow several next year.



This is a determinate variety called Cream Sausage. This is a paste tomato. It is white once it's ripe. I want to make a fresh white tomato sauce and try it on some pasta. I'm anxiously awaiting this one to get ripe. 



This is supposed to be a Jersey Giant. I don't think that's what they are at all. Jersey Giants are elongated paste tomatoes. These are round. Oh well. It's a tomato. That's all I care about. I won't save seeds from these because I don't know what they are.



These are Yamali Blue. I've been wanting to grow this variety since 2013. I received some seeds, from a gentleman in France, and I had little seedlings and I got up one morning to find that our old cat, KiKi, had laid on top of the dome and crushed all my tomatoes.
I ordered these seeds from Kim Lund and I have 2 plants.


This is the second Yamali Blue plant. These are one of those varieties that are strictly being grown out for looks. I'm not sure they will make a decent tasting sauce.


This is a pair of Opalkas. I have 5 plants of this variety. This is supposed to be one of the best for canning.




I have 4 tomatillo plants. I want to make green salsa this year.



Here's a close up of the Dark Galaxy. It's stunning even before it's ripe!


Seriously! Look at it!


More Prairie Fire. I hope these taste as good as Baker Creek claims.


This is a Cascade Lava.
I grew this solely because of the name.



This is supposed to be a Jersey Giant. I have my doubts.


I see one got zapped by a bug. I'll just cut that part out.


This is my tomato beauty this year. This is a Sart Roloise. Once it's ripe, it will be white and blue. It's stunning even when it's not ripe.


Another Sart Roloise.


Here is my most unusual tomato. This is called Reisetomate. That is just one tomato.

Here's an Opalka. These are a Polish variety with very few seeds. They are said to have originated around 1900. So that would make this particular variety almost 125 years old!


Another Reisetomate.


A pair of Sart Roloise. These are so pretty. I put them at the end of the row so I can sit at my window and look at them.


These greenhouse photos were taken yesterday. It amazes me how quickly these little melons grow.


This is a Minnesota Midget cantaloupe.



This is a baby cucamelon. It looks like I may actually be able to harvest more than 4 of these!



Pretty melons all in a row!


More baby cantaloupes. I'm not pruning this vine or anything. I want to see what it will do. I'll learn to prune next year when I have more than just one vine.



That Kajari melon is growing up the side of the greenhouse, which is just fine with me.
We put a thermometer in there and it's routinely 90+ degrees in there. All these melons and the okra love it!
We bought a 20 foot greenhouse just like this smaller 12 foot one. I'll be growing enough of these melons, gourds, cucamelons and okra next year to have a harvest to rave about.



My Siamese bitter melon decided to set blooms.
I'm hoping I can grow a few of them. That would be amazing!



Okra have the most beautiful blooms on them. They pop out with these and then the blooms roll up and become okra.


I took these photos in the morning and, by that afternoon, they were rolled up and becoming okra pods.





Thank you for taking the garden tour with me. Until next time, go out and take a look at nature. It's very peaceful!