I grow organic food (when the slugs and snails let me!) in my back garden and my work allotment in South Birmingham. I experiment with heritage varieties, unusual edibles and growing from saved seed. I make things too, mostly in winter and mainly with crochet and I'm learning to sew dresses and follow patterns with some help from my sewing club friends.
Showing posts with label Nasturtium. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Nasturtium. Show all posts
Sunday, 5 August 2012
Friday, 27 January 2012
2011 saving money with a small garden
In 2011 I saved £172.45 through growing my own food. With what I have learned over the last year I am sure I can increase that saving this year!
I only recorded savings between May to December as that was when I was initially inspired to find out how much I actually save with growing my own food.
May
In 2010 I hadn't really learnt to grow many things to eat over the winter months as yet with chard being my main winter crop so until May this was really all that was growing outside together with the perennial herbs.
The saving for this month was £2.21 which consisted of salads, herbs, peas, turnips and some cabbage.
June
Things were starting to pick up a bit in June and I was able to more than double those savings to £5.34. The spring sowings were planted out and starting to crop.
Crops I was eating in June were salads made with kai lan, chard, nasturtium leaves, pea shoots, mustard leaves, squash flowers, etc. I was making herbal teas with mint and lemon verbena. My crop of early potatoes were ready to eat and the potato bag produced nearly a kilo of salad potatoes - now that was a crop I savoured! I was also eating french beans and peas.
July
Savings continued to grow in July when I saved £7.90. I had similar crops to June except for the potatoes - I was then waiting for my second batch of earlies which were being grown for my boyfriend's rest & recouperation break from a tour in Cyprus in August. There were also some new crops that came in to season: courgettes started to crop, patty pans and strawberries in hanging baskets.
August
The savings took a wapping jump to £72.51! It includes gifts of 800g chard and 3kg of tomatoes saved from blighted crops which were given in return for volunteer gardening maintenance in a community garden. As this was free food I included this in my savings. In addition, it highlights one of the major benefits of joining or helping out in community gardens - free food!
September
The savings were pretty similar to August coming in at £62.53. Again, a little generosity inflated my crops as a friend gave me 500g windfall apples which I turned into my first ever jelly - it was delicious and set marvelously. All the crops in season in August were still producing in September just slightly less prolifically. We had a really hot week at the end of September/early October - unfortunately I had already removed my tomatoes due to the blight experienced in August which would have done really well in that heat.
October
Things really started to tail off this month at £15.81. Although, keeping that saving value high were the winter squashes. The summer in 2011 was disappointing with not much sun but in mid to late autumn, temperatures were remaining stable at about 15 degrees centigrade which was ideal weather for the winter squash to fully finish on their vines before being cropped. With the mild weather, tomatoes and chillies were continuing to finish cropping and winter salad was starting to be substantial enough to eat.
November
The year was really starting wind down now with £6.17. Chillies and sweet peppers were still cropping and kale, cabbage, kai lan, nasturtium, chard and winter salad were this month's crops.
It has been a brilliant exercise recording all my crops and their weights. Its given me something solid to reflect on. Through the data I can see which months things were cropping in a challenging summer with little sun. It also made me realise what foods were expensive and which ones were less expensive. It told me that with a container garden it makes more sense to grow the high value crops that I can get a good yield from.
For 2012, I have decided to capitalise each season on getting the most value from my plot. I will grow the expensive Solanceae through the summer and concentrate more on brassica types through the winter. I will grow what grows easily in pots and not invest too much space in those crops that don't fare well in pots. I found turnips were a disaster and peas were difficult. However, I think I will still grow a pot of peas as they are like sweets in the garden!
From the summer, I will be planning my winter crops better - I was starting to do this in late summer 2011, but I will give this more focus in 2012 and sow some kohl rabi good and early. I will experiment with a different variety of kale to see if I can find a favourite as this grows so well in winter and I find it easier to grow in containers than cabbage.
Lets see if I learn from 2011's data and really improve my savings and crop yields this year. Watch this space!
Here's the Spreadsheet if you would like to see the results in more detail.
Have you done an exercise to record your crops? I'd love to hear of your experiences.
Tuesday, 27 December 2011
2011 Gardening Year of Trials and Tribulations
If we look back over the past year we've had an extremely warm start in spring with April reaching over 20 degrees centigrade. In May, temperatures dropped (but I find they do most years so waited until early June to plant out the cucurbitaceae (squash)). Then the summer didn't really come. July was grey and wet through some of the weeks. Then August came and didn't really bring summer either ending, certainly in the South East with a day of severe rain that swiftly followed with blight attack on many tomatoes (the community gardens and school garden I support suffered this more than my small patio garden). In September as there were so many green tomatoes being given to me I learned to make chutney for the first time. Followed by a crazy Autumn and really high temperatures in the first week of October when lucky people who hadn't cropped yet got a week's summer. And now we are experiencing a rather warm winter - in fact, I'm not sure whether to call it winter at all. Usually the nasturtiums have died off by now but my sheltered patio garden hasn't really felt the bite of a frost yet.
So a rather challenging year to garden in but his meant lots of adaptation and resourcefulness.
Early in the year my boyfriend bought me a plastic greenhouse. It was absolutely fantastic for hardening off seedlings in early spring and I used it for this purpose from March all the way through to June. For a few months I left it vacant, but I've really got into growing chillies this year and our summer wasn't really a good one for them so as the weather started to disappoint in July I started to move them into the plastic greenhouse - and they loved it! I didn't even have to water them that much as they would sweat off the excess water and it would stay in the green house. I continued to use it all the way through to October. If you don't have one, and don't have the space for a glass green house I really recommend getting a plastic greenhouse!
For ages it remained stored in its wrapper and then when I started to see flowers on my aubergines I had little hope of them bearing fruit and I thought about the idea of using the horticultural fleece. It worked a treat!
Definitely using it next year, especially if I get impatient with my tomatoes!
This year I stumbled across a really good variety of winter squash that seemed completely unperturbed by our disappointing summer. They are called Zapallito de Toscana and I ordered them from the Garden Organic Heritage Seed Library Catalogue. I am definitely going to be sourcing more seed for next year.
It was the first year I grew from seeds sourced from the Heritage Seed Library and I had some absolutely beautiful purple peas.
I wouldn't recommend them for crops to be grown in a container garden as they didn't really give enough of a yield but the flowers were beautiful and I just couldn't help take photos of them.
I would definitely recommend growing Heritage Seed Library varieties and to learn seed saving. Its a great source of seed if you like to experiment with unusual or old heirloom varieties.
I tried seed saving for the first time this year and found it tremendously rewarding.
Next year, I am going to grow more varieties that are perennial/biennial and/or are low fuss to grow. Varieties I found to be in this camp this year were nasturtiums (plant them anywhere you have a spare bit of ground - you can make pesto, a little chopped leaves on top of curries, flavour for salads - they are truly wonderful and add colour to small plots), zapallito de toscana (winter squash), kai lan, chard, kale and herbs, salad potatoes...
I am also going to introduce more early varieties of tomatoes as these will probably be more UK climate friendly. I'll also look for early varieties of chillies, sweet peppers and aubergines as these could be more suited to the UK growing season too.
In 2012 I will be looking for more varieties to add to this list. I am still trialling Egyptian Walking Onions and broad beans.
A review of gardening in 2011 wouldn't be complete without mentioning my wormery. It provided me with wonderful worm casts and the garden benefited so much from the worm tea. If I didn't have my own wormery I would pay for worm tea. So much more superior than bought organic fertiliser.
Next year I plan to be far more savy in July and August with my winter planting. Its lovely having things growing in the winter garden and I think you should be able to graze and browse your garden no matter what month of the year it is. I still have some winter salad growing and brassicas in my garden.
I think it so important to keep a relationship with your garden no matter what season and that includes eating/grazing from it as many days of the year as possible!
Labels:
aubergines,
blight,
chard,
chilli pepper,
container garden,
early potatoes,
garden salad,
green tomatoes,
hardening off,
Heritage Seed Library,
kai lan,
Nasturtium,
wormery,
zapallito de toscana
Friday, 18 November 2011
Fresh Veg from the November garden
I was just looking through my garden diary and noticed that I am still cropping food from the garden even now in mid November. The other night I picked a winter salad to accompany some shepherds pie and last night I was picking chard for a curry.
In fact the garden has been feeding me steadily and hasn't taken a week off since April - thank you garden!
Considering I have a small patio garden and my growing is in pots, I don't suffer gluts very often, but I am finding with time and learning about what works through trial and error that I have a steady supply of salad greens and these haven't had a week off for about 7-8 months, which I would never have guessed would happen in a small container garden, but what a blessing it is.
I am sure it is also thanks to this strange year of weather we've been having and we haven't had a frost in South West London yet.
The types of things that I am still cropping are:
- Chillies & Peppers (from the plastic greenhouse)
- Kale
- Chard
- Beetroot
- Cabbage
- Rapa de Senza (turnip green eaten as a salad leaf)
- Kai Lan (delicious raw in salad or lightly stir fried)
- Nasturtium (will definitely be popping these seeds around the garden anyway I find a spare bit of soil - such a versatile crop for pesto, salad, pickled seeds, flavour and it grows so easily in the UK. So far from May - November)
- Mustard Leaf
- Garlic Chives (from last summer's garlic bulbs - I missed a few when harvesting and now have garlic chives popping up in a few places...delicious!)
I would never have guessed that even in November the garden would be inspiring evening meals.
Friday, 28 October 2011
October Gardening
I haven't been blogging much of late. Its not that I've stopped gardening... I've just not been gardening much in my own garden. Maybe because I have a container garden and there's so much more to do in the community gardens I help maintain.
At the school garden we've been doing lots of weeding, harvesting beetroots, chard, beans and grapes. Some of the pupils were even inspired to make juice out of the grapes! We've also been planting green manures on the patches of ground that will remain vacant until next spring. We chose Phacelia as it is not in any of the crop groups we are using in our crop rotation plans.
At the Community Garden we're planting a winter wheat section. So far we've been turning the soil (with forks I might add as we didn't have a rotavator!) As we have quite a large area to sow this has been very much fat burning work with towels to mop brows and water bottles on hand! Next we will be raking the soil and then planting the seed.
At home, I do still have jobs to do... Planting the garlic! This is a job my boyfriend sees as very high on my todo list as he would be devastated if there wasn't any fresh garlic to go with the fresh tomatoes next summer!! I'm also going to plant some broad beans. I've never grown them before but have an eye on a broad bean hummus recipe I'd love to try and I'm sure it just wouldn't be the same unless they are fresh from the garden and young beans. I'm also thinking about moving the salad boxes into the plastic greenhouse when the final chillies have moved out. I have some Hatif d'Annonay Peas http://www.realseeds.co.uk/peas.html which is a fast growing dwarf pea which can be sown now in October/November so that's another of my intentions. I will have to bring my Zapallito de Toscana winter squash in soon but as we haven't had any frosts in South West London yet I'm letting it stay on the plant as long as I can. The plant is still very much alive so have been letting it stay on the mother plant for as long as possible. Please let me know if this is the right thing to do or would I be better just bringing them in now as this is the first year I have grown winter squash with a hard outer shell.
I've also been busy in the kitchen baking muffins with an oversized 600g patty pan, making nasturtium pesto, cooking roast squash and chilli, rosehip and apple jelly to name but a few concoctions.
Recipes coming soon to clairesculinaryadventures.blogspot.com
I'm still trying to find something exciting to do with a bumper crop of beetroot from the school garden. Any delicious beetroot ideas?
At the school garden we've been doing lots of weeding, harvesting beetroots, chard, beans and grapes. Some of the pupils were even inspired to make juice out of the grapes! We've also been planting green manures on the patches of ground that will remain vacant until next spring. We chose Phacelia as it is not in any of the crop groups we are using in our crop rotation plans.
At the Community Garden we're planting a winter wheat section. So far we've been turning the soil (with forks I might add as we didn't have a rotavator!) As we have quite a large area to sow this has been very much fat burning work with towels to mop brows and water bottles on hand! Next we will be raking the soil and then planting the seed.
At home, I do still have jobs to do... Planting the garlic! This is a job my boyfriend sees as very high on my todo list as he would be devastated if there wasn't any fresh garlic to go with the fresh tomatoes next summer!! I'm also going to plant some broad beans. I've never grown them before but have an eye on a broad bean hummus recipe I'd love to try and I'm sure it just wouldn't be the same unless they are fresh from the garden and young beans. I'm also thinking about moving the salad boxes into the plastic greenhouse when the final chillies have moved out. I have some Hatif d'Annonay Peas http://www.realseeds.co.uk/peas.html which is a fast growing dwarf pea which can be sown now in October/November so that's another of my intentions. I will have to bring my Zapallito de Toscana winter squash in soon but as we haven't had any frosts in South West London yet I'm letting it stay on the plant as long as I can. The plant is still very much alive so have been letting it stay on the mother plant for as long as possible. Please let me know if this is the right thing to do or would I be better just bringing them in now as this is the first year I have grown winter squash with a hard outer shell.
I've also been busy in the kitchen baking muffins with an oversized 600g patty pan, making nasturtium pesto, cooking roast squash and chilli, rosehip and apple jelly to name but a few concoctions.
Recipes coming soon to clairesculinaryadventures.blogspot.com
I'm still trying to find something exciting to do with a bumper crop of beetroot from the school garden. Any delicious beetroot ideas?
Friday, 10 June 2011
An ornamental edible garden
Lately I've been pondering a lot about the ornamental qualities of an edible garden.
It could be my work at the garden centre that has inspired me.
It could be due to planting a few companion flowers in the garden to ward off pests (e.g. calendula and nasturtiums).
It could be recently reading Alys Fowler's book The Thrifty Gardener - I could not help but read this gardening manual cover to cover! This book inspired me to look at the garden as a combination of a thing of beauty and an edible garden. Previously, I had always been focussed on growing edibles. It really got me thinking about combining the two aspects, not just the plants but the containers that the plants live within.
Since then shopping has not been the same - always on the lookout for potential plant containers where ever I go and what ever I consume. Take a look at what the radishes are growing in, in the picture below.
As well as hunting for potential containers this also led to my sowing a few annual ornamentals which I haven't really done before. Cosmos was the ornamental flower that crept in - technically speaking the rest of the flowers are recommended companions for an edible garden.
I find rainbow chard with its full leaves and colourful stems always to be visually beautiful as well as very tasty. Virtues of growing chard
Another vegetable that I have always thought very beautiful are squash. I grew crookneck summer squash last year and the leaves looked so lush, the flowers and the bright yellow fruit looked amazing. Wonder of germinating squash
This year I have simply been completely bowled over by the beauty of purple pea varieties. I think their flowers are simply astounding. The flowers look sweet and no doubt their peas will taste amazing too. I have never grown these before. They came in this year's batch of seeds from the Heritage Seed Library called Purple pod. Just take a look at how it flowers. Peas please
I had almost forgotten to eat nasturtiums. I've grown them for the last few years but simply as a fodder for the aphids so that they would leave my more prized edibles alone.
The other day I was gardening at the Bramford Community Garden and one of the other volunteers ate a nasturtium leaf. The penny dropped - of course, you can eat the leaves! So I picked a nasturtium leaf. Immediately, I smelt a very evocative smell that reminded me of a smell I knew from my childhood and with that smell I remembered the taste. I thought why didn't I do this sooner!! Munched on the leaf and that leaf packed a punch of peppery flavour. Ever since then, nasturtium leaves have appeared in my daily salad!! And the leaves and the petals are so beautiful too.
Last week I planted a Globe Artichoke in the Bramford Community Garden for its beautiful tall thistle shaped flower and its multi purpose of being a beautiful and architectural plant as well as an edible. (Not the one in the picture!) It is just a baby plant at the moment but I am looking forward to it growing taller than me with loads of beautiful flower heads!
Another thing of beauty is strawberry plants. They come in a range of flower colours from deep dark pink, to pale pink through to the classic white flowers. They can be planted in hanging baskets where the ripening fruit can dangle down graciously.
Take a look at these radish flowers.
If I hadn't neglected the radishes last summer, I would never have seen this beautiful display of white flowers. Following on from the flowers came the radish pods which were delightfully crunchy in salad (a bit like very small mange tout).
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