Monday, September 8, 2008
Say Cheese !!!
Wednesday, September 3, 2008
Peaches Peaches Peaches
" Your the cutest thing I ever did see ... Really Love your Peaches ... wanna shake your tree ... Luv a dubby Luv a dubby all the time " Steve Miller Band
All totaled between the 2 peach trees the haul was about a market basket & a half which if bought works out to almost $25 (organic). Each tree retailed for $24.99. Doing the math after the 3rd year one tree is owned free and clear.
Seeing the twinkle in my children's eyes as they bite into a sweet juicy just picked peach - priceless.
~~ pelenaka ~~
http://thirtyfivebyninety.blogspot.com/2008/04/urban-orchard-part-3.html 3rd picture down - same tree full of pretty pink peach blossoms - future peaches !
MIA on the Urban Homestead
Here is a really fugal version of drip irrigation. One of the many items that attracted me to DH was his collection of plastic pails & buckets that he had hoarded away after years of collecting but I digress sorry back to the subject of drip irrigation.
In short the concept is very simple - a slow steady drip of water that finds it way to the deepest portion of a plants root system, a small area of wet soil that extends down to a foot or more vs. a large soggy area that only extends down a few inches (surface watering).
Each container has a small hole drilled in the bottom about the size of half a pea. That hole I found was best to place about two inches from the edge. This works well when I place the container up close along side the plants stalk as well as the original area where the root ball was first planted.
Good method to deliver either compost or manure tea.
There are 13 Romas on that one plant ... now if only they would grow to a pound each!
~~ pelenaka ~~
Monday, August 11, 2008
not my bro's deck
This is a close up of Gita Specialty Snap bean. More than a few measured 16" however it's best not to let them grow that long or thick. Planning on canning these in a recipe called Dilly Beans.
Bragging rights on my Rainbow Swiss Chard - a whopping 27 " long. Unfortunately not every stem so for now I am selectively harvesting only the largest. Chard like other green leafy vegetables has to be pressure canned instead of the usual water bath canning procedure.
~~ pelenaka ~~
Monday, August 4, 2008
Press this Baby!
