Saturday, November 13, 2021
Raised Bed Progress. 11.13.2021
Today I topped off the first raised bed with a layer of tree leaves. During the winter, earthworms should pull some of those underground and start their composting. I thought about buying a soil inoculum, since the topsoil was processed by the recycler and probably devoid of much life. Instead, I've added my own compost, and added a top layer of soil from my existing garden bed. That should give it life. Also, I collected mushrooms of various sorts and added those on top of the soil, prior to the leaf layer. To an organic gardener, soil is a living community of microorganisms.
Whenever I happen to see an earthworm, usually a result of digging, I re-home them in the new raised bed. Earthworms are nature's tiny farmers. They tunnel through the soil, aerating it. Their mucous binds soil particles together. Their castings make minerals available to plant roots. They till organic matter from leaves and roots, into the soil.
Meanwhile, the other raised bed is about 20% built now. Not bad. Rain is expected tomorrow.
A Very Good Pumpkin Pie. 11.13.2021
This was one of my best pumpkin pies ever. I used puree from Galeux d'Eysines pumpkin. It's basically the Libby's pumpkin recipe, except I used light coconut milk for baking, instead of evaporated milk. I also rolled sesame seeds onto the crust before transferring it to the pie plate. I blind baked the crust, leaving the aluminum foil on the crimped edges throughout baking.
Definitely grow Galeux d'Eysines pumpkins next year.
Winter Cover Crop. 11.13.2021
I have not tried this mix before. I've grown buckwheat as a cover crop. Deer love it.
This seed covered 1/2 of the area where I want to plant sweet corn next year, and where I grew squashes this year.
I don't know if this is too late, or how they will do, or if deer will eat all of the plants, or if they will be too weedy. It's an experiment.
I don't want to leave the soil bare, or encourage thistles, so it is worth a try.
Today was a break in rain. It should rain again over the next several days. That should get them settled in and starting.
Here is the seed mix:
Austrian Winter Peas
Winter Wheat
Triticale
Forage Collards
Hairy Vetch
Daikon Radish
Fenugreek
Crimson Clover
Berseem Clover
Yellow Mustard
Persimmons. 11.23.2021
Birds have started eating the ripest persimmons, so I picked them all. Persimmons ripen just fine indoors. Most of these are "Nikita's Gift". There were also more "Saijo" than I expected.
Wednesday, November 10, 2021
New Raised Bed #1 is Done. 11.10.2021
This one is completely done. I topped it off with some well aged compost, then a layer of good raised bed soil from the one I'm digging out.
I also planted a few dozen topsets from Egyptian Walking Onions at the ends. Still thinking about whether to plant a cover crop on the rest, or just a thick layer of leaves.
I cut the wire fencing and plastic fencing to use as mole deterrents for the bottom of new raised bed #2, and moved some blocks nearby. When these, and the rebuilt smaller bed with wooden sides are done, I really don't want to do more big garden construction projects after this. The entire idea is to reduce heavy work.
Meanwhile,the hardest part is to level the soil for the blocks, and lay the blocks kevel and plumb. After the base rows are in place, it goes better. Maybe ten more days?
Also thinking about pathways between raised beds. This year, moles did a lot of damage, undermining sides and corners of beds and burying the woodchips with soil. Plus, I got behind pulling perennial volunteers - mainly four o'clocks and potatoes - and it became a challenge to access those garden beds. I'm thinking laying down wire fencing in the walkways, top with black plastic, then I don't know. Wood chips? Gravel? Depends on how I think moles will affect this area.
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