Monday, October 09, 2023

Green Bean Crop. 9 Oct 2023.

 This is a bit delayed.  Last week I harvested green beans, the last of the sauce tomatoes, and some nore figs.



I cut, blanched, and froze the green beans.  I spread the beans on a sheet pan to freeze, then transferred to a freezer bag.


I didn't weigh them, but I estimate the green bean yield as about 15 pounds this year, spread over a few harvests.  It was a lot of beans.

Nemagon Mustard Cover Crop. 9 Oct 2023

 Last week I harvested all of the green beans, and cut up all of the plants.  Then I added chopped marigold plants to the soil, covered by leaf mould from last fall.  




I should add, the rhizobium inoculant carried over from a bean crop, grown two years ago.  The roots all had nice nitrogen-fixing nodules.



This area will have tomatoes next year.  The soil level has dropped, so I added about three inches of soil from a fallow atea that has nit grown to atoes or potatoes for several years.  Then I sowed Nemagon mustard seeds, for green manure crop / winter groundcover / soil benefits for tomatoes. I watered them in, and in a week there are mustard seedlings germinating.


If I can, I'd like to do the same for the other tomato bed for this year.  So far, I'm half way through adding soil and sowing mustard seeds there.


Completed Tropical Shirt Quilt, with Flannel Backing. 9 Oct 2023

 Here's the completed tropical shirt quilt.  I'm pretty happy with the result.





The backing is cotton flannel.  I found a good quality, unused flannel fitted queen size sheet at the thrift store, for $6.  It seemed thicker than flannel fabric at the fabric store, softer, and I was able to use one large piece instead of piecing narrower ones together.  After starching, cutting off the elastic and seamed parts, it was large enough for this quilt and a little left over.

I think the starch helped a lot.  It was fairy stiff and didn't stretch and deform while sewing.  On the other hand, my newer Brother sewing machine didn't work for this quilt - the tension settings were either too much or too little, and it skipped stitches.  I tried denim needle and titanium quilting needle.  I switched to the old Kenmore machine, added the titanium quilting needle and walking foot, and it went very smooth and fast.  Also, no bunching up of backing, no creases or pleats.  

After washing with an extra rinse to get out all of the starch, and drying to fluff up the batting and flannel, this quilt is very warm and comfortable.  

Since the pattern was much simpler, and I did not have to piece the backing, this quilt came together much faster than most.   Plus, instead of taping each line to quilt, I mostly used the guide on the walking foot - set at two inches - the quilting went a lot faster too, with fewer challenges.


Pawpaws and Chestnuts. 9 Oct 2023.

 The chestnut trees are making some nice nuts now.  I planted the trees about six years ago,  They are grafted varieties, hybrids of Japanese with European species.  They are disease resistant, and can pollinate each other.

The pawpaws surprised me by making a nice crop.  I did hand-pollinate them.  All of the grafted tops died off, and now they are multi-trunked trees of the rootstocks.  I put protective mesh bags on the fruits this summer, and thinned them to a few per bunch.




The pawpaws have a nice flavor, mild, sort of like mango.  The texture is like avocado.They are nicecto have as a treat.

The chestnuts are starchy, like potato.  Roasted in the air fryer with some oil and salt, they remind me a bit of French Fries.

Tuesday, September 19, 2023

Tropical Shirt Quilt. The Top is Completed. 19 Sept 2023

 Here's the completed quilt top.


I'm actually kind of pleased with the result.

First I combined squares into pairs, and sewed those together.  I left out 2 of each type, for row ends.


The seams are ironed toward the darker square, so the nest when sewn to the next row.  The other seams were ironed open so they will be flat.


I questioned whether I left enough un-sewn, so I laid them all out on the sunroom floor.


Well, they were OK.  So I sewed together the pairs, building up to eight rows.



At this point, I'm ironing all seams toward the darker squares.  I'm also checking my photo of the layout that I liked, so I get it right.

Then U sewed together the rows, this time ironing the seams open.  Result is at the top.

Next step, batting is ordered on Amazon, USA grown and manufactured.  The Chinese imported is cheaper, but there's the slave labor issue, so I paid more for a US small company product.

Also, the flannel backing.  I'll starch, press, and sew that in the next few days.