Thursday, June 30, 2011

New Pictures Added - Garden Album


Last week I picked some of the mixed lettuce in the communal bed and enjoyed a wonderful fresh salad from our garden! It seems like our garden is growing by the minute now! Check out the new pictures and the veggies that have popped out.

Monday, June 27, 2011

Growing garlic

Why do you garden? It's a lot of work. You wouldn't be doing it for no reason at all.

One reason to garden is to produce foods that you can't buy. Ground cherries come to mind.

So does garlic. For the past three years, only garlic from China is available in supermarkets. Not only is it tasteless, but it's been ferried and transported from the other side of the world, wasting precious fossil fuels on a vegetable that grows well right here. (Secretly I wonder if China keeps all the good garlic for themselves and ships us the garbage.)

If you long for the good ol' days of tasty garlic, you might want to consider growing your own. And now is the time to start finding some garlic to plant.

Steps in growing garlic:

1. Visit the market in early July to find locally grown garlic.

It should be available very soon. (My garlic is already harvestable, a good two weeks early due to all the rain.) Ask the vender a lot of questions. Where was it grown? What kind is it? When do you usually plant it? Do you have other kinds?

Consider visiting a few stalls and getting a variety. One popular garlic for Ontario is known as Music -- developed by a Mr. Music in Uxbridge, Ontario. Remember that each clove will produce one bulb, so buy enough for a year's worth of garlic plus enough extra bulbs to plant in the fall.

As an alternative, you can order seed garlic from seed stores for delivery in September. But they'll be more expensive.

Do not, do not, do not try to plant grocery store garlic from China. I promise it will be tasteless and not worth the effort.

2. Store the bulbs in a cool, dark place.

Cool, not cold. (Never refrigerate garlic -- it develops mould.) The back of a cupboard will do, as long as it doesn't get too warm there in the summer.

3. Plant in mid fall.

In October, you'll probably be pulling up your vegetable harvest and composting your plants. At that time, the CPCG will probably arrange for a delivery of soil amendments to dig and rototill in so that the beds are ready for planting in the spring.

Once that's all done, around Halloween, prepare a square in the corner of your garden for garlic. Sprinkle in some organic fertilizer or a scoopful of good compost and dig it in a little.

Separate your bulbs into cloves, leaving the papery coverings intact. Poke each clove into the ground, pointy-side up. Cover the cloves with soil but there's no need to push them down really deep. Plant in a square of tight rows, not in a long, single row. The cloves don't need more than 3 inches of space on each side.

When finished planting, gently step all over the bed to press the soil down. Then cover it with leaves, straw, or wood chips. Garlic is very frost-hardy, so don't worry if the tip starts to grow through the mulch before the snow cover arrives.

Then forget about it till spring.

By the way, if you like shallots, plant them at the same time in the same way. I've found that grocery store shallots grow just fine in our climate and produce a sweet-tasting shallot.

Next year

In March, you'll notice the garlic tips poking through the mulch. At this point, you can rake the mulch aside and get rid of it, in case it's harboring any insect eggs. Or you can just leave it in place -- it's your call.

Give the garlic bed another sprinkle of organic fertilizer and gently rake it in. Keep the bed as free of weeds as possible throughout the growing season.

In June, the garlic plants will grow a graceful, curling flower stalk known as a garlic scape. Snap off the scapes to promote good bulb development. Use the scapes in soups, stirfries, and oriental cooking.

Once the garlic has seven leaves and seems to be drying out in early July, it's getting to be time to harvest it. As a precaution, I always check with the organic market venders to find out if it's time to harvest yet -- they're very helpful. If you leave the garlic in the ground too long, the bulbs will start to open, and they won't store as well.

To harvest, loosen the soil with a pitchfork and pull each garlic out of the ground. Let the garlic dry outside in the sun for at least a week to help develop a strong bulb cover. You can do this on your back deck, but farmers just leave the garlic sitting in the field.

Once it's completely dry, brush off any remaining soil and dirt. Trim the roots off the bulbs. Then either cut the stems or figure out how to do that cool braiding thing.

Store your garlic in a cool, dry, dark place. As long as the garlic doesn't freeze, it will be good till next summer.

If it's still early in the summer, plant a quick-growing vegetable where the garlic was growing, such as lettuce, broccoli seedlings, or beans.

Saturday, June 25, 2011

July 9th Garden Picnic

Mark your calendars! Everyone is invited to a garden picnic on Saturday, July 9th at 11:00 am.
Meet your fellow gardeners, share tips and delicious food, and enjoy surveying the fruits of our work!

More details to follow.

Friday, June 24, 2011

New Pictures Added - Garden Album


New pictures have been posted to our Garden Album. I've added dates to the bottom of the pictures so you can see just how fast things grow in only a weeks time. The difference from week to week is amazing! Check it out!

Friday, June 17, 2011

Gardening workshops in Kingston

Be sure to head to the Sunnyside Garden Party this Saturday, June 18th for good food, good folks, and good workshops!

Square Foot Gardening – June 18th, 11am-12pm, Sunnyside Community Garden (on MacDonnell at Brock)
Square Foot Gardening is a condensed, all natural method of gardening that grows more food in less space, with less time, less water and less work. Learn more about this innovative approach to urban gardening in a one hour workshop facilitated by Wess Garrod of WillGrow Gardens, and see a sample garden close up.

Garlic Growing and Natural Pest Control – June 18th, 1-2 pm, Sunnyside Community Garden (on Madonnell at Brock)
Familiarize yourself with ways to control pests naturally, including growing garlic.  Participants will learn about planting and growing garlic and will be invited to make a natural pest control potion that saves money and avoids poisoning. Facilitated by Tim Lyon of Main St. Market.

The workshop series continues...
 
Sat. June 18th 11a.m.-12p.m. Square Foot Gardening
Sat. June 18th 1-2p.m. Garlic Growing and Natural Pest Control
Tues. June 21st 7-8p.m. Direct Seeding and Bed Preparation
Tues. July 5th 7-8p.m. Pest Control and Weeding
Tues. July 19th 7-8p.m. Scything 101
Sat. July 23rd 1-2p.m. Composting
Tues. July 26th 7-8p.m. All Things Garlic
Tues. Aug. 9th 7-8p.m. Permaculture: A Lazy Gardener’s Guide
Tues. Aug. 23rd 7-8p.m. Seed Saving: Beginner-Intermediate Guide
Tues. Sept. 6th 7-8p.m. Bed-Preparation and Care

Thursday, June 16, 2011

Helping Hands


Liz Neely's Grade 1/2 class from St. Thomas More School helped out with the planting of our communal beds earlier in the spring. With the permission of Liz, and her students' parents, we can share some delightful photos of the children at work. More have been added to our Picasa album - just follow the link on the left side of the blog.  Enjoy!

Saturday, June 11, 2011

New Pictures Added - Garden Album


Veggies are growing and the garden is looking great! Each time I head out I cant believe how quickly everything is growing...our community garden sure is photo friendly. Check out some new pictures in the Garden Album!