Showing posts with label arugula. Show all posts
Showing posts with label arugula. Show all posts

Monday, May 4, 2009

Rotting in the Rain

My poor greens! Sunday at noon I ventured out to the garden to collect salad fare but found they had been attacked by slugs and rot. Luckily everything else seems to be thriving and joyful.

I spent a few hours enjoying the gentle rain while harvesting, trimming, discarding, protecting, and moving plants in the greenbed. A lot of rocket and endive had to be sacrificed to the alley for the rabbits. Some of the leaf lettuce was too soft to keep, too. Leaving it for three days caused some of it to bolt - I've only had problems with that in the heat, never because I had so much I didn't need to harvest continuously. I was able to collect two large shopping bags full, but when cleaned and trimmed wound up with much less.

I moved around some radishes that had grown too large to harvest. I'll use them for pest prevention around the garden. Leaving them to flower helps deter pests both under and over ground. I need to sow more onions sporadically as well for the same reason, but cannot find my stash of bulbs. The green onions have been excellent this year!

The brussels sprouts are starting to crowd each other, so I began the slow process of moving every other plant to the front garden. We'll have to see how that goes, they may be too large to move already.

I removed the redneck hothouses from the tomatoes. All the rain and rot I found today makes me worry that they will get a disease. I used the lower portion of the gallon jugs I cut off earlier to make a protective cover around the stems (see figure 2). Then I added the old tomato cages around the front row of maters. I'll do a taller rebar fence for the ones in back. My plan is too keep the front row smaller in an attempt at creating bushier plants. I'll let the ones in back ramble a bit more. We'll see which produces more fruit, since they're all the same cultivar.

I planted the last 6-pack of Preston's tomatoes in the front garden. I think they are the cherry tomatoes, but will not know for a few weeks. I left lots of room for Burpee's plants which should arrive any day. Four more tomatoes and that bed will be pretty full, except for basil edging. We have not added our compost pile yet, so I'm using a trench system in the middle of the front garden bed to deposit kitchen scraps, shredded paper, etc.

People keep driving by, slowing down and telling me to go inside. They're saying, "don't you know it's raining?" These are my favorite days to mull around the garden. You can really smell the differences in each plant, you don't get a sunburn, and, if you set out a bowl, God will fill it with rain which creates an instant sink for handwashing. Roses always smell the very best when it's raining, so I make a few trips around the yard to enjoy their different scents, teacup in hand.

I do enjoy life's simple pleasures. I also love watching the worms wriggle in that top layer of dirt. Now, if they'd stop generating so much at the dam, we could head down to the river for a bit of fishing...

I am learning a lot about salad greens this season. The main thing: my husband hates rocket (arugula). He helped me clean the harvest today, and tried each leaf until he found the offender. Arugula will forevermore be planted elsewhere. We're such opposites. It's my favorite. Not only does it remind me of my London trip (everything is served with rocket), but it's peppery zip is perfect for piling fresh on a plate under creamy pastas and risottos. My favorite rainy day dish.

I cannot finish this post without sending a shout out to the San Diego Hat Co. Yesterday I found a true treasure. The greatest garden hat ever to grace my head. It is made of 84 percent paper and actually fits my giant melon loosely and comfortably. It's just wide enough to keep my shoulders dry in the rain, and (I'm assuming) to keep my face shaded in the sunshine. I believe I've found my new gardening companion for all time.