Posts Tagged ‘Scoreboard’

Green Thumb Up My Nose

October 30, 2023

Garden Report for 231030

This is the last crop report of the year, although I will have a Lessons Learned and Plans for 2024 coming soon. Weather was cold (lows around 20F), with snow.

Closed out the garden. Harvested 2kg of ripening tomatoes (not red but lots of color), and 9kg of greenies. Also brought in the last of the squash, including a large green one that looks like a kabocha, except I didn’t plant any of those.

As part of the closeout process, I’m trying a new chop and drop method. Turns out, my new whipper-snipper (AKA weed-whacker) is one with stiff plastic blades instead of nylon twine. The blades are strong enough to chop their way through most tomato and squash vines. So once I cut down all the remaining plants onto a tarp, I went through and hashed it all up. Part of it went into a trench in Section 3, and part was layered into four of my grow bags (along with some pelleted fertilizer).   I also took up all the old black soaker hose, and plan to replace it next spring.

Week
Ending
10/30
Vegetable
(bold = final)
Count Total
Weight
g
Unit
Weight
g
Grand
Total
Total
Weight
kg
  Tomato 81 11000 135 331 32.8
Butternut 1 880 880 2 1.9
Potato 52 4.83
Cabbage 2 0.45
Tromboncino 37 13.5
Cocozelle 40 11.14
Acorn 3 1.29
Pattypan 7 3.87
Zucchini 11 2.93
Carrots 0.57
Pumpkin 2 2610 1300 8 8.82
Spaghetti 3 1200 400 3 3.9
Beets 0.25
Beans 0.81
Grand Total 87.06

So we beat 2019’s 67kg, but were nowhere near 2021’s all time high of 107kg.

Green Thumb Up My Nose

October 23, 2023

Garden Report for 231023

No report for last week because there was nothing to report. Cool and rainy, followed by warm, with a high of 72. Forecast for cooler, with rain. And frost. And maybe snow.

I left most of the tomatoes on the vine this week to get as much color as possible. First frost is forecast for Tuesday, so I’ll do a big harvest today. Meanwhile, the pumpkins and the winter tromboncino looked to be as good as they’re gonna get so I harvested almost all of them. There was one really big winter tromboncino, 1.8kg, and a handful of medium summer varieties. (The summer/winter split, of course, just depends on how long you leave them on the vine).

Week
Ending
10/23
Vegetable
(bold = final)
Count Total
Weight
g
Unit
Weight
g
Grand
Total
Total
Weight
kg
  Tomato 9 1007 112 250 21.8
Butternut 1 1000 1000 1 1.0
Potato 52 4.83
Cabbage 2 0.45
Tromboncino 6 4104 684 37 13.5
Cocozelle 1 438 438 40 11.14
Acorn 3 1.29
Pattypan 7 3.87
Zucchini 11 2.93
Carrots 0.57
Pumpkin 5 5003 1000 6 6.22
Spaghetti 2 1602 801 3 2.78
Beets 0.25
Beans 0.81
Grand Total 71.44

Back in 2019 we closed out the garden on 28 September, just ahead of a killer frost and a touch of snow. So the 67kg cumulative total for that week was also the total for the year, and included  a couple of kilos of green tomatoes. We are now 4kg ahead of that, and I have not even started on the tomatoes.

Green Thumb Up My Nose

October 9, 2023

Garden Report for 231009

The weather is what I think the Canadians call First Nation’s Summer. Highs in the  70’s, peaking at 80 by the end of the week. Then next week it falls off a cliff —  upper 50’s with rain.

Modest crop of squash. Surprising number of tomatoes getting et by slugs, or something. Harvested one of our two winter Tromboncinos. Roasted the neck for dinner, and only ate half of that. So we have half the neck and the whole — football-sized — main body yet to go. Some say it tastes a little like Butternut, but the best I could do is that it tastes very much like a winter squash.

Making another attempt at growing carrots indoors over the winter. Took a small grow bag full of dirt (you could use a 1-gallon planting pot). Stuck in a square of chicken wire. Dropped one carrot seed into each cell of the chicken wire.

Week
Ending
10/09
Vegetable
(bold = final)
Count Total
Weight
g
Unit
Weight
g
Grand
Total
Total
Weight
kg
  Tomato 9 787 87 241 22.8
Butternut
Potato 52 4.83
Cabbage 2 0.45
Tromboncino 1 1960 1960 31 9.39
Cocozelle 39 10.70
Acorn 3 1.29
Pattypan 7 3.87
Zucchini 11 2.93
Carrots 0.57
Pumpkin 1 1.22
Spaghetti 1 1.18
Beets 0.25
Beans 0.81
Grand Total 60.29

Back in 2019 we closed out the garden on 28 September, just ahead of a killer frost and a touch of snow. So the 67kg cumulative total for that week was also the total for the year, and included  a couple kg of green tomatoes.

Green Thumb Up My Nose

October 2, 2023

Garden Report for 231002

The weather this week continued autumnal. Highs in the upper 60’s, lows in the mid-40’s, with a short but intense thunderstorm. Next week will be warmer.

Modest crop of squash. Harvested our three Acorn squashes. Grilled up the medium-sized one for dinner, saving the big one and the small one for later. Also harvested some of the unkillable rhubarb, to go with the strawberries the local food bank was forcing on everyone who walked by before they went off.

Cleaned out the Section 4 potatoes. Total for the year is 52 potatoes, weighing not quite 5kg . I’d have done as well by just eating the seed potatoes.

Week
Ending
10/02
Vegetable
(bold = final)
Count Total
Weight
g
Unit
Weight
g
Grand
Total
Total
Weight
kg
  Tomato 232 22
Butternut
Potato 16 695 43 52 4.83
Cabbage 2 0.45
Tromboncino 4 830 207 30 7.43
Cocozelle 4 1097 274 39 10.70
Acorn 3 1295 442 3 1.29
Pattypan 2 424 212 7 3.87
Zucchini 11 2.93
Carrots 0.57
Pumpkin 1 1.22
Spaghetti 1 1.18
Beets 0.25
Beans 0.81
Grand Total 57.5

Back in 2019 we closed out the garden on 28 September, just ahead of a killer frost and a touch of snow. So the 67kg cumulative total for that week was also the total for the year, and included  a couple kg of green tomatoes.

Green Thumb Up My Nose

September 25, 2023

Garden Report for 230925

The weather this week was positively autumnal. Highs in the upper 60’s, lows in the mid-40’s, with occasional showers. Next week will be cooler and rainier.

Modest crop of tomatoes this week. Mostly Early Girls. I’m expecting at least as many before first frost.

Meanwhile, my face is as red as the tomatoes, both from embarrassment and anger. I’m using flat soaker/sprinkler hoses in the garden.  On the brand that I’m using, the transition from the rectangular flat portion to the round part that attaches to the extension hose is stretched, and the very first spray hole tends to rip (as does the last hole, where it transitions back). A marine epoxy plug backed by tight wraps of duct tape failed almost instantly. Since the hose goes to a two-tube configuration right after the attachment, it’s impossible to cut it and put on a new one.

The result is that most of the water comes out at the ends, and the pressure along the rest of the hose drops to almost nothing. As a consequence, Section 4, with the potatoes, has not been properly watered for months. When I harvested the first two plants I felt like a peanut farmer.

Week
Ending
09/18
Vegetable
(bold = final)
Count Total
Weight
g
Unit
Weight
g
Grand
Total
Total
Weight
kg
  Tomato 26 2126 82 232 22
Butternut
Potato 16 533 33 36 4.13
Cabbage 2 0.45
Tromboncino 2 1075 538 26 6.6
Cocozelle 31 9.60
Acorn
Pattypan 2 950 475 5 3.45
Zucchini 11 2.93
Carrots 0.57
Pumpkin 1 1.22
Spaghetti 1 1.18
Beets 0.25
Beans 0.81
Grand Total 53.2

2019 is still ahead, at 55.6kg.

Green Thumb Up My Nose

September 18, 2023

Garden Report for 230918

Warmer. Highs in the upper 70’s to mid-80’s.  Next week will be cooler and wetter.

I’m starting to harvest the winter squash now. Unlike summer squash, I can leave them on the vine until needed without fear that they’ll blow up like clown balloons. Started off by harvesting one pumpkin and one spaghetti squash.

Starting end-of-season maintenance on the planter bags — pulling up the dead/dying plants and dumping out the soil. So far, I’ve done the cucumber and zucchini bags, plus a couple of tomatoes.

I’ve planted one of the bags with pickling cucumbers. Should be ready in mid-November, if the frosts don’t get them first. It’s a gamble, but I’ve got the spare bags and soil, so why not. El Nino autumn is theoretically warmer than average (which does not necessarily mean warm).

Week
Ending
09/18
Vegetable
(bold = final)
Count Total
Weight
g
Unit
Weight
g
Grand
Total
Total
Weight
kg
  Tomato 37 2523 68 232 19.86
Butternut
Potato 36 3.60
Cabbage 2 0.45
Tromboncino 1 255 255 26 5.52
Cocozelle 2 1050 525 31 9.60
Acorn
Pattypan 5 2.5
Zucchini 2 310 155 11 2.93
Carrots 0.57
Pumpkin 1 1216 1216 1 1.22
Spaghetti 1 1183 1183 1 1.18
Beets 0.25
Beans 0.81
Grand Total 48.5

2019 has now crept ahead, at 49.7kg.

Green Thumb Up My Nose

September 11, 2023

Garden Report for 230911

Much cooler weather. Highs in the mid to upper 70’s and lows below 50F.  Next week will be slightly warmer, into the lower 80’s.

As I said last week, the harvest is thinning out but it’s not done yet. I harvested my second planting of beans — yellow beans — but didn’t get very many. That’s OK, since we’re not all that fond of beans. There’s perhaps fifty tomatoes yet to ripen, six pumpkins, four spaghetti squash, two tromboncino that I’m letting go to winter squash status, and at least one each acorn and butternut squash hidden in the jungle.

Week
Ending
09/11
Vegetable
(bold = final)
Count Total
Weight
g
Unit
Weight
g
Grand
Total
Total
Weight
kg
  Tomato 195 17.34
Butternut
Potato 36 3.6
Cabbage 2 0.45
Tromboncino 2 425 25 5.26
Cocozelle 4 1170 29 8.55
Acorn
Pattypan 1 550 5 2.5
Zucchini 9 2.62
Carrots 0.57
Beets 0.25
Beans 100 0.81
Grand Total 42

Creeping ahead of 2019, now by four kilos.

Green Thumb Up My Nose

September 4, 2023

Garden Report for 230904

Rain and cooler weather off and on all week, with highs as low as 64F. We are at the start of Meteorological Autumn.

The harvest continues to slow, but it’s not done yet. There’s perhaps fifty tomatoes yet to ripen, six pumpkins, four spaghetti squash, two tromboncino that I’m letting go to winter squash status, and at least one acorn squash hidden in the jungle.

Week
Ending
09/04
Vegetable
(bold = final)
Count Total
Weight
g
Unit
Weight
g
Grand
Total
Total
Weight
kg
  Tomato 6 480 80 195 17.34
Cucumber
Potato 36 3.6
Cabbage 2 0.45
Tromboncino 3 560 187 23 4.84
Cocozelle 25 7.38
Acorn
Pattypan 4 2.0
Zucchini 9 2.62
Carrots 0.57
Beets 0.25
Beans 0.71
Grand Total 39.76

Still ahead of 2019 now, but only by about three kilos.

Green Thumb Up My Nose

August 28, 2023

Garden Report for 23008028

Rain and cooler weather to start (which helped kill the Gray Road fire), then in the mid 90’s.  Forecast variable — mid 80’s to mid 90’s, with rain at the end of the week, with highs below 70.

The harvest continues to slow. Not so many squash and tomatoes (but there’s lots of greenies). We left the beans too long whilst we went on the cruise, so we lost most of them (but there’s another crop a’comin. Beets were small and tough — don’t plant again. Carrot crop was small but nice. The grow bag cucumbers have died.

LastAugustGarden20230823_091230

I took all our remaining tomatoes and cooked them down into just over two quarts of juice.

Week
Ending
08/28
Vegetable
(bold = final)
Count Total
Weight
g
Unit
Weight
g
Grand
Total
Total
Weight
kg
  Tomato 17 830 49 195 17.34
Cucumber
Potato 36 3.6
Cabbage 2 0.45
Tromboncino 1 380 380 23 4.84
Cocozelle 25 7.38
Acorn
Pattypan 4 2.0
Zucchini 9 2.62
Carrots 490 0.57
Beets 250 0.25
Beans 330 0.71
Grand Total 39.76

Still ahead of 2019 now, but only by about five kilos.

Green Thumb Up My Nose

August 21, 2023

Garden Report for 23008021

Extremely hot. Four days over 100. Forecast is for cooler, in the upper 80’s.

The harvest is slowing down. Not so many squash and tomatoes. Harvested one of the small potato bags and got lots of …. small potatoes.

Week
Ending
08/21
Vegetable
(bold = final)
Count Total
Weight
g
Unit
Weight
g
Grand
Total
Total
Weight
kg
  Tomato 30 2663 89 178 16.51
Cucumber
Potato 32 1284 40 36 3.6
Cabbage 2 0.45
Tromboncino 2 933 466 22 4.46
Cocozelle 3 1064 355 25 7.38
Acorn
Pattypan 1 705 705 4 2.0
Zucchini 3 1100 367 9 2.62
Carrots 0.08
Beets
Beans 0.38
Grand Total 37.48

Well ahead of 2019 now, by about ten kilos. Next week we’ll be getting beets, and maybe pumpkins, so the gap should widen.

Green Thumb Up My Nose

August 14, 2023

Garden Report for 23008014

Low to mid-80s. The coming week will be upper upper 90s and low 100s.

Lots and lots (and lots) of tomatoes.

TomatoesAndSquash20230813_070215

Still not so many squash. One of the winter Trombones is all tan now.

Week
Ending
08/14
Vegetable
(bold = final)
Count Total
Weight
g
Unit
Weight
g
Grand
Total
Total
Weight
kg
  Tomato 53 4752 90 148 13.85
Cucumber
Potato 4 2.32
Cabbage 2 0.45
Tromboncino 20 3.47
Cocozelle 2 694 347 22 6.32
Acorn
Pattypan 1 530 530 3 1.31
Zucchini 6 1.52
Carrots 4 0.08
Beets
Beans 0.38
Grand Total 24.07

Surprisingly, we’re only about a kilo ahead of 2019 now. I think it’s because in 2019 we had a number of tomato bags on the unwatered deck, and harvested them all just before going on our Alaska trip. This year the grow bags are all on the autowatering system, and will be harvested over a longer time.

Green Thumb Up My Nose

August 7, 2023

Garden Report for 2300807

Mid-90’s to start, around 80 at the end. Next week is all low 80’s.

Lots and lots of tomatoes. Made two quarts of tomato sauce that was 50/50 Early Girl and Romas .

Not so many squash. We’re letting a couple of the Trombones grow into winter squash size. One enormous Cocozelle that had hid itself behind a cinderblock added to the weight.

Week
Ending
08/07
Vegetable
(bold = final)
Count Total
Weight
g
Unit
Weight
g
Grand
Total
Total
Weight
kg
  Tomato 72 5875 82 95 9.10
Cucumber
Potato 4 2.32
Cabbage 2 0.45
Tromboncino 2 319 160 20 3.47
Cocozelle 2 1290 645 20 5.97
Acorn
Pattypan 2 0.78
Zucchini 1 285 285 6 1.52
Carrots 4 0.08
Beets
Beans 382 0.38
Grand Total 24.07

We continue to lead 2019 in edible biomass — as in almost three times more.

Green Thumb Up My Nose

July 31, 2023

Garden Report for 230731

Continuing our hot summer. Very warm (mid-80’s) to start, and Hot (mid-90’s) at the end.

Harvest is picking up. Six hours after I posted last week’s GTUpMyN I picked two Trombones, two Zucchini, and one each of Pattypan and Cocozelle.

Harvested some more softball-sized, heirloom-looking not-Early Girl tomatoes, as well as lots of real EGs.

The Planter Tracker (sidebar) says the carrots are ready, so I’ve started harvesting them. Normally I wait ’till the end of the season and lift them all. This time around I’m taking a few at a time. At this point, ready means barely big enough. I have four that are about 20g each. We can have them in a salad.

Week
Ending
07/31
Vegetable
(bold = final)
Count Total
Weight
g
Unit
Weight
g
Grand
Total
Total
Weight
kg
  Tomato 16 2010 126 23 3.23
Cucumber
Potato 4 2.32
Cabbage 2 0.45
Tromboncino 2 362 181 18 3.15
Cocozelle 1 145 145 18 4.68
Acorn
Pattypan 1 400 400 2 0.78
Zucchini 2 197 98 5 1.23
Carrots 4 80 20 4 0.08
Beets
Beans
Grand Total 15.86

Courtesy of the Cocozelle (and a hot Summer) we are well ahead of our nearest competitor, 2019, in edible biomass — as in five times more. A surprising number of recent years hadn’t even gotten to the scoreboard level by the end of July.

Green Thumb Up My Nose

July 24, 2023

Garden Report for 230724

Once again, hot to very hot, with highs reaching 98. The air conditioning regularly comes on by 8AM. Lows in the mid-50’s to mid-60’s, just barely enough to cool the house to sleeping temps — even with the house fan on high, the inside temperature tends to be ten degrees warmer than the outside. Next week: more of the same, only mostly very hot.

Emptied a second potato bag. One large, one medium, and four small. About 500g total, e.g. one pound. Hardly seems worth the effort, but they’re very nice potatoes.

The crimson tide is beginning. Harvested three softball-sized, heirloom-looking tomatoes. The tag says EarlyGirl, but I suspect they’re Brandywine or such.

I tried lifting one of the Tromboncinos I was letting go to winter squash status so that the bulge was not rotting in the dirt. Instead, it broke off. The squash was a light brown, so maybe it was ripe already. We sliced it in half, lengthwise, and baked it, each getting one half.  Very good. As they say, vaguely Butternut flavor. Not as much meat as you might think.

I’m a little behind on posting photos, so here’s a compilation of this months harvests.

Week
Ending
07/24
Vegetable
(bold = final)
Count Total
Weight
g
Unit
Weight
g
Grand
Total
Total
Weight
kg
  Tomato 6 1161 194 7 1.22
Cucumber
Potato 2 475 237 4 2.32
Cabbage 2 0.45
Tromboncino 1 360 360 16 2.79
Cocozelle 3 458 153 17 4.54
Acorn
Pattypan 1 0.38
Zucchini 1 117 117 3 1.03
Carrots
Beets
Beans
Grand Total 12.74

This time in 2021 the Zucchini were just starting to produce and there were seven spaghetti squash on the vine.

Green Thumb Up My Nose

July 17, 2023

Garden Report for 230717

Hot to very hot, with highs reaching 98. More of the same next week.

Found a small, shriveled, two-eyed potato at the bottom of our store-bought potato sack. I cut it in half and planted it in the small potato grow-bag I emptied last week. We’ll see what happens.

Lots of tomatoes, only one ready to harvest, a 55g Early Girl. Four pumpkins, mostly orange. Two biggish spaghetti squash.

We have three big Trombones what I am leaving for winter squash status. Both the Tromboncinos and the Cocozelles are starting fruit, then fading out at the four inch mark. I think it might be the heat.

Week
Ending
07/17
Vegetable
(bold = final)
Count Total
Weight
g
Unit
Weight
g
Grand
Total
Total
Weight
kg
  Tomato 1 55 55 1 0.55
Cucumber
Potato 2 1.84
Cabbage 2 0.45
Tromboncino 3 703 234 15 2.43
Cocozelle 3 844 281 14 4.08
Acorn
Pattypan 1 0.38
Zucchini 2 0.92
Carrots
Beets
Beans
Grand Total 10.65

This time in 2021 the Zucchini were just starting to produce and there were seven spaghetti squash on the vine.

Green Thumb Up My Nose

July 11, 2023

Garden Report for 230710

Sunny, with highs around 90.

Harvested our first, and possibly only, pattypan squash.

Finally gave up on our indoor cabbage and harvested both heads. Leaves felt tough, but cooked down and turned bright green when we boiled them, so we make cabbage croquettes. I planted them back in early February, so they’re two months beyond the pick-by date.

Emptied one of the small potato grow-bags. Got one medium (98g) and ten small (25g). Only counting the medium. I’ll wait another couple of weeks before I do the next small  bag (there are three, total, with potatoes).

Picked some more Trombones. Here’s the scoreboard.

Week
Ending
07/10
Vegetable
(bold = final)
Count Total
Weight
g
Unit
Weight
g
Grand
Total
Total
Weight
kg
  Tomato
Cucumber
Potato 1 98 98 2 1.84
Cabbage 2 450 225 2 0.45
Trombone 1 67 67 12 1.70
Cocozelle 2 337 168 11 3.24
Acorn
Pattypan 1 380 380 1 0.38
Zucchini 2 0.92
Carrots
Beets
Beans
Grand Total 8.53

This time in 2021, things were still growing. Scoreboard start wouldn’t be for another two weeks.

Green Thumb Up My Nose

July 3, 2023

Garden Report for 230703

Warm all week, in the mid- to upper-80s, 90s over the weekend, with intermittent CBs. Next week is all sunny and 90’s.

Continuing the comedy of errors that is my gardening, it turns out that the lone Delicata plant that I had hidden in the middle of the garden is really a Cocozelle. The color of the 1.4kg squash tipped me off. MJ is going to wedge it up for pickles. I have one house bag that I planted some Cocozelle in, which we don’t really need, so I added a couple of Delicata seeds. We’ll see if anything comes up. And speaking of big squash, I just found a 780g Zucchini hiding on the back side of the grow bag.

None of the wax beans in the north half of Section 3 have sprouted, so I dug it over and planted Lettuce (Black Seeded Simpson (65), plus Salad Bowl, Sylvestra (55)), Beets, and a couple more Delicata (90, early October) rounded out the day. All slots are now filled.

It’s been a week or so since the potatoes flowered, so I harvested some new potatoes, very good. The Interwebs say that potatoes are ready to harvest in about three months — 12 weeks — but that new potatoes are ready in ten weeks. Do they really grow that much in just two weeks?

Picked some more Trombones. Here’s the scoreboard.

Week
Ending
07/03
Vegetable
(bold = final)
Count Total
Weight
g
Unit
Weight
g
Grand
Total
Total
Weight
kg
  Tomato
Cucumber
Potato 8 760 95 8 0.76
Delicata
Trombone 3 275 92 11 1.03
Cocozelle 4 2122 530 9 2.90
Acorn
Pattypan
Zucchini 1 780 780 2 0.92
Carrots
Beets
Beans
Grand Total 5.61

This time last year things were still growing. Scoreboard start wouldn’t be for another two weeks.

Green Thumb Up My Nose

June 26, 2023

Garden Report for 230626

Cold and breezy enough that NWS was reporting windchills at the start of the week, mid-80s by the end. Next week will be mid- to upper-80s with intermittent CBs.

Bought some new hoses. Moved the front lawn hoses (known to be good) into the garden, put the new hoses in the lawn. Threw out the old hoses — it’s impossible to repair the hard plastic.

The men came ’round to take down the tree. It went surprisingly fast — about five hours, top to stump.

Picked some more Trombones. Here’s the scoreboard.

Week
Ending
06/26
Vegetable
(bold = final)
Count Total
Weight
g
Unit
Weight
g
Grand
Total
Total
Weight
kg
  Tomato
Cucumber
Potato
Delicata 1 0.38
Trombone 7 480 69 8 0.76
Cocozelle 4 0.40
Acorn
Pattypan
Zucchini 1 0.14
Carrots
Beets
Beans
Grand Total 1.68

This time last year I was still planting stuff and it was even colder and wetter.

Green Thumb Up My Nose

June 19, 2023

Garden Report for 230619

The week kicked off with the hottest days of the month — 91F on Tuesday — then settled down to merely warm — upper 70s/low 80s, and then cool, with highs in the mid 70’s and lows in the low 50’s. Forecast is for more cold and wet (highs as low as 59F), then heating up.

I’m harvesting the various squash more often, to try to stay ahead of it.

Here’s the scoreboard.

Week
Ending
06/18
Vegetable
(bold = final)
Count Total
Weight
g
Unit
Weight
g
Grand
Total
Total
Weight
kg
  Tomato
Cucumber
Potato
Delicata 1 0.38
Trombone 1 0.28
Cocozelle 2 135 4 0.40
Acorn
Pattypan
Zucchini 1 137 1 0.14
Carrots
Beets
Beans
Grand Total 1.2

This time last year I was still planting stuff and it was even colder and wetter.

Green Thumb Up My Nose

October 23, 2022

Garden Report for 221024

The lovely 70F weather that we’ve had for the last month continued through Thursday, after which the bottom dropped out. End of the week highs were in the upper 40s, about what last week’s lows were, and we had a drenching cold rain.

The rain was predicted to start on Friday and run off and on through all of next week with a chance of frost Sunday night, so I decided to close out most of the garden on Wednesday and Thursday. In the event, we had frost on both Friday and Saturday nights, which pretty much killed my ‘late harvest’ hopes.

Got ~60 tomatoes, ~ten of which were some shade of reddish. The remaining 50 greenies were barely enough to fill one box, a quarter of what we usually get.

Four nicely shaped Zucchinis this week. Probably more picklefodder.

Eight nice acorn squash. Maybe a little early — the leaves hadn’t turned yellow yet — but we’ll let them rest inside for a month or so.

One delicate little Delicata. What I thought was a Delicata now seems to be a pumpkin. It’s turning very slightly orange.

The problem is, the plants planted in the center of the garden (Spaghetti, Delicata, Pumpkin this year) tend to be shaded out, and to get lost in the jungle. This accounts for the Beefsteak tomatoes the size of grocery store standards, hanging off the cherry tomato cage, and Delicatas the size of …well… very small squash hidden behind what may be a pumpkin. I think in future I’ll try putting those in a week before the others.

Harvested the sweet potatoes from Section 4. As with the regular potatoes, the yield was nothing like what I got from the grow bags — 14, totaling 400g. I suspect I may have under-watered that part of the garden. When I was digging it up I noticed it was very dry. Also, the grow bags got a lot more sun than did the traditionally-over-shady Section 4. Sweet potatoes are supposed to cure for a month at 85F and 85% humidity. One YouTube website suggested putting them in a covered container with a bottle of water and a thermostat probe controlling a seed bed warmer. I took an old styrofoam cooler and rigged that up with a $20 thermostat from Amazon and a sawed off juice bottle full of water. The temperature is holding, but I’ve no way to measure the humidity. We’ll see in December.

Vegetable Count Total

Weight
g

Unit

Weight
g

Grand

Total

Total
Weight
kg
  Tomatoes 61 4311 70 262 23.23
Potatoes 63 9.96
Sweet Potatoes 14 400 29 50 0.89
Pumpkin 1 985 985 1 0.98
Summer Squash 3 335 112 9 2.87
Zucchini 4 506 126 25 9.73
Delicata 1 172 172 1 0.17
Acorn Squash 8 8000 1000 8 8.0
Cucumber 1 0.56
Grand Total 56.39

So, as I hoped, the Acorn squash drove us over 50kg for the year, which is just slightly over half of what we got last year.

Green Thumb Up My Nose

October 17, 2022

Garden Report for 221017

This week continued warm (74+/- 1) and dry. The coming week continues more of the same, except that the mid range forecast is for much colder by Friday, with up to 2″ of rain over the weekend.

Picked ten small ripe tomatoes ones this weekend. I’ll close it out next week. It looks like we’ll only have 40 or so greenies to let ripen in the bathtub. About one flat box worth. In prior years we’ve had four or five boxen.

Seven more Zucchinis this week, some of them somewhat misshapen. More picklefodder.

Harvested the potatoes from Section 4. Only 15 larger than a walnut, totaling 1.2kg. That’s about 15% of what came out of the grow-bags, from twice the area. Next week I’ll get the sweets.

Beefed up the berm around the Dawn Redwood. Planted grass in many of the areas killed off by the summer heat.

Vegetable Count Total

Weight
g

Unit

Weight
g

Grand

Total

Total
Weight
kg
  Tomatoes 10 925 92 201 18.92
Potatoes 15 1231 82 63 9.96
Sweet Potatoes 36 0.49
Carrots 0 0
Beets 0 0
Summer Squash 6 2.54
Zucchini 7 1352 193 21 9.22
Delicata
Acorn Squash
Cucumber 1 .56
Late harvest tomatoes
Grand Total 41.67

I’m seriously thinking about closing out most of the garden next week, before the cold sets in. We’re still less than half of last year’s crop.

Green Thumb Up My Nose

October 10, 2022

Garden Report for 221010

This week was record-breaking warm (75+/- 2) and dry. Next week the highs are expected to stay around 70F, with the lows dropping into the upper 30’s —  keep in mind that we are now into the ‘chance of frost’ period through the end of the month.

We’re at the tail end of the harvest season. The tomatoes are getting tired. Picked an even dozen small ripe ones this weekend, and it looks like we’ll only have 40 or so greenies to let ripen in the bathtub. About one flat box worth. In prior years we’ve had four or five boxen.

Two Summer Squash and one Zucchinis early this week. MJ will use them, along with last week’s cucumber, in a pickling recipe.

The Dawn Redwood appears to have survived the transplant process. Now to get it through the winter.

Vegetable Count Total

Weight
g

Unit

Weight
g

Grand

Total

Total
Weight
kg
  Tomatoes 12 500 42 191 18.0
Potatoes 48 8.73
Sweet Potatoes 36 0.49
Carrots 0 0
Beets 0 0
Summer Squash 2 355 177 6 2.54
Zucchini 3 452 150 14 7.85
Delicata
Acorn Squash
Cucumber 1 .56
Late harvest tomatoes
Grand Total 38.17

This time last year we had already closed out the garden ahead of an on-time frost. Total take was a record 107kg, mostly due to tomatoes and Zucchini.  I think we’ll catch up somewhat when I harvest Section 4.

Green Thumb Up My Nose

October 3, 2022

Garden Report for 221003

Hot week (mid-80’s) ending in a record-setting rainfall (~0.5″) followed by a slight cooldown (upper-70’s). Forecast is for continued warm (77+/- 1) and dry.

Planted another two rows of lettuce in Section 3. The earlier planting is just starting to sprout. We’ll see if we get anything before the frosts come. The late harvest tomatoes and Acorn Squash probably won’t produce anything useful. I put them in too late.

Nothing in the way of tomatoes this week. I’d pretty much cleaned everything out last week. Maybe forty greenies coming along.

One Summer Squash and two Zucchinis early this week. Fat banana sized. Plus at the end of the week an almost 2kg Zucchini what was hiding under a bunch of smaller ones — too big to be salad-worthy, but too small to take prizes. More dehydration is in order. It looks like we’ll also get a single Delicata Squash, which is a winter squash the size of a Spaghetti Squash that tastes like a Butternut.

I started to close out the two non-tomato grow bags next the house, and found that we did have a cucumber! Only one, but sizeable.

Harvested the House Container sweet potatoes. Eighteen puny sweets totaling not quite 500g. Quite a bit less than the regular potatoes. Soil in the bags was very dry, so perhaps the irrigation system wasn’t set right. Perhaps more fertilizer was needed also. I plan to wait for first frost to harvest the garden potatoes.

We now have a new Dawn Redwood to replace our old Cypress. It don’t look like much now, and since it’s the only deciduous member of the Sequoia family (it drops its needles in the Fall), it will shortly look like less. We’ll check back in come Spring.

Vegetable Count Total

Weight
g

Unit

Weight
g

Grand

Total

Total
Weight
kg
  Tomatoes 179 17.52
Potatoes 48 8.73
Sweet Potatoes 18 490 27 36 0.49
Carrots 0 0
Beets 0 0
Summer Squash 1 380 380 4 2.18
Zucchini 3 2327 776 11 7.40
Delicata
Acorn Squash
Cucumber 1 563 563 1 .56
Late harvest tomatoes
Grand Total 36.88

This time last year we still had ~30kg more than now. Mostly from tomatoes, with some squash. I’m just as glad we don’t have that much this year. I think we’ll catch up when I harvest Section 4.

Green Thumb Up My Nose

September 26, 2022

Garden Report for 220926

No report last week because nothing much happened. About the biggest thing was the onset of meteorological Autumn. Over the last two weeks we’ve had highs in the mid 70’s, lows in the upper 40’s to low 50’s. One day was down to 60F, while another was 76F. So cool Autumnal, not crisp. End of the week started Indian Summer, with turning in a nice 80F. Next week will start with four days around 80F, then cool to the low 70’s.

Section 3 has been pretty much of a bust. The beets came up small and misshapen, and the carrots didn’t come up at all. Early last week I dug most of it up in order to try again with some late season lettuce-on-tape (see the Planter Tracker), despite the fact that we’ll be at risk of frost any time after Halloween.

I left the tomatoes on the vine for an additional week. With cool temps they won’t ripen too fast. At the start of the week we had four baskets of the little red buggers to go through, but i managed to foist off about 20 of them to the four guys on the tree removal crew. Yield was down, I think because the plants are wearing out. I’m going to prune them heavily, because I don’t think they can set and grow any decent fruit before the first frost. We’ve been ignoring the cherry tomatoes, only harvesting a handful at a time. On Sunday I went out and did a full sweep, just pulling them off by hand. Got a nice round kilogram, not included in the total because I don’t count cherries.

Harvested the House Container potatoes. Eighteen white potatoes totaling not quite 2kg. Twenty-five Red potatoes totaling over 6kg. Not counting the LTWS — less than walnut sized. There were a couple of grocery-store sized reds, but most were half that size — just right for an individual serving.

I’ve started dehydrating the Zucchini. One 600g Zuke gives 28g of powdered concentrate, a roughly 95% reduction. Good in soups, stews, and oatmeal.

Meanwhile, our 60 year old cypress finally died. Two drought/heat wave-stricken summers did it in. Looking to get a Dawn Sequoia to replace it.

Vegetable Count Total

Weight
g

Unit

Weight
g

Grand

Total

Total
Weight
kg
  Tomatoes 32 2415 75 179 17.52
Potatoes 45 8466 188 48 8.73
Sweet Potatoes
Carrots 0 0
Beets 0 0
Summer Squash 1 368 368 3 1.80
Zucchini 8 5.07
Spaghetti
Squash
0 0
Acorn Squash
Cucumber 0 0
Late harvest tomatoes
Grand Total 33.12

This time last year we still had ~30kg more than now. Partly because we had lots more squash than now. I’m just as glad we don’t have that much. I think we’ll catch up when I harvest the House Sweet Potatoes and everything in Section 4.

Green Thumb Up My Nose

September 12, 2022

Garden Report for 2200912

Not as hot, but still in the low 90s. Forecast is for highs around 80F. Some smoke from OR fires.

More tomatoes this week, including some cherries.

In addition, we got one Summer Squash and a few early potatoes.

Vegetable Count Total

Weight
g

Unit

Weight
g

Grand

Total

Total
Weight
kg
  Tomatoes 30 2462 82 147 15.11
Potatoes 3 263 88 3 0.26
Sweet Potatoes
Carrots
Beets
Summer Squash 1 176 176 3 1.80
Zucchini 8 5.07
Spaghetti
Squash
Acorn Squash
Cucumber
Late harvest tomatoes
Grand Total 22.24

This time last year we still had 20kg more than now, including some nice big Spaghetti Squash.

Green Thumb Up My Nose

September 5, 2022

Garden Report for 2200905

Hot, then hot and windy, then just windy. At least the nights were cool…ish. Next week is more salubrious.

Big tomato haul this week, initially from the house plants. That’s to be expected because they are both early style (Early Girl and Bonnie). At the end of the week we got an equal load from the Main Garden.

In addition, we got some more biggish Zucchini and Yellow Squash. That’s what we get for failing to keep an eye on them. I blame the heat.

Vegetable Count Total

Weight
g

Unit

Weight
g

Grand

Total

Total
Weight
kg
  Tomatoes 68 10108 149 117 12.65
Potatoes
Sweet Potatoes
Carrots
Beets
Summer Squash 1 540 540 1 1.08
Zucchini 4 2424 606 8 5.07
Spaghetti
Squash
Acorn Squash
Cucumber
Late harvest tomatoes
Grand Total 18.08

This time last year we had 20kg more than now, including some nice big Spaghetti Squash. Probably won’t get any this year.

Green Thumb Up My Nose

August 28, 2022

Garden Report for 220829

Lovely weather this week (temps in the mid 70’s), with more lovely weather, followed by more hellish heat predicted for the week ahead.

The only plants producing pickable product are the tomatoes. The Zucchini has turned into a bushy monster, with no produce. The Acorn Squash is starting to produce, but they won’t be ripe for another couple months.

Lots of cherry tomatoes coming in, but they don’t count for weight.

Vegetable Count Total

Weight
g

Unit

Weight
g

Grand

Total

Total
Weight
kg
  Tomatoes 19 1400 74 49 2.54
Potatoes
Sweet Potatoes
Carrots
Beets
Summer Squash 1 0.54
Zucchini 4 2.65
Spaghetti
Squash
Winter Squash
Cucumber
Late harvest tomatoes
Grand Total 5.73

I’ve given up on setting any kind of records this year.

Green Thumb Up My Nose

August 22, 2022

Garden Report for 220822

Just got back from a week-long Alaska cruise — of which more, anon — and the garden is doing surprisingly well. Better than the lawn. Must be the automatic watering system.

The Zucchini managed to sneak in another monster ~2.5kg. Not sure what to do with it.

Got our first Summer Squash.

Surprisingly few ripe tomatoes, other than the cherries.

Week
Ending
08/15
Vegetable Count Total

Weight
g

Unit

Weight
g

Grand

Total

Total
Weight
kg
  Tomatoes 20 1140 57 20 1.14
Potatoes
Sweet Potatoes
Carrots
Beets
Summer Squash 1 540 540 1 0.54
Zucchini 1 2400 2400 4 2.65
Spaghetti
Squash
Winter Squash
Cucumber
Late harvest tomatoes
Grand Total 4.33

We continue to run behind last year, but I have hopes for the upcoming couple of weeks.

Green Thumb Up My Nose

August 15, 2022

Garden Report for 220815

Not as hot this week, with highs in the mid to upper 80’s. Next week in the mid to upper 90’s.

Our lone Zucchini is finally producing. Harvested two small ones so we won’t get overwhelmed. Our Spaghetti Squash is running all over the place, and I’m working to tie it up to the stakes.

The cherry tomatoes are putting out a dozen or so every few days. The other tomatoes are producing lots and lots of greenies.

The determinate tomatoes and the the Cocozelle Delicata are surviving, but not much in the way of growth.

So we start the scoreboard.

Week
Ending
08/15
Vegetable Count Total

Weight
g

Unit

Weight
g

Grand

Total

Total
Weight
kg
  Tomatoes
Potatoes
Sweet Potatoes
Carrots
Beets
Summer Squash
Zucchini 3 148 74 1.15 1.25
Spaghetti
Squash
Winter Squash
Cucumber
Late harvest tomatoes
Grand Total 1.25

We continue to run behind last year, but I have hopes for the upcoming couple of weeks.

Green Thumb Up My Nose

August 7, 2022

Garden Report for 220808

The week went from hot to bearable to hotter, peaking out at 97F on Sunday. Next week is forecast to peak at 100F, but be mostly in the mid-90’s.

Our lone Zucchini has been growing like a weed, and producing lots of fruits … that get to about 10cm long and then die. One, however, did better, hiding out by hanging down into the hole in one of the cinderblocks where it could grow undisturbed. Came in at 35cm and 1.1kg.

The cherry tomatoes are starting to ripen, but nobody else has any color.

Planted out one of the grow-cups with the determinates and the big cup with the Cocozelle Delicata. Both survived the operation. Also tried planting a bunch of seeds from a melon what I bought. We’ll see what comes up.

So we start the scoreboard.

Week
Ending
08/08
Vegetable Count Total

Weight
g

Unit

Weight
g

Grand

Total

Total
Weight
kg
  Tomatoes
Potatoes
Sweet Potatoes
Carrots
Beets
Summer Squash
Zucchini 1 1100 1100 1 1.1
Spaghetti
Squash
Winter Squash
Cucumber
Late harvest tomatoes
Grand Total 1.1

We’re running well behind last year, when we had 10kg of harvest already, split evenly between the tomatoes and the zucchini.

Green Thumb Up My Nose

October 10, 2021

Garden Report for 211011

Started out warm (low 70’s), then dropped into the high 50’s, with lows in the lower 30’s.

On Wednesday I closed out the garden, just ahead of the frost (10/07, our average first frost date), including taking down the greenhouse and emptying the last house bag of its carrots. Total was 105kg, which is not only a record, but is ahead of almost any two previous years worth of produce.

Last week’s Green Tomatoes section on The Scoreboard was only those what came off the house bags. This week, it’s all the greenies from the main garden — over 25 kilos worth.

Section 3 remains essentially unchanged. The lone survivor of the cucumber seedlings I planted a couple of weeks ago is coming along, but getting anything out of it before the frost kills it is looking less and less likely. I’ve been getting enough greens for our salads through simple thinning. As with graham crackers and milk, getting the lettuce and tomatoes to come out even requires skill and luck. Section 3 carrots are looking good. I’ll harvest them right before the first hard frost (late October?). Carrots total here is not a final number. I’ll update it when I finish the harvest.

Both the corn and the sweet potatoes were severe disappointments. Sweet potatoes were the size of carrots, and totaled 538g — probably less than the size of the one I cut up for slips. Despite my efforts with fans and shakings, the corn didn’t get properly pollinated. All the ears were small, and all but one were bare of kernels. Still, I’ve learned a lot of lessons that I can put into effect next year.

Here’s the almost final score board:

Week
Ending
10/11
Vegetable Count Total

 

Weight
g

Unit

 

Weight
g

Grand

 

Total

Total
Weight
kg
  Tomatoes 31 5537 172 210 37.4
  Summer Squash 2 658 329 17 4.0
  Zucchini 4 1256 314 38 17
  Spaghetti
squash
7 13578 1940 10 18.6
  Green Tomatoes 87 23497 270 120 26.1
  Carrots 2381 2.38
  Sweet Potato 538 0.558
Grand Total           107

Our end-of-season total is 105kg 107kg, which is over 37kg higher than any previous recorded results, which is to say, it’s essentially a full season’s additional growth. Note that there’s another kilo or so of carrots yet to harvest from Section 3. I’ll update this page when it happens. UPDATE: another 2.4kg of carrots added.

We were not overrun with Summer Squash the way we were with Zucchinis, but here’s a recipe anyway. Finally, as an end-of-season special, and for others like us, who didn’t get a lot of corn out of their corn,  here’s a recipe for tea.

 

Green Thumb Up My Nose

October 3, 2021

Garden Report for 211004

It is well and truly Autumn in the NENW. Wind and rainstorms are blowing through (we got something around half an inch on Monday), and trees are thinking about turning. Blustery and rainy off and on at the start of the week, with lows in the low 40’s and highs in the low 60’s, warming to 70F at the end. Forecast is for it to continue around 70 early next week, with a cooling trend into the 50’s thereafter.

 Out front, our Redpointe Maple once again is the first in the neighborhood to turn. In the garden, the various pollinators seem to have already thinned out. This means the Zucchini and Summer Squash are ending their runs, and most of what’s left is the occasional slow-grower or well-hidden ones, like the 1.5kg Zucchini that managed to grow down inside one of the openings in the concrete blocks of the garden wall. I think I’ll make soup.

I have emptied out most of the grow-bags along the house (one has carrots in it) and have moved the dirt up onto the front lawn. After the last mow of the season I’ll put in some grass seed and see if Spring will give us something that looks more like a lawn and less like an unkempt vacant lot. There almost three dozen green tomatoes left on the plants in the bags; those I put in the spare bathtub to ripen.

Speaking of greenies, I’m starting a green tomatoes section on The Scoreboard, replacing the non-functional winter squash category. The current entry is only those what came off the house bags.

In the greenhouse the corn still isn’t doing much of anything.* I think I’ll wait until we pass what is probably our peak heat for October next week, and then harvest everything, ready or not.

Section 3 is essentially unchanged from last week. The lone survivor of the cucumber seedlings I planted a couple of weeks ago is coming along, but getting anything out of it before the first frost (mid October?) will be a close run thing. I’ve been getting enough greens for our salads through simple thinning. As with graham crackers and milk, getting the lettuce and tomatoes to come out even requires skill and luck.

Here’s the score board:

Week
Ending
10/04
Vegetable Count Total

 

Weight
g

Unit

 

Weight
g

Grand

 

Total

Total
Weight
kg
  Tomatoes 15 2216 148 210 37.4
  Summer Squash       17 4.0
  Zucchini 1 1460 1460 38 17
  Spaghetti
squash
      3 5.0
  Green Tomatoes 33 2721 82 33 2.7
  Cucumber          
  Corn          
  Sweet Potato          
Grand Total           66

By this time in ’18 and ’19 we had closed out the garden and had our final tallies: 45kg in 2018 and 67kg in 2019, so our current 66kg is right up there, and next week (which may be when we close out for ’21) we’ll probably surpass all previous harvests. Of course, two Zucchinis totaling 2.7kg helped.

There’s still a glut of both tomatoes and Zucchini, so here’s a soup recipe to use up both.

* This newsletter says it’s about 40 calendar days/525GDD from silk to R3 (there’s some math involved), and silking didn’t start until early September. From then until now (32 days), WSU says Spokane County has only added ~300GDD.

 

Green Thumb Up My Nose

September 26, 2021

Garden Report for 210927

Lovely weather all week, with temps in the 70’s and no rain until Sunday night. I can tell that Autumn is well and truly here: yesterday I saw a large skein of geese — flying west. Forecast for next week is for somewhat rainy (MTTh), with highs wandering between 58F and 68F, depending on the rain.

I’m giving up on the deck tomatoes. Low yields of low-weight fruit. Not worth the time to hand water. Pulled up all three. Left the peppers and carrots, et al. Reminder to not try bush tomatoes on the deck next year. Maybe do herbs. House tomato plants are starting to go brown. Pulled out two of them so far. As I empty the bags I’m taking the dirt out and putting it on bare spots on the lawn.

The Zucchinis continue a somewhat relaxed production rate. Summer Squash are moseying along. Pot carrots have sprouted.

In the greenhouse the corn still isn’t doing much of anything. We’re now at almost 120 days (theoretically , it’s 85 days to maturity). As a test case, I picked the largest cob with brown tassels. It was about 5-6″ long (theoretically 7-8″) — most of the rest look even smaller. Very green looking/tasting when cooked. Looks like it needs another week, at least.* Fortunately, things look to be warm. No change to sweet potatoes.

Section 3 is essentially unchanged from last week. The lone survivor of the cucumber seedlings I planted a couple of weeks ago is coming along, but getting anything out of it before the first frost (mid October) will be a close run thing. I’ve been getting enough greens for our salads through simple thinning

Here’s the score board:

Week
Ending
09/27
Vegetable Count Total

 

Weight
g

Unit

 

Weight
g

Grand

 

Total

Total
Weight
kg
  Tomatoes 28 3661 131 195 35.2
  Summer Squash 2 607 304 17 4.0
  Zucchini 4 2045 511 37 15.5
  Spaghetti
squash
      3 5.0
  Winter Squash          
  Cucumber          
  Corn          
  Sweet Potato          
Grand Total           59.7

We have fallen well behind where we were in 2019 (67kg),  mostly because we harvested a bunch of pumpkins and such back then. We slightly above double what we harvested in 2018 (27kg).

Since we have something approaching 10kg of ripe tomatoes of various sizes laying about the house, here’s a recipe on roasting them.

*According to this midwestern site, the corn should start silking about 10 weeks after planting. So that would be about mid-August. Actually, silking didn’t start until into the first week of September, so we’re two weeks behind. If I am reading the website aright, the corn should be in the R3 Milk stage about three weeks later (sometime after 21 Sep). Stages after that (R4-R6) sound like they’re for field corn for feed or something. Another page says that from the silk stage it needs about 45 days until 50 percent milk line. Which would be mid-October, just in time for the frosts.

Green Thumb Up My Nose

September 19, 2021

Garden Report for 210920

This  week started out comfortable, with highs in the lower 70’s, then cooled to the lower 60’s (lows in the low 40’s), with rain over the weekend. Forecast is for a warming trend, ending in the high 70’s next weekend.

I’m trying something new — planting carrots in some 10″ and 12″ pots to grow indoors over the winter. Going by a program what I saw on the YouTubes, I filled them with soil and laid a slab of chicken wire over the dirt. Using the damp end of a Q-tip with the cotton clipped off, I picked up one seed at a time and placed it in one of the hexen of the chicken wire. Should be ready in late January.

The Zucchinis continue a somewhat relaxed production rate. Summer Squash are chugging along. Tomatoes have gone mad, with over 6kg ripe enough to pick. I did a sweep on Friday afternoon, just ahead of the forecast two-day rainstorm. Broke the handle off my small basket. That’s because there were a number of Brandywine and Beefsteaks, running close to 500g each. Also harvested one more Spaghetti Squash.

In the greenhouse the corn isn’t doing much of anything. I suspect it might be the cool weather. Since we’re due for a warming trend, I’ll give it another week. Sweet potatoes are still suffering from their leaf infection. Since we don’t have any frost in the forecast, I’ll let them go a little longer as well. Besides, the way things are laid out, I really have to harvest the corn first.

In Section 3 I’ve cut down the older lettuce what has bolted. The newer lettuce is at the point where I need to thin it. The carrot and chard seedlings are coming along.

Here’s the score board:

Week
Ending
09/20
Vegetable Count Total

 

Weight
g

Unit

 

Weight
g

Grand

 

Total

Total
Weight
kg
  Tomatoes 36 6515 181 167 31.5
  Summer Squash 4 696 174 15 3.4
  Zucchini 3 713 237 33 13.5
  Spaghetti
squash
1 1346 1346 3 5
  Winter Squash          
  Cucumber          
  Corn          
  Sweet Potato          
Grand Total           53.4

We have fallen a skoshi behind where we were in 2019 (55kg), but still have almost twice what we harvested in 2018 (27kg).

I should be posting recipes for tomatoes, but here’s a YouTube with one last Zucchini snack recipe instead.

Green Thumb Up My Nose

September 13, 2021

Garden Report for 210913

This  week started warm and hazy, drifting down to cool. 85/55F at the beginning, 75/45F at the end, with one day of record-setting rain. The latest NWWx discussion is for a major cooling trend,  and the trees tell me it’s coming on for Autumn .

The Zucchinis continued a somewhat relaxed production rate, except that they kept hiding under the foliage at the south end of Section 1, giving us things like this 1.3kg monster. Summer Squash are chugging along. Tomatoes are mostly taking a break, but there’s a good 50 greenies waiting for the last of the warm weather.  There’s another eight Spaghetti Squash hanging around.

In the greenhouse the corn has started to put out cobs. Looks like we might get 10 or 12, depending. Theoretically, it’s due next week, but the cobs look awfully small. I’ll probably put off the harvest until the end of the month. Unfortunately, what’s good for the corn appears to be bad for the sweet potatoes. Rampant leaf fungus. Rain forecast had me roll up the power cord for the fan.

In Section 3 the older lettuce is getting older and the newer lettuce is at the two-leaf stage. I can see some carrot seedlings just poking up. Carrot tops are doing well. Theoretically, the carrots should have been ready in mid-August, but I’ve pulled up a couple and they’re the size of the end of my thumb. I think I’ll do the usual and lift them when I close out the garden in October.

Here’s the score board:

Week
Ending
09/13
Vegetable Count Total

 

Weight
g

Unit

 

Weight
g

Grand

 

Total

Total
Weight
kg
  Tomatoes 11 1684   131 25
  Summer Squash 3 880   11 2.7
  Zucchini 5 2946   30 12.8
  Spaghetti
squash
      2 3.7
  Winter Squash          
  Cucumber          
  Corn          
  Sweet Potato          
Grand Total           44.25

We have fallen behind where we were in 2019 (49kg), but still have over twice what we had in 2018 (19kg).

MJ has made some more of the pickled Zucchini we talked about six weeks ago. Very good.

Green Thumb Up My Nose

September 6, 2021

Garden Report for 210906

Today’s report is number 264 in the Green Thumb series. It’s been ten years since I started the Thumbs, mostly as a way of recording how well my gardening was doing. Keeping a gardening log with paper and a quill pen is so Jeffersonian, and storing the information in a spreadsheet on a floppy leaves me at the mercy of the dreaded bit rot, so I decided to roll it into my blog.

This decennial week started mild and breezy with a warming trend. 70/45F at the beginning, 83/52F at the end. Looks like next week will be mostly mid-80’s.

The Zucchinis continue a relaxed production rate, as did the Summer Squash. Lots and lots more of tomatoes. Harvested a second Spaghetti Squash. There are an additional seven on the vine, all fairly green.

In the greenhouse the corn has started to put out silks. Between that and the need to keep the inside warm I’ve decided to close the windows and turn on the fans again. Interestingly enough, my very first Green Thumb also talked about corn: The corn was a disaster. Ankle high by the …end of August. That don’t rhyme.

In Section 3 the older lettuce is getting older and the newer lettuce is at the two-leaf stage. I can see some carrot seedlings just poking up.

Here’s the score board:

Week
Ending
09/06
Vegetable Count Total

 

Weight
g

Unit

 

Weight
g

Grand

 

Total

Total
Weight
kg
  Tomatoes 22 3807 173 120 23.3
  Summer Squash 3 521 174 8 1.8
  Zucchini 3 932 310 25 9.9
  Spaghetti
squash
1 1848 1848 2 3.7
  Winter Squash          
  Cucumber          
  Corn          
  Sweet Potato          
Grand Total           38.7

We are now ahead of where we were in 2019 (36kg), and over twice what we had in 2018 (16kg). Surprisingly, we almost passed 2019 even without the Spaghetti Squash.

MJ has started taking bags of tomatoes to her dog club and slipping them into peoples cars during the meetings.

Green Thumb Up My Nose

August 29, 2021

Garden Report for 210830

Started out cool and breezy, with a warming trend. 70/45F at the beginning, 83/52F at the end. Looks like next week will be more of the same.

Only two Zucchinis. I think they’re taking a breather. Lots and lots more of tomatoes. A couple of Spaghetti Squash look ready to harvest — they are bright yellow and the fingernail test leaves a small indent — so I harvested one of them. Counting that one, there are six big Spaghetti Squash, plus another two or three that appear to be doing well, plus a final two that are small, but might yet turn out to be growers.

In the greenhouse the corn is still tasselizing, but the corncob parts have yet to put out silks (TIL that each silk strand connects to one kernel of corn). I’ll wait to turn on the fans.

In Section 3 the older lettuce is getting older and the new lettuce is at the two-leaf stage.

Here’s the score board:

Week
Ending
08/30
Vegetable Count Total

 

Weight
g

Unit

 

Weight
g

Grand

 

Total

Total
Weight
kg
  Tomatoes 40 6139

153

98 19.5
  Summer Squash 2 224 112 5 1.2
  Zucchini 2 893 446 22 9.0
  Spaghetti
squash
1 1941 1941 1 1.9
  Winter Squash          
  Cucumber          
  Corn          
  Sweet Potato          
Grand Total           32

We are still somewhat behind where we were in 2019 (34kg), and well ahead of what we had in 2018 (12kg). Too bad that much of it is coming from that one Summer Squash. (Well, I say that, but I don’t think we could stand another two kilos of Zucchini).

Here’s some grilled Zucchini recipes for you.

So far, me eating a half kilo of tomatoes a day for lunch seems to be staying ahead of the flood.

Green Thumb Up My Nose

August 22, 2021

Garden Report for 210823

Started out warm and breezy, with a cooling trend. 90F at the beginning, 76 at the end. Forecast is for slightly warmer next week, trending into the low 80s .

Five more Zucchinis, including two biggies that were hiding under the foliage. Lots and lots of tomatoes. A couple of Spaghetti Squash will likely be ready to harvest next week.

In the greenhouse the corn has started to tassel. I have the windows open, but even with gusts to 20mph the leaves barely move. If I leave the doors open the squirrels will get in. My solution is to run an outdoor extension cord across the yard and stick a small fan in there. Check wildefires.wa.gov to see how that worked out.

Transplanted what might be three Acorn Squash into the N end of Section 03, next the greenhouse. Something ate one of the seedlings overnight, so I’ve dusted them with diatomaceous earth.  Pulled up the peas, what weren’t doing much anyway. Replaced them with carrots-on-tape, and added a strip of chard-on-tape, which the cats promptly dug up, then belatedly added some shelving grid to protect it. Hoping that they will prove frost tolerant.

Here’s the score board:

Week
Ending
08/23
Vegetable Count Total

Weight
g

Unit

Weight
g

Grand

Total

Total
Weight
kg
  Tomatoes 29 4112 142 98 13.4
  Summer Squash 2 428 214 5 1.0
  Zucchini 7 3034 433 22 8.1
  Spaghetti
squash
         
  Winter Squash          
  Cucumber          
  Corn          
  Sweet Potato          
Grand Total           22

We are well behind where we were in 2019 (34kg), and well ahead of what we had in 2018 (12kg). Too bad that much of it is coming from oversized Zucchini.

Here’s some more Zucchini recipes for you.

So far, me eating a half kilo of tomatoes a day for lunch seems to be staying ahead of the flood.

Green Thumb Up My Nose

August 16, 2021

Garden Report for 210816

Started out cool and hazy, with a warming trend. End of the week had four days over 95, and two days near 100. I suspect we’d have more produce if the heat didn’t keep shutting down the plants.

One more Summer Squash, two more Zucchinis, one Bell pepper. Lots and lots of tomatoes. If you look at the scoreboard, it says the average weight of the tomatoes is about 132g. Actually, we have a bimodal distribution. The EarlyGirls come in at around 100g, and the Brandywines and the like, weigh closer to 500g.

In the greenhouse the corn is still growing, as are the sweet potatoes. We had a bit of a windstorm last week, so I zipped up the greenhouse and sealed the normally-open windows. That allowed some sort of viral fungus to take hold in the sweet potatoes. Hopefully, opening back up will allow the air to circulate again and keep the disease at bay. Otherwise, it will be the traditional race between the leaf fungus and the late-September harvest.

Planted some more seeds-on-tape (lettuce and carrots) in Section 03.

Here’s the score board:

Week
Ending
08/16
Vegetable Count Total

Weight
g

Unit

Weight
g

Grand

Total

Total
Weight
kg
  Tomatoes 36 4744 132 69 9.3
  Summer Squash 1 250 250 3 0.6
  Zucchini 2 508 254 15 5.1
  Spaghetti
squash
         
  Winter Squash          
  Cucumber          
  Corn          
  Sweet Potato          
Grand Total           15

We are well behind where we were in 2019, and slightly ahead of what we had in 2018. I’m going to stop 2020 comparisons, ’cause I just remembered I only had half a garden that year.

Speaking of being ahead, we are still fighting to stay ahead of the Zucchinis. Here’s a quick Zucchini/pasta recipe.

I really don’t want to have to do tomato recipes, but it might become necessary.

Green Thumb Up My Nose

August 9, 2021

Garden Report for 210809

Started out smoky and hazy, which kept the temps down to the upper 90’s, not quite making 100. End of the week was quite a bit cooler, with one day at 74. Forecast is for a warming trend, peaking near 100.

One more Summer Squash. Zucchini’s are still showing up in ones and twos. Unfortunately, we missed one that was hiding under the foliage, and now have a 1.8kg football. Maybe we can bake bread. And speaking of footballs, there are five spaghetti squash that challenge Ile Zucchino. None of them pass the fingernail test just yet. On the tomato front, the Scarlet Tsunami is upon us.

In the greenhouse the corn is still growing, as are the sweet potatoes.

Here’s the score board:

Week
Ending
08/09
Vegetable Count Total

 

Weight
g

Unit

 

Weight
g

Grand

 

Total

Total
Weight
kg
  Tomatoes 16 2798 175 33 4.6
  Summer Squash 1 264 264 2 0.4
  Zucchini 2 2049 1024 13 4.6
  Spaghetti
squash
         
  Winter Squash          
  Cucumber          
  Corn          
  Sweet Potato          
Grand Total           9.6

We are still ahead of where we were in 2020, and slightly ahead of where we were in 2019.

Speaking of being ahead, we are still fighting to stay ahead of the Zucchinis. Here are 20 recipes you can make in your instapot.

Green Thumb Up My Nose

August 2, 2021

Garden Report for 210802

Started out smoky and hazy, which kept the temps down to the mid 90’s, then clear and hot, with four days in the 98-100 range. We have now tied the record for number of days over 100F. Forecast for next week is cooler early, near 100 at midweek and back down to the high 70’s by the end.

The Zucchini’s are starting to crank out produce. Summer squash, not so much, possibly because they are in the middle of the garden and shaded from all sides. On the tomato front, the Scarlet Tsunami is gathering force. I expect it to hit next week.

In the greenhouse the corn is showing a worrisome tendency to fall over after its alternate day watering. I may have to cut back further. On the failure front, the pumpkin in Section 1, what was never very healthy, has finally died and been removed.

Here’s the score board:

Week
Ending
08/02
Vegetable Count Total

 

Weight
g

Unit

 

Weight
g

Grand

 

Total

Total
Weight
kg
  Tomatoes 15 1636 109 17 1.8
  Summer Squash 1 98 98 1 0.14
  Zucchini 8 1458 182 13 2.6
  Spaghetti
squash
         
  Winter Squash          
  Cucumber          
  Corn          
  Sweet Potato          
Grand Total           4.54

And we’re still ahead of where we were in 2020, and just behind where we were in 2019.

On the cooking front, we already have over two and a half kilos of Zucchini and are looking for recipes. Here is one for overnight Zucchini refrigerator pickles.

Green Thumb Up My Nose

July 26, 2021

Garden Report for 210726

Not as hot this week, but still in the mid-90’s. Next week, more of the same, maybe hitting 100F.

Looks like one of my grow bag tomatoes has Septoria leaf spot. According to the interwebs, “The fungus is most active when temperatures range from 68 to 77° F, the humidity is high, and rainfall or overhead irrigation wets the plants.” The trouble is, it’s been mostly warmer than that, the humidity has been low, and I’m using drip irrigation. Just lucky I guess. Meanwhile, I’ve harvested two tomatoes (both Early Girls) a grow-bag Zucchini, and a garden Summer Squash.

Other main garden plants are doing well. There’s around six or so Spaghetti Squash in various sizes, and I’m getting a small crop of lettuce.

The greenhouse plants are also doing well. The corn is not bepestered with critters, the way my previous crops have been, and the sweet potatoes are covering the ground. Next year I’ll plant the corn closer together.

Here’s the score board:

Week
Ending
07/26
Vegetable Count Total

Weight
g

Unit

Weight
g

Grand

Total

Total
Weight
kg
Tomatoes 2 220 110 2 0.22
Summer Squash 1 140 140 1 0.14
Zucchini 1 168 168 5 1.16
Spaghetti
squash
Winter Squash
Cucumber
Corn
Sweet Potato
Grand Total 1.52

So far, we’re still ahead of where we were in 2020, and behind where we were in 2019.

Green Thumb Up My Nose

July 20, 2021

Garden Report for 210719

Another heat wave week. High 90’s, with one day over 100F. This week it will drop into the upper 80’s to mid 90’s. Fortunately, the soaker hose system is keeping the garden moist.

The Zucchini are finally producing. Three middling-small and one middling-big that provides half the total weight. Nothing much on the Summer Squash side. The Spaghetti Squash is trying, but something keeps eating the leaves. I spent some time in the yard the other night with a flashlight, looking for the culprit, without success. Nevertheless, there’s seven or so on the way. The corn and the sweet potatoes seem to be doing well in the greenhouse.

The tomatoes are getting ready for a good harvest. House Bags have about 25 worth harvesting, if only they were ripe. Main garden has about half that, but that’s because it gets less sun.

So I guess it’s time to break out the scoreboard for 2021:

Week
Ending
07/19
Vegetable Count Total

Weight
g

Unit

Weight
g

Grand

Total

Total
Weight
kg
Tomatoes
Summer Squash
Zucchini 4 988 247 4 0.99
Spaghetti
squash
Winter Squash
Cucumber
Corn
Sweet Potato
Grand Total 0.99

So far, we’re ahead of where we were in 2020, and behind where we were in 2019.