Kitchen Gardeners

I notice that there are several New Mexico members now, and I'd love to get to know other kitchen gardeners in my area. Please, introduce yourself and say a little about your garden space, garden ambitions, garden woes, or whatever. I garden on a small city lot near UNM, produce most of the vegetables that we eat for 8-9 months of the year, and my ambition this year is to produce more food than last year.

This is a bit of my front yard bed, which runs along the sidewalk and combines vegetabls and flowers. .

Share

Reply to This

Replies to This Discussion

Hi, Heather

I'm Catherine, and my kids and I garden in Los Alamos. I have one bed, 3 ft by 7 ft, near the front door that is my "show" garden of winter vegetables. In past years I have had lettuce, carrots, and spinach in that bed in the fall and winter, deeply mulched and covered with a low tunnel. This past winter I didn't get seed into it in time, but I found fall transplans for kale, Swiss chard, and lettuce. The kale was by far the winner for as late as I got the plants in, so we're doing that again. The chard has become a great spring vegetable, so that is going in again, too. But I need some more room, so I'm clearing another 4ft x 4ft bed for lettuce and carrots. My 6 yo twins were very vocal about the lack of carrots over the winter.

Then I have about 200 sq ft of strawberries, half in a newly renovated bed with compost and manure and a deep mulch of pine straw, half in need of all that; and another 200 sq ft, scattered around the back yard, for vegetables. My son owns the bean teepee, and we have lots of tomatoes, some potatoes, lots of garlic, peas, lettuce, radishes, all the usual suspects.

I really like the idea of a four season harvest (from the book of that name by Eliot Coleman), but I have rarely succeeded with a late winter/early spring planting because of the high spring winds that hit my yard. My compromise is to plant the summer garden on Memorial Day weekend (last year earlier, this year later), and start the fall/winter stuff in July to catch the Monsoon rains. Every year I try more of the cold-hardy vegetables for the fall/winter garden. Last year, of course, the new plants were kale and chard. This year our new plants are Brussels sprouts and sugarloaf chicory. Year before last we found that turnips and radishes worked well in the fall garden, and could get quite large without getting woody or hot. This year we are trying some different varieties of winter radishes.

Tomatoes are a challenge in Los Alamos, as our summer night time temperatures are cooler than you get in Albuquerque. When I first bought my house and had a yard I could garden in, I picked up a bunch of Siberian varieties and other short season toms, and have developed a few favorites. I have one yellow tom, Amber Colored, one pink, Maritime Pink, and one red, Glacier (either American or Canadian bred for that one). Those are my sure things. Then I like to grow Striped Cavern and Yellow Stuffer for stuffed tomato salads, but I usually only get a few ripe ones. Oh, and I have cherry toms in two large pots on either side of my front door, red Peace Vine cherry on one side and Yellow Currant (not really a currant tom, just a cherry) on the other. The tomatoes in the beds out back will have row covers on them most of the summer to help them withstand the cool nights and hurry the ripening. The ones out front are on the south side of the house, so they don't need the extra help.

My son and I have failed with pumpkins three years running, but we have 6 more plants to try this year. This time we will put row cover on them right away, along with deep pine straw mulch and a soaker hose, and see what we get. Watermelon, too. And one zuccini plant.

My daughter is in charge of flowers and corn. I was supposed to help her plant her flower maze a month ago, but the winds blew us back indoors. I think it will now become a corn maze with cornflowers and dwarf sunflowers in the rows.

Last fall she saw me piling the pine needles on the strawberry bed, and she decided to pile mulch on her gladiolas, too, instead of digging them up. Fine with me, if they didn't make it through the winter they aren't too expensive to replant. But six inches of pine straw mulch on those gladiolas was enough to bring them through the winter just fine! Thanks to her mulch we never have to dig gladiola bulbs in the fall again! She also thinks jonny-jump-ups are the best flower in the world, so we have them in all the beds and between pavers and in the grass.... Creeping thyme and violets make a beautiful combination.

Well, I've run on long enough. I hope to see more people here, and more activity as the spring and summer progress.

Catherine

Reply to This

Keep us posted. I was interested to hear abou all your container growing. I'm pretty space-limited here too, and use lot of half-barrels and pots, and last year my husband got me three of the one-meter-square self-watering raised beds from Gardener's Supply and put them across the top of the driveway. They work nicely and added 27 square feet of growing space where there was noly concrete before.

Reply to This

I just harvested a bunch of garlic, mostly rounds that came up from the little topsets, bulbils, from last year's garlics. They were starting to lay down, so my daughter and I dug them before they got lost. The plants that grew from mature cloves planted last fall don't look ready for harvest, they probably need a couple more weeks. This fall we'll plant the largest of the rounds again and next summer they should be full heads. It takes two years, but it was a way to increase my planting while still being able to eat part of the harvest. ;-)

I have a 6-pack full of lettuce that I have been tucking in here and there. Now I can put them in the finished spots in the garlic bed. Oh, and I can also put in some of the left-over tomato plants. Hmmm, in fact, it sounds like that's the space for the pizza garden we never got around to this spring for my son. And then, come fall, I'll bury the beds in leaves, cover with pine needles to hold the leaves down in windy weather, and plant the garlic there again. They really seemed to like that treatment last fall.

Catherine in Los Alamos

Reply to This

Hi, Heather,

Say, do you know of anyone who has an herb spiral? I want to redesign my garden to utilize more space for veggies.

Thank you,
Pam Rogers

Reply to This

I don't know of anyone who has a formal one. I've seen a few informal ones, made by grouping pots from very large to very small in a rough descending spiral. I grow most herbs in large pots now, and reserve the in-ground space for veggies. Have a look at my websire, www.localfoodalbuquerque.com, for more about front-yard gardening. Where do you live, and what are you growing?

Reply to This

I live at Wyo. and Comanche. Mostly I have grown plants, flowers, herbs, herbs, herbs, ha ha and different types of bell peppes, eggplant. Now I want to grow all my own veggies for my husband and myself. They just taste better! Did I read that you worked at UNMH? If so, I am a Chaplain there.

I did find a spiral that looks good and my husband said he will construct it! Your website is inspiring, Heather.

Thanks,
Pam
293-1127

Reply to This

Hi Everyone

I haven't made a posting in a long time. I live in 4-Hills and have 4 very large raised bed vegetable gardens. Right now I am busy cleaning them for the winter. This year rather than bagging the waste, we ran it through the chipper -filled the composter and have a big heap waiting for the next cycle. Just got a veggie grower for the winter. Basically it is a small raised bed with a lid. I am looking forward to growing leafy vegetables throughout the winter and starting my tomatoes plants there in the spring.

Best

Janet

Reply to This

RSS

KGI's book of the month

Latest Activity

Sumitra Pande added 4 photos to the album 'My Garden at Kathmandu'
29 minutes ago
Thats great Everret! So lovingly composed that I felt the warmth of that old rickety stove around me after so many years and away so many miles.
3 hours ago
lovely memories Everett, thanks for sharing.
5 hours ago
Everett McDonald added a blog post
My father-in-law Fred Pond died ten years ago. He loved his garden and I still miss him a lot especially at this time of year when the seed catalogues start arriving. The Pond family lived on a seven acre homestead of sorts in Westford Massachuset...
6 hours ago
I think this might need it's own category, don't you? Tomatoes are one of the most popular things to grow and we've been placing them in all kinds of groups, but the fact is we almost all grow them, and they have specific needs.
6 hours ago
The cooking shows are entertaining, but that's all. Some of my favorite recipes started with notes handed down from family. They're still as good as ever. James Beard, Joy of cooking, and Professional Chefs Manural are good references. I have over...
7 hours ago
8 hours ago
8 hours ago
8 hours ago
10 hours ago
Greetings everyone :D Sice we've been having such odd weather this year, I decided to try getting my garlic in the ground this past weekend. Now I hope that it'll all grow nicely.
11 hours ago
Amanda Williams and Maggie are now friends
12 hours ago
Donald you lucky to live in an area where you can start a new hive at any time during the year! In New York one could never start a new package in December! =8-o We'd love to see pix of your current hive. :)
14 hours ago
marion stewart added a blog post
Red osier dogwood is just the best plant for this time of year – cut down some branches – you can find them in fields and ditches and then place them in garden pots or containers. Fill the over-season containers with soil to hold the stems. Attach...
14 hours ago
Hi Everyone: I am new to kitchen gardeners and I currently have one bee hive and I am planning on buying one four pound package of bees and a queen in December. If my luck is strong I will also capture a swarm and end up with three total hives goi...
15 hours ago
Donald joined Joy Williams's group
Bees! How they benefit us, how to keep them, how to maintain them! Experts invited, and welcome.
15 hours ago
I had not heard of this new link of cell phone towers to CCD, but I believe that CCD is caused by a number of different things and is mostly limited to large scale professional beekeepers that put their bees on large semi-trucks and haul them all ...
15 hours ago
Donald updated their profile
15 hours ago
Oi! Penelope! The cooking shows are designed to make people who've grown up eating processed foods and without a Fannie Farmer in the house want to go to a restaurant and be demanding, or buy expensive, exotic ingredients that they'll mostly never...
15 hours ago
16 hours ago

Notes

HOW TO - ADD A LINK

Several people have experienced difficulty putting working links into comments and blogs etc and I know it is clumsy.... so here is how you do it.....

First type the text you want to appear....  ie  IAN'S PAGE

Then go back and highlight the link text.

Then hit the hyperlink button...a pictogram of a chain link.

Your browser may intervene and request permission to allow temporary scripting or some similar message.   Allow it and go back and highlight the text again

Continue

Created by Ian Jun 7, 2009 at 7:28pm. Last updated by Ian Jun 8.

Forum Policy

Hi, I'm starting to put together a few guidlines on using the discussion forum on here.

I would be happy to hear any comments you may have.  This is very much a work in progress so plese feel free to ask me to add anything you think is needed.

I don't want to make our community hide bound by rules and regulations but I think that, as the community has grown, some explanation of what is expected is needed.

Administration

You can refer any que

Continue

Created by Ian May 23, 2009 at 1:55am. Last updated by Ian May 25.

Climate maps

Hi following recent discussion I have put climate maps of the USA, Australia and Europe on here for reference..

 Climate map of the USA

Climate map of Australia

Climate map of Europe

 

Continue

Created by Ian Sep 12, 2008 at 6:20pm. Last updated by Ian Apr 14.

Recipes, Recipes, Recipes

Hi Everyone,  I've started to collect together recipes from various posts on the site and put them all together here.

If you have a recipe you want to add on here, just post it on the site and leave a comment on my page telling me where it is and I'll go and fetch it back here.

They are organised in Contributor Order but I'm open to better suggestions!

BEVA'S RECIPES

Continue

Created by Ian Jun 2, 2008 at 9:54am. Last updated by Ian Apr 13.

US STATES ABBREVIATIONS

 

US STATE ABBREVIATIONS

AK - Alaska               AL - Alabama              AR - Arkansas
AZ - Arizona              CA - California           CO - Colorado
CT - Connecticut          DC - Dist of Columbia *   DE - Delaware
FL - Florida              GA - Georgia              GU

Continue

Created by Ian Jan 27, 2009 at 4:27pm. Last updated by Ian Jan 27.

HOW TO - MAKE COMPOST

Recently there was an excellent discussion about composting. I’ve pulled together all the various comments here. You can also watch KGI's video on composting here.

 

 

KATE’S ADVICE

I used to have a tumbler that we made from a wine-barrel but

1 you have to fill it up all at once

2. it seemed mostly

Continue

Created by Ian May 30, 2008 at 5:29am. Last updated by Roger Jan 15.

Notes Home

Welcome to Notes.

To view notes that are in the system hit the "all notes" button above.

Continue

Created by Ian May 28, 2008 at 12:10pm. Last updated by Ian May. 30, 2008.

A Note about Notes

I have just written this note so that I can see what we can achieve by using this new feature.

If you read this and have any suggestions then please leave a comment on my page or email me.

Ian

Continue

Created by Ian May 28, 2008 at 6:19pm. Last updated by Ian May. 28, 2008.

© 2009   Created by Kitchen Gardeners International

Badges  |  Report an Issue  |  Privacy  |  Terms of Service

Sign in to chat!