Nov 032012
 
Young Pumpkin in Percy's Pearmain Portal

You have landed on Day 3 in this 6-day series of videos depicting the fine art of collecting/processing/storing pumpkin seeds.  Enjoy!

 

First some pumpkin pics:

Day 1 = flowers

Day 2 = vine

Today  = new fruit

Day 4  = green manure

Day  5 = seed saving

Day 6  = seed planting

 

THEN a video  re “Saving Happy Halloween Pumpkin Carving Seeds”.   6 videos (1/day) for the series!

 

Young Pumpkin in Percy's Pearmain Portal

Young Pumpkin in Percy's Pearmain Portal. Note the thick stem, a sign that this pumpkin is going to be a biggy! Also note how the stem comes off the vine at a 90-degree angle, which will allow the vine to sit on top of the soon-to-be large pumpkin. Note the shriveled, dieing off flower. See the next pic, which shows this pumpkin's growth a month later.

 

 

Adolescent pumpkin in Percy's Pearmain Portal

Adolescent pumpkin (maybe Junior High). Note 1) how the vine was dragged up on top of the pumpkin (the vine was alongside the fruit when younger; see previous pic) so that the growing pumpkin would not pull away from the vine. With the vine on top and pumpkin below, why wanting the fruit to come off of the vine at a 90 degree angle (as mentioned in previous pic) becomes clearer.

 

 

Young pumpkin growing across Rock Birdbath

Young pumpkin growing across Rock Birdbath. Note how quickly the fruit has grown yet the vine is not very developed beyond it. Also note how the young pumpkin still has the shriveled flower attached.

 

Years later, I am starting to really have fun with the lushness, almost unreasonable growth, of pumpkin vine.

 

Skyward Netted Pumpkin

Skyward Netted Pumpkin. Now this project has been fun! My goal was to have a pumpkin grow in the air, suspended off the ground. This pumpkin almost made it to the top, that is, to the crossing bamboo poles, where I was wanting a pumpkin to hang out for a while – at least till Halloween. Spore Lore’s blog entry, 20121030 Skyward Pumpkins and Happy Halloween, tells all.

 

Skyward Netted Pumpkin -- close-up

Skyward Netted Pumpkin -- close-up view. Note the thick stem, 90-degree stem, and the black plastic landscape netting that supports the weight of the pumpkin in the air on the not-so-strong vine.

 

And my favorite of the year…drumroll, please!

 

Skyward Nestled Pumpkin -- close-up view

Skyward Nestled Pumpkin -- close-up view. At last, a pumpkin vine has climbed up to the very crotch of the bamboo teepee AND fruited in a perfect orientation to wedge itself in FOREVER! You do it – I am not going to be the one to tell Skyward Nestled Pumpkin it’s time to move on.

Saving Happy Halloween Pumpkin Carving Seeds — 3 of 6


Happy seed saving and see you tomorrow.

Tony

 

 

Nov 022012
 
pumpkin growing up bamboo

You have landed on Day 2 in this 6-day series of videos depicting the fine art of collecting/processing/storing pumpkin seeds.  Enjoy!

 

First some pumpkin pics:

Day 1 = flowers

Today = vine

Day 3  = new fruit

Day 4  = green manure

Day  5 = seed saving

Day 6  = seed planting

 

THEN a video  re “Saving Happy Halloween Pumpkin Carving Seeds”.   6 videos (1/day) for the series!

 

pumpkin vine undergrowth

Pumpkin vine undergrowth. Note the older (dark green) segments of vine and the male flowers (far right) with their tall thin stalks.

Banana squash vine climbing up into pine tree.

Banana squash vine climbing up into pine tree in author's garden. Although not a pumpkin, the vine is very similar to a pumpkin vine. Pumpkins are a type of squash -- all pumpkins are squash but not all squash are pumpkin (very new proverb).

 

A pumpkin is a gourd-like squash.

Banana squash vine climbs higher into pine.

Banana squash vine climbs higher into the pine tree. Note what an adept climber the vine is, sending curled tendrils out in front to grab hold of/wrap around ANYTHING.

 

pumpkin growing up bamboo

Pumpkin vine growing up a bamboo trellis pole. The "curly tendrils" (see above pic) on the right, will lead in front up the climbing-for-the-sun vine, wrap around the pole, and support the vine as it continues to bear fruit and grow higher. Note 1) the intentionally left branch stub on the home-harvested bamboo pole, and 2) how nicely that hold-on point secures a soft hanger for the vine (always carry more hair ties than you need for your hair and a few extra rubberbands).

 

Saving Happy Halloween Pumpkin Carving Seeds — 2 of 6

Happy seed saving and see you tomorrow.

Tony

Nov 012012
 
European Honey Bees gather pollen in a squash flower.

Now that Halloween is over (in a couple of hours), I want to run through what to do with the seeds from pumpkin carving.  The next few days will be a new video each day depicting the fine art of collecting/processing/storing pumpkin seeds.  Enjoy!

Oh, about seeds, so glad I can legally harvest from the pumpkin that we have — that might not be the case some day if we lose food freedoms from mega agriculture corporations.  Keep food (and seeds) available to the people — vote Prop 37 (California)!!!

First some pumpkin pics:

Today = flowers

Day 2  = vine

Day 3  = new fruit

Day 4  = green manure

Day  5 = seed saving

Day 6  = seed planting

 

THEN a video  re “Saving Happy Halloween Pumpkin Carving Seeds”.   6 videos (1/day) for the series!

 

male pumpkin flowers

Male pumpkin flowers have a long thin stalk as long as a foot from the vine. These flowers are pollen suppliers -- they will not die back and leave a fruit underneath the shriveled petals, as do the female flowers.

 

female pumpkin flower with midges

A female pumpkin flower being pollinated by a small swarm of midges.

 

female pumpkin and base

Female pumpkin flower with typical bulbous base, close to the vine. Too early to tell whether pollination was successful -- the fresh petals tell me that this flower bloomed the night before or early this morning. The petals will die back by the next day. If she is not pollinated, the small base will shrivel up and fall off the vine. If she is pollinated, the flower petals will still die back, but the bulbous base will grow bigger -- a pumpkin is born!

 

European Honey Bees gather pollen in a squash flower.

European Honey Bees gather pollen in a squash flower. Note 1) the dusting of pollen on the bees' entire body; 2) the chamber-like ovule of this female flower; and, 3) the nectariferous area, or the inside bowl , that collects falling nectar -- sticky and hairy!

An interesting blog explaining pumpkin flower pollination, including hand-pollination (being your own pollinator):  Pumpkin Nook

Saving Happy Halloween Pumpkin Carving Seeds — 1 of 6

Happy seed saving and see you tomorrow.

Tony

Oct 032012
 
Carabid Carapice Cabanas animal habitat installation.
Carabid Carapice Cabanas animal habitat installation.

Carabid Carapace Cabanas animal habitat installation completed.

Carabid Carapace Cabanas was about planting Jerusalem sage in the thin strip of poor soil between our driveway and the property line fence.  Our neighbors want low maintenance.  We want a thriving animal habitat, food forest, critter wonderland.  Tall order for a 12″-wide strip of soil, destined to be a low-water hydrozone.  We had the plants — the Jerusalem sage was from a pruning debris (debris, HA!!!) pile on street in front of a local park.  Got to do somethin’ with this plant.

The Before

Area for planting, habitat installation -- the Before. Note the intentional low-water zone with cacti, potted plants, and tree "boulders".

The Jerusalem sage had been freshly pruned and was fairly vibrant, full of life.  I knew that it was a fairly drought-tolerant plant, so I wanted to get it established now in some organic mass, only to be able to leave it be in future years.  I had some wood chips on hand from a local arborist friend (thank you, Tom!); they would work well to mulch the area.  I scraped out , loosened the topmost layer of crud (you call this soil?!) and worked the sage cuttings down a couple of inches.  The cuttings came from a large bush, perhaps 6-8 feet wide at the base.  They were about 3 feet long — a long flat curve for at least 18″, then swept up.  What a hassle to plant these cuttings with a 90 degree bend in them.  Orrrrrrrrrrrr, how lucky am I?  Yes, the right-angle-shaped cuttings were perfect for starting these cuttings.

Because the Jerusalem Sage cuttings were to be transplanted at the end of our dry season, they needed every possible advantage to create roots and thrive.  Being able to horizontally plant the first 18″ of the cuttings under moist mulch was such an advantage.  So be it — the cuttings were scratched in, the stalk ends were positioned pointing skyward, and mulch was used to snug them into place. But I want MORE MULCH.  How rockin’ is this project?!  More finally gets to be better!

And, in order to get more wood chips and surrounding oh-so-natural duff on top of the unstable sage stalks, I will want something to build up along the driveway, a higher edge to be able to pile up the mulch.  Thinking.  Thinking, still.  Yes!  Those dungeness crab carapaces that I have been drying on top of the refrigerator are finally going to make it into the garden.  All those come-and-get-it calcium and sea mineral-rich shells have finally qualified for an animal project, an animal habitat.  “Habitat?”, you ask.

We are still not home.

We have left for the day. Please leave any packages with our neighbor, Mrs. Pill(bug), at carapace number 3. (The Beetles)

This installation, Carabid Carapace Cabanas, is not merely about planting, saving, giving a new lease on Life to some forgotten Jerusalem sage plants.  We (I love to include innocent people) have jumped to Art in the Garden.  Sea Life in the garden.  Cool looking, I-want-a-car-like-that looking, scary-even-when-dead looking gifts from Nature!  There must be some hint of an animal habitat here somewhere.

Of course!  Critters will live, thrive, make house, set up neighborhood in the crab shells.  Here we go, then.  The carapaces are lined up along the edge of the driveway next to the cuttings’ planting area.  More mulch and wood chips are worked around the sage stalks and up against the crab shells.  The carapaces/shells are hunkered down into their embankment, albeit only an inch or two high, of mulch/chips.  We got our MORE organic matter around the stalks, onto the planting area.  That much more nutrients and moisture will be available for the sage cuttings.  Peace on Earth sings loudly.

Carabid Carapace Cabanas completed -- the After

Carabid Carapace Cabanas animal habitat completed -- the After.

Mulch surrounding Jerusalem sage cuttings

Wood chips hold the Jerusalem sage cuttings in place. Duff gathered from the immediate surroundings soften the just-planted look AND provide an inoculation of microbes for the new planting.

Planting of sage complete

Planting of the Jerusalem sage is complete. Note how thin the strip of available planting space is and how the neighbors' yard is about growing pea gravel. The drought tolerant sage was grown on our side of the fence to minimize water on their side of the fence. More water = more weeds, and we don't wish that for our neighbors wanting low-maintenance.

The planting bed, that is, the mulch and wood chips and sage cuttings, were kept moist for a couple of weeks.  And the cuttings made it!  They lived happily ever after in their little corner of the driveway.  The wet winter season was a boon for the newly developing roots.

By spring, the plants were vibrant and boasting blooms.

Jerusalem sage blooms in May

Jerusalem sage blooms in May.

 

Jerusalem sage flowerhead without petals

Jerusalem sage flowerhead without petals. This spring vibrant green flowerhead will become a dry brown cluster of seeds come summer.

And the blooms kept coming.  Very nice that by spring and early summer, this transplant was so obviously thriving.  But then, tragedy.

I walked out the front door one day to find the row of cabanas had been DISTURBED!  What is this?!  Whooooooo did this?!  What has the culprit done to our fine art project?  (You should be upset, too.)  Oh, how disappointing.

A breath.  Another breath.  A glimmer of light coming.  Possible okayness working its way into my carapace of a brain.  A quick swirl of positive possibility.  Sure.  Why not?  This could be a good thing.

 

Who ate my oatmeal?!!!

Animal habitat, complete with animals. Last fall's art has become this spring's microbe mix.

That was close.  I nearly forgot why we had installed this animal habitat in the first place — to attract critters and give them a place to thrive in.  And now we have it; we have success.  There are messy, slimy, uncouth critters here on our driveway, in the smack middle of suburbia.  How great!

Last night’s critter was looking for food.  That very smart critter was looking through the line of cabanas because it knew that insects and mollusks (slugs and snails) live in the cabanas.  My bet is that the dinning critter got some meal because of the extensive disruption of the crab shells.  And, the diner left us a gift.

Every time a critter visits your garden, it leaves a trace of microbes.  That’s good critter etiquette.  And those gifted microbes will introduce themselves (microbe etiquette) to the fauna also, previously, in your garden.  And there will be biodiversity, and there will be happiness throughout the land.

Tony

 

 

Sep 202012
 
Pumpkin Atop the World

My birthday present from my daughter this year was some help in the garden. We constructed a bamboo trellis for pumpkin vine and a twine corral for sidewalk-side sunflowers. The pumpkin vine has grown beyond the teepee apex and a young pumpkin sits in the apex crotch of bamboo. And, IT’S GROWING! The sunflowers below are, for the most part, contained within the garden twine "fencing" provided by the rectangular-shaped bamboo pole corral. Read on!

Nap, anyone?

Straw Bale Recliner Bed in 2008

The planting bed alongside our driveway is named Straw Bale Recliner Planting Bed, or Straw Bale Recliner, for short.  I gave the 20′ x 10′ bed that name because straw bales were used to frame it.  To start the bed, 3 feet of adobe soil was removed the entire 200 square feet — many wheel barrow fulls of adobe carted away, some to our back yard, some down the sidewalk to a neighbor looking for clean fill.  Then, rice bales (less germination than wheat) were used to make a rectangular shaped box.  Some bales were stood on end; that much more organic material to rot in place and make soil and home for decaying straw-loving creatures.  Alfalfa straw was used to line the bed – yummy nitrogen-rich straw that would enrich the soon-to-be soil.  One side of the rectangle had bales propped up at an angle – that was the “recliner” side.  Comfy place to hang out till we started to fill it.

Then the planting hole was filled with yard debris from wherever it could be found, but no ivy, please.  Months of adding organics and soil mixes.  Months of growing green manure only to chop and drop it in place – pumpkin/squash is my favorite expendable green manure.  Such luscious large leaves later lacerated to litherines.  (poetic license with a capital L!)Squash for chop-and-drop soil making.

Soil making mix — juicy sugar-laden fresh plants, fallen oak leaves from down the block, hedge trimmings, magnolia limbs, fruit tree harvests, miscellaneous weeds and grasses, last year’s old straw.  Mix it, turn it, water it, AND REPEAT.  Crop after crop, a labor of love to add organic matter to the soil and encourage soil microbes, soil critters, and even critters that might leave the soil.  Hey, who brought this warthog home?!

Apples and greens to feed the new crop

Apple harvest and squash greens to feed upcoming garlic crop.

Four years of garlic by winter, sunflowers by summer and now we have rich soil.  We also have a healthy crop of aphids and other insects enjoying Straw Bale Recliner Bed.  Are aphids a problem?  Of course not – they are sugar and protein packets stuffed with bacteria.  Alive aphids are food to some critters; many insects feast on aphids.  Amphibians, reptiles, and birds will feast on those insects.  Dead aphids are also food to other critters – insects and soil microbes to the rescue!  So, those aphids-abundant (no, not “infested”) squash leaves will be all that more nutritious when churned into the soil.

aphids on squash leaf

Aphids contribute to a rich soil's environment.

This year’s sunflower crop is stunning.  Would have loved to plant earlier than the first week of July, but such is life.  BUT, this year, a pumpkin vine emerges from the bowels of Sunflower Earth and winds its way toward the sky.  There are actually two pumpkin vines growing up the two teepee trellises; the left vine is both more substantial and has a larger pumpkin at its end.

Sunflowers and pumpkin vine.

Happy sunflowers and a trellis cradled-pumpkin.

 

For each of the two “chosen” pumpkin vines (one right and one left), the vine was trimmed of off-shoot vines as it climbed up the bamboo trellis.

Pumpkin sitting pretty in top of left trellis.

A pumpkin wedges itself tightly atop the left trellis.

Trimming off competing vines ensured faster and stronger growth up the pole for the chosen vine.  The vine was also twirled around the poles and through garden twine to keep it from falling back into the bed.  All flowers, both male and female (the females usually have a small pumpkin already starting to grow) were plucked off.  No competition, please; we have a pumpkin to grow at the top of this trellis!

tight squeeze!

A pumpkin grows between trellis poles. The locked-in configuration of the pumpkin will probably keep it from falling to the ground.

 

Have a great Halloween.

Peace on Earth.

Tony

Jan 112012
 
20120108-LTH-retaining-wall

Garden Log (what I did):

071509 LTH -- soil harvest

071509 Leaf Trench Highway. Soil has been harvested from the trench, between the slate walk path and the planting bed. The trench will be prepped for more soil making, starting with a base of straw from the awaiting bale. Since this picture, lots of organics have been composted onto and into the trench. Those organics include: tree prunings, wheat straw, alfalfa straw, oak leaves, carbon harvest (for example, pumpkin vines), twigs and stout tree limbs, wood chips, and horse manure. Beautiful, rich, high quality tilth soil has been harvested several times from the trench.

1. Constructed a low retaining wall to increase the soil volume of a planting bed, Leaf Trench Highway.  Leaf Treanch Highway got its name back in 2007 when we were installing irrigation supply to our garden’s back corner.  The water supply was trenched along a walk path, buried about three (3) feet and encased in 3″ perforated plastic drainpipe.  The depth and casement were to allow “mistakes” in the garden — a shovel could graze the drainpipe and might not break through and bust the water supply.  Lots of digging since then, and no busted trench pipe, yet.  The trench was called a “highway” because, when filled with leaves, or other organics, it’s a corridor for critters to move about the garden.

So, there we were, in 2007, with a sizeable 3-foot deep trench running along the property line’s planting bed.  We decided to use the trench to make soil; we would use the trench to turn compostable material into planting soil.

20110929-LTH-Apples

"Opps! Did I spill that?" No, Anita, Leaf Trench Highway is getting a rotten apple harvest -- Sebastopol's finest for our dear soil-making critters.

About every six months, the trench is dug up for a soil harvest.  That harvested soil is then used to amend the soil in the gardens.  And yes, sometimes waiting the six months or so is difficult.  But having fresh, new, teeming-with-microbe, alive! soil on hand when we do harvest is all that much more a treat after the wait.

20100604 LTH -- potatoes

Potato (broad-leaved), garlic (along fence), red and white clover grow in Leaf Trench Highway in the summer of 2010. The red and white clover serve as both insectary and nitrogen-fixing plants.

This time around,  in 2012, I want to grow a crop above the composting trench.  I want us to produce a garlic and vegetable crop WHILE the trench is composting.  I have also found that new crop love a good compost under it.  BUT, the compost can not be too hot or the new crop will burn.  For this planting, there is a good base of wood chips, green manure, oak leaves, and a recent magnolia tree pruning.  Especially with the magnolia twigs and limbs, those bulky organics will supply microbes, miosture, and nutrients to the growing crop.  Also, as the crop plants grow, their roots will travel the moist, nutrient-rich paths along the decaying wood.  Great mulch for the coming dryer months.  Throughout the spring, we will harvest salad from the composting trench.  By July, the garlic will be ready to be dug up — harvest garlic, harvet soil.  Garlic for the kitchen, soil for the garden.

20120108-LTH-retaining-wall

Low retaining wall built to increase the soil capacity of Leaf Trench Highway's planting bed. Old redwood fence boards were cut in two-foot lengths and pounded into the gap between the planting bed and the vertical slate border. Using a wood block between the fence board and the sledgehammer kept the fence boards from splitting.

 

 

 

20120108-LTH-retaining-wall, close-up

20120108-LTH-retaining-wall, close-up. Note the beautiful mosses and lichens on the old fence board. Not only is this FREE!!! redwood fence board functional (it will last many years in the soil), it is also beautiful. Moist soil from the planting bed was rubbed into the board cuts to instantly age those fresh-cut surfaces -- we are talking art here! I am interested to see if that soil smear will promote moss growth on the top edges of the boards. Stay tuned.

2. Manure run.  Collected both hot (fresh) and cold (old) horse manure from my secret source (nothing personal).  The hot manure was laid down at the bottom of the fence boards to create a little heat for the wintering crops.  The cold manure, which is pretty much a sandy loam soil because it has broken down for so long, was thrown on top of the bed.  That cold manure was thrown into and on top of the magnolia tree prunings, enough of it to plant the crops in.

20120107-manure-collecting

Collecting horse manure from a neighbor's pile. The bins/barrels help keep the job cleaner and easier. Using the barrels, my truck does not have to be washed afterwards and the manure can sit in the bins until ready for use. Sure is nice to load it once (into the barrels) but not have to clear it out of my truck's bed the same day. Note the looseness of the fresh (hot) pile at the rear of the truck. That pile was moved twice -- once to get it out of the way so the buried old (cold) manure could be harvested, then again to fill up the hole that cold manure harvest left. Perhaps in 6 months, that filled in hole will be cold manure soil itself. Just another example of our wondrous revolving World at work.

20120110-LTH-garlic-planting-2

It's late, but the garlic is in. Come tomorrow, I will throw a thin mulch of rice straw over the veggie seeds and garlic starts. Note how the low retaining wall of recycled (reused) fence board allowed enough soil to be added to the bed to cover most of the magnolia prunings. Will be exciting to see what crops actually do rise out of the straw mulch and to see how well they thrive in this compost, soil-making bed. Oh, did I tell you -- it's an experiment. 🙂

You, the Habitat Gardener (reflections):

1. Leaf Trench Highway is a major no-toll pathway in our garden.  True, there is often construction along this roadway, but the improvements are always worth it.  This year’s road upgrades include last year’s woodchip pile from Santa Rosa’s waterways cleanup (oak and willow), oak leaves from the neighborhood, our ridiculous Jack-in-the-Beanstalk pumpkin patch green manure, the magnolia tree’s prunings, hot manure, and cold manure soil.  Microbes party down!  All insects and amphibians welcomed.  Just add water, as the soon-to-come rains will do, and the entire length of Leaf Trench Highway will be a mess of healthy fungi, vegetables, flowers, microbes, crawly critters, and birds.  And that’s just at ground level.  The length of the trench, along the fence, is a fedge — food hedge, a permaculture term.  That hedge planting includes fig, pineapple quava, loquat, and pomegranate.

2. Our soil gets better every year as we grow more food each year.  And we share — without an atom of pesticide, herbicide, or fungicide, the trench and fedge will take on a natural balance.  The critters will get some of the planted crop, but by far, we will get our fair abundant share.

Happy soil making to you.

                                                            Tony

 

 

The Next Day and Night:

1. More cold manure soil was added to the bed tocover the garlic and to give the veggie seeds more soil to establish themselves in.

20120111-LTH-veggy-planting

Bowl-O-Seeds. Rooting powder was used to help the seeds germinate, a tall task during these wintery days.

2. The vegetable seeds were all mixed together with rooting powder (only because I didn’t have any mycorizzae spore on hand).  Life is good!, especially when I get to open dozens of seed packets that I prepared throughout last growing season.  Round and round, mixed in a large stainless bowl, or bucket, and dusted with a little love (spore or rooting powder).  Then I’ll carefully toss the seeds out onto a prepared planting bed — a dash here, a dash there, some over my right shoulder, some underhanded between my legs.  Most importantly, I get to have fun being ridiculous.  I get to plant way too many seeds.  Yes, I work hard to collect seeds all year long so that I can have a Chia Pet garden.  Too many plants that grow too much means I will eventually get to havest them, in whole or in part, and reap the green manure they are.  I will be harvesting carbon — all that alive, green plant material is merely bottled up sunshine to be poured onto the compost pile.  Sun >>> plants >>> photosynthesis >>> juicy packets of carbon >>> Tony’s compost >>> SOIL MAKING.  And with that carbon-rich soil, we will grow more STUFF, whether it be flowers, food, or fodder.  And we will live happily ever after.

The seeds I grew and collected and mixed together are cilantro, parsley, Queen Anne’s lace, bok choy, gopher plant, impatiens, fennel, round zuccini, calendula, “Primo” danelion, and chard.  Store-bought seeds that also became part of the mix are broccoli, cauliflower, and lettuce.  SOMETHING ought to grow!

3. The seeded bed, also with its garlic starts, was mulched with rice straw to keep critters away from the seeds and to keep the seeds moist for germination.  The mulch will also help the seeds receive waterings and/or rain without being washed out of the planting bed.  Perhaps too heavy a cover of straw to be left on the young sprouts.  BUT, I will keep an eye on the bed and will thin off some of the straw in a week or two.  I will be curious to see what plants actually do come up during these frosty nights and cool days.  Nice to have some ground warm perculating upward toward the seeds from the hot manure below.  Even if nothing were to germinate now, surely some seeds will germinate further down the year when the sun warms the soil and spring rains moisten it.  How fun to wait and see.

20120111-LTH-veggy-planting-mulched

The seeds have been sown and the rice straw mulch is in place. A little water. A lot of waiting. Soon enough, though, a forest of food and flowers.