Monday, April 24, 2017

Coming Along


Tomatoes, peppers, parsley, marigolds, and a few houseplants under a light in the kitchen.




In the plant room, tomatoes and peppers on the cat tree (Bea and Lou are not thrilled about this).





More tomatoes and peppers in the plant room...





...and still more!




In the living room, my beloved leeks, a handful of tomatoes and peppers, parsley, and marigolds.  The last two weeks have been overcast and cool.  The seedlings are showing it.  :-(




Overnight temps lately have dipped as low as -4, and tonight the forecast is -8.  I brought in my milk jug greenhouses for the time being.  Almost everything has germinated, including the Swiss chard...




...and the mixed kale!  :-)





Sunday, April 23, 2017

Robins, Robins, Everywhere


    After a stretch of relatively mild weather, Easter weekend brought a blast of winter.  Heavy, wet snow fell steadily on April 13th and 14th.  It was perfect snowman snow.  On the 15th, the temperature rose and almost everything that had fallen - at least a foot - melted.  Puddles dotted the driveway and formed in the shallow sections of our lawn.  By the next morning (Sunday), it was snowing heavily once again  We received more than another foot by Monday night.


     It was an atypical Easter weekend, spent dealing with a blocked sewer line (we had to have a plumber here on Easter Monday, the second "after hours" service call in 8 days).  The bright spot for me was the very sudden appearance of robins in the middle of the snowfall on Monday.  I glanced up from my laptop and was shocked to see the crab apple tree outside the plant room filled with dozens of robins!  I stopped counting at 35. There were more in the trees along the alley behind the house, too. They were chubby, lively, and loving the snow!  Some were fluttering their wings the same way they do when bathing in puddles.  Others were eagerly feasting on the shriveled up crab apples left on the tree.   These pictures are unfortunately not very clear, but they will give you the idea.  (Click on pictures to enlarge)














Wednesday, April 5, 2017

Ho-Mi Digger and Dried Mushrooms


Two weeks ago, I finally decided to go ahead and buy the Romanesco cauliflower seeds I have wanted for two years. They aren't cheap, and when shipping fees are factored in - and the currency exchange, depending on which seed company one buys from - they end up costing $9 to $15. Ouch.

Nevertheless, a gardener wants what a gardener wants, so... I found the hybrid variety ("Veronica") of Romanesco cauliflower I was looking for at Veseys.  Fortunately for me, I subscribed to the Veseys e-newsletter before buying them and discovered that a code for free shipping on my first order came with the subscription confirmation.  Woohoo!  In addition to buying these platinum-coated seeds (I jest....but they are $5.25 for "approximately" 25 seeds), I splurged and bought a gardening tool I have wanted for some time.  It is a Korean hand tool called a Ho-Mi Digger (also called an Easy Digger/EZ Digger). 

When my package from Veseys arrived and I took out the Ho-Mi digger, I was impressed.  It looks like it is versatile and easy to use, like a small plough for your hand.  Most remarkably, it looks like a weapon. Right some deadly.  Heaven help the foolhardy soul who tries to raid my garden.




Early in the year, I was looking for a Canadian business that sells freeze-dried or dehydrated mushrooms in bulk.  In the past, I have waited for sales on button mushrooms, then bought them, dry-cleaned them, sliced them, and dehydrated them.  While the flavour is excellent and it is wonderful to have them on hand whenever we want to make a quick soup or stew, prepping them that way is time consuming.  It took some hunting, but I found a place called Misty Mountain Specialties in Vancouver. 

I admit that I spent the first few minutes making sure that Misty Mountain was selling the kind of mushrooms I was looking for and not a more....mind-expanding product. *ahem*  They do, in fact, sell a wide variety of wild and cultivated mushrooms - fresh, dry, medicinal, and truffle products.  Also some specialty products, like black garlic, goji and juniper berries, chilis, and ginseng.  I ended up buying dried button, portabello, and shiitake mushrooms, as well as a canister of powdered porcini mushroom (this is delicious in stews!).  The package that arrived was very large, but very light.  They enclosed a snazzy pen/flashlight combo as a thank-you.  If you order, it might be an idea to do so with friends.  The mimimum order to qualify for free shipping in Western Canada is $100.  In Eastern Canada, it is $180.  Worth it to me.  We're enjoying them, and they should last until the end of the year.