Saturday, July 12, 2008

hold up with that next episode.

I was talking to Amanda last night about the future of the Urban Carrot. The space has been as fantastic as the name but I ain't so sure the co-operative movement of a few should sputter into the amusing dregs of time. Planning is not my strength but I can scheme and make something out of nothing with the best of them.
Maybe it was harvesting beets the other day or maybe it's the accumulated experience of the garden that has made me feel this way but I do know we had the best of times gardening with good people and someone will have to convince me why I should let it skulk away.

Thursday, July 10, 2008

Long Live the Urban Carrot

We always knew we were running on borrowed time.  Garden plots on rented property just have shorter lifespans.  And our time finally has run out.  

While we still have the space free and clear for another month or so, likely a new tenant will be moving into the duplex associated with the garden, and this incarnation of the Urban Carrot will pass into someone else's hands, to nurture or neglect as s/he will.  

It's been a marvelous two seasons of planning and trying new things, making mistakes, learning, and caring for the space.   Based on the silly gardening schlock purveyed by Lillian Russell catalogues and the like,  as a young girl I always thought the cheesy sentiment that gardening and growing food allows you space, time, and knowledge to grow and nurture your soul as well was just that-- a cheesy sentiment shared by middle-aged ladies in gloves and gardening clogs, with mass-produced "God Loves a Garden" signs in their yards.   Well, count me in your ranks, ladies!   This garden has been soul-food for me-- more than just a place to grow stuff to eat-- it's made me feel more connected to the ground, to my roots.  It's given me a place to come read, reflect, weed, recreate with friends, reconnect.

So, the Urban Carrot grows, and having growed, grows on.  Despite cross-town, cross-country moves, brand new old houses, changes and dramas, I think all of us will continue to spread the Urban Carrot love wherever we are.

Oh, and hey BIRDS!  Stay the heck away from my tomatoes!  I'm tired of finding pecked-out holes in the lovely red ones.


Sunday, June 22, 2008

Super Big Hugs

Big, big thank yous to RJ and Joe for their mad grass-hacking skills!  RJ actually rolled her mower all the way to the Urban Carrot to cut our picnic area grass, and Joe borrowed a weedeater from his folks in order to clear the pathways that had become choked with weeds.  

The shaggy garden is now the well-trimmed garden thanks to these two.


Supa big hugs!


Saturday, June 7, 2008

Few and Far Between

My garden posts have been woefully few and far between since I've spent the last several months computer-less. I am currently mooching from a friend to post this.

I have many photos to share of the progress this year as soon as I can get a computer long enough to upload them.

Today, I simply wanted to share that the garden looks shaggily beautiful. We could definitely use some sort of grass-controlling device to help maintain the area around the beds. I weeded two beds, turned dirt in one, and Joe helped me put up a lattice around the tomatoes. I have another lattice, but I'm not sure how the lattice will work, so I figured I wouldn't put it up till I consulted with the other girls. I actually thought I was buying plain old twine.

The girls and I may decide to take it down-- it looked like someone already caged the tomatoes pretty well.

I bought two seed packets for cukes; hope to plant them tomorrow. I got a Tendersweet burpless variety and a "Pickle Bush" which is supposed to be good for small spaces.

I guess after that, the last thing I'll put in for awhile will be my Jubilee tomatoes.

I took a couple of Anaheim pepper plants and a tomato plant home to try in containers.

love.

Thursday, April 24, 2008

save dough, eat green





Since I don't live in the lowlands, I'll remain pleased with the glorious amount of rain we have been getting. The salad greens couldn't feed a mouse on Saturday, now y'all best come and get some roughage UC style.


Behold the glorious tomato patch in its wee stages. We have some peppers interspersed for pest control.

Sunday, April 13, 2008

between now and soon

We should make another journey to the North for pint-sized produce to plant in our plot. I'm not sure if it is supposed to freeze this week but it will be close so we should perhaps postpone our planting but expedite our planning.

Oh yeah, Amanda was unawares that I have another and far more useless blog. I might as well pimp my shit to those I know so they can say "back in the day" stories about me when I blow up like a wet bottle rocket.

Friday, April 4, 2008

Rainwater Collection

http://www.wikihow.com/Build-a-Rainwater-Collection-System

check it out :)

Saturday, March 29, 2008

Seed Burst

It was a cold and rainy day here in Memphis, and as such was a great day to go to Home Depot. No crowds, no hassles, lots of seeds.. and they have Bradley pinks!!

I finally saw one of my products on the cloud at Home Depot- my Discovery fan was displayed and I was pretty tickled. That's a first for me.

I bought some bell and pimento peppers, a cherry tomato pack (jellybean), Jubilee tomatoes for the garden, and some herbs for home. I started the seeds today, so hopefully soon I'll have baby plants.


PS- It's 8 PM, so I just turned out my lights for http://www8.earthhourus.org/!

Tuesday, March 25, 2008

Earwigs

-Image from Snopes
-Info from Wikipedia and links


While in the garden last weekend, I saw at least two rather evil looking insects in various beds. I thought the bugs were probably earwigs, and we all agreed that they looked particularly vicious and must be very destructive. As shown in the image here, they probably can crawl in your ears and eat your brain, or so we assumed.

Though we don't have to worry about brain-eating, they do, according to Harvard's Insect Fact Sheet and Wikipedia, pose a threat to seedling peas and beets, lettuce, and strawberries. So we may need to figure out some way to deter them from feasting on the fruits of our labor.

Some interesting earwiggy facts:
-they also eat other insects, which can be good for gardens
-females have straight pincers while males have more curved pincers
-they really like damp stuff
-some rare earwigs are blind and feed on giant rats in Africa (? this actually from Harvard's bug page..)
-their pincers, though formidable in appearance, cannot break human skin and so pose no stingy-bitey threat to humans

Input Sequence

The spring weather has me running hot. I just can't seem to wait to get good stuff in the ground.

Although it is totally possible for the weather to turn deadly cold again before winter quits for good, we have hopes that the stuff we've planted so far will withstand all but the most extreme killing frosts.

This weekend Allison and Daniel and I set off to a local grower's operation (Bayless? Bayliss?) in hopes of securing some veggie plants. It was still a bit too early for the veggies to leave their incubators, so we enjoyed the calm greenhouses full of early flowers and some herbs. We got a bang-up bunch of strawberry plants for cheap, so now the only issue is where to plant them. I got some thyme, parsley, and oregano for home use, and we also got a couple of Lantana plants and some fruity mints (pineapple and orange) for the garden.

After we got back, we used our newly acquired soil to punch up and loosen the clay-dirt in mine and Michael's old patch, and then planted a bunch of strawberries, peas, and a section or two of broccoli there. Surprisingly, the broccoli I planted there last winter still has beautiful frosty-blue green leaves and is producing florets, but no large heads. We left them in, but I think they should probably come out soon as at least one plant is trying to bolt. Broccoli plants are quite decorative.

We decided to forego the brussels sprouts this time, as they are not good bedfellows with peas, and they have a very long growth cycle. We totally should have planted them in the fall.

We also skipped the onions for now, but have plans to maybe try them with early tomatoes. Don't know if that will work.

By this time, Allison had been up over 24 straight hours, and it was getting cold, so we called it a day. A very good day.




--

Hopefully I will get a new camera soon, so that I can post more garden pics. I really miss having one handy.

--

-mildly melancholy j

Tuesday, March 11, 2008

Bitch ass dogs.

Before any intriguing night of emotional conversation, I cut a piece of plywood and was set to mount it on the gate so the dogs don't jump over it (a mighty fine piece of crap, I tell you) and enjoy freshed turn urban dirt. Dogs love dirt. That's probably why I love them so.

Sunday, March 9, 2008

Spring Pics!

Spring planting


Today Allison and I turned the soil in two beds, and planted peas, lettuce, spinach, beets, and radishes. Tomorrow she plan to add some broccoli and Brussels sprouts to the second bed.

Wednesday, January 30, 2008

URBAN OH ATE!

Wednesday night, the girl Carrots met at Sweet for dinner and our first official 08 planning session. Many exciting discoveries were made, including but not limited to "Decorate your Own Martini Glass" night, Pig Candy, and this intriguing tangy tomato sauce called 'Ketchup'. Or, as it is sometimes more enigmatically spelled, 'Catsup'.

Also, some important decisions were made. We each prepared and compiled a list of must-haves for the coming seasons.

Starting and focusing on early plants-- things we can purchase, plant, or start anytime in the next few weeks-- here are the most likely candidates for our cool Spring garden.
  • lettuce mix (possibly Mesclun, Arugula, and Spinach)
  • cabbage
  • carrots
  • radishes (breakfast? varieties from Seeds of Change)
  • peas
  • beets
  • potatoes (possibly a whole bed-full)
  • brussell sprouts
  • snow peas or sugar snaps
  • garlic
  • 'zipper cream' peas

We have not finalized our warmer-weather harvest, but it will most likely include the following plants.
  • peppers (chili, thai hot, jalopeno, poblano, bell-- some varieties from Seeds of Change, some from local sources)
  • green beans
  • tomatoes (several varieties including Caspian Pinks (?), Arkansas Traveler, Brandywines, cherry tomatoes, and possibly others from local sources)
  • okra (possibly a red variety)
  • strawberries (should get berries this year, as we started on these last summer)
  • cucumbers (salad variety and mini-pickling variety)
  • pumpkins (as last year- maybe the small variety)
  • zucchini squash
  • sweet corn (possibility)

We also plan to devote some space to an herb bed that includes the following tasty and medicinal herbs.
  • basil (mix from Seeds of Change)
  • borage
  • oregano
  • yarrow
  • french marigolds
  • nasturtiums (maybe-- I think they spread a lot...)
  • lemongrass (in tubs)
  • mint (in tubs)
  • pineapple sage (should return from last year)
  • lemon balm
  • thyme

Amanda brought up the idea of a cut flower bed. We all enthusiastically agreed that would be very nice.
  • zinnias
  • cosmos
  • sunflowers (pg 67 Seeds of Change)
  • hollyhocks


We also discussed the layout of our garden, which I will scan and post here in a couple of days.