Whether you are tucking things into niches between ornamental landscape plants, planting a patio patch like in the image, setting up a first time summer garden patch, or replanning your annual garden, here are some great ideas to increase your production! 1. If you have space, and are creating a back, or front, yard food forest, always [...]
Archive for the ‘Cabbage’ Category
Herbs and Your Winter Veggies
Posted in Artichoke, Beets, Beneficials, Broccoli, Brussel Sprouts, Cabbage, Carrot, Cauliflower, Celery, Chard, Cilantro, Collards, Companion Plant, Garlic, Kale, Leeks, Lettuce, Onion, Parsley, Peas, Pests, Potato, Strawberries, Time of Year, Veggies!, Winter Plants - Cool Season on November 11, 2011 | Leave a Comment »
Herbs and Your Winter Veggies Lavender, Marguestau at http://lestroisamies.wordpress.com/ Herbs – Pretty, aromatic, to repel pests! The flavors that makes veggie dishes come alive! Now’s the time for them to get a good start, with fall and winter rains coming. Divide the ones you already have growing now as your plants slow down. Rosemary and [...]
Winter Plants are Very Efficient!
Posted in Artichoke, Beets, Brassicas, Broccoli, Cabbage, Carrot, Celery, Chard, Collards, Kale, Lettuce, Onion, Peas, Potato, Time of Year, Veggies!, Winter Plants - Cool Season on October 14, 2011 | Leave a Comment »
Most of them are Cut and Come Again types! Harvest your big greens – kale and collards, and lettuces, leaf by leaf rather than cutting your plant down. Many lettuces will ‘come back’ even if you cut them off an inch or two above ground. Leave the stalk in the ground, see what happens! Rather [...]
PLANT Your First Round of Summer Veggies!!!!!
Posted in Artichoke, Bean, Beets, Broccoli, Cabbage, Carrot, Chard, Cilantro, Community Gardens, Corn, Cucumber, Design - Layout, Determinate, Disease, Eggplant, Fusarium Wilt, Indeterminate, Lettuce, Melon, Okra, Onion, Peas, Pepper, Potato, Pumpkins, Radish, Seeds, Squash, Strawberries, Summer Plants - Warm Season, Time of Year, Tomato, Turnip, Verticillium Wilt, Winter Plants - Cool Season, tagged amendment, April, artichoke, bean, beets, broccoli, bunch, cabbage, carrot, chamomile, chard, cilantro, cool-season, corn, cucumber, determinate, drainage, eggplant, flower, fusarium, gardener, gift, Greenhouse, heat, humid, indeterminate, June, lettuce, lima, lottery, lover, March, melon, mildew, Mother's Day, New Zealand, okra, onion, Peas, pepper, Pilgrim Terrace, poppy, potato, powdery, Provider, pumpkin, radish, resistant, round, seed, South, spinach, squash, starts, strawberry, succession, summer, tomatoes, transplant, turnip, verticillium, vine, wilt, winter on March 1, 2011 | Leave a Comment »
FIRST WEEK OF MARCH! Go get your seeds, transplants, any amendments that make you happy, clear your space, and go for it! Poke bean seeds in at the base of finishing peas, tomatoes, artichokes from transplants, corn, New Zealand spinach, cucumbers, summer and winter squash! [Pilgrim Terrace gardeners, those of you in the lottery section [...]
Seed Soaking/Presprouting Tips & Ideas Part 2
Posted in Asparagus, Cabbage, Carrot, Celery, Cilantro, Community Gardens, Corn, Germinate, Lettuce, Onion, Parsley, Parsnip, Peas, PreSoak, PreSprout, Rain, Seeds, Squash, Veggies!, Watering, Weather, tagged absorption, agent, asparagus, cabbage, Carl Wilson, carrot, celery, cilantro, cling, clipper, coat, Cooperative Extension, coriander, corn, cover, Denver, dry, fennel, forecast, furrow, gel, germination, horticulture, hot, humus, lattice, lettuce, mist, moist, onion, paper, parsley, pea, planting, pre-germinate, presoak, presprout, sandpaper, scarify, seed, seed tape, seedling, shade cloth, shell, slice, small, solution, sow, squash, squeeze, surface, technique, towel, viable, water, weather, wet on February 25, 2011 | Leave a Comment »
Have you already seen Part 1? Why soak or presprout, all about seeds, how seed coats function; soaking times, seed soaking solutions. Scarify Seeds Scarify pea seeds to speed up absorption of water, and therefore, germination. Rub them between sheets of coarse sandpaper, or clip them with a nail clipper by making a slice through the seed [...]
Broccoli! Beautiful and valuable to your health!
Posted in Antioxidant, Aphids, Blood Meal, Brassicas, Broccoli, Cabbage, Cauliflower, Cilantro, Community Gardens, Companion Plant, Compost, Fertilizer - Sidedressing, Foliar Feeding, Fertilzer, Fish - Kelp, Heat Tolerant, Lettuce, Manure, Mycorrhizae, Nutrition Specifics, Pests, Seeds, SeedSaving, Soil, Teas- Compost, Manure, Worm, Varieties, Veggies!, Watering, Winter Plants - Cool Season, tagged 35, A, ACS, AK, Alaska, American Cancer Society, anthocyanins, anticancer, antioxidant, aphid, apples, blindness, blood meal, bolt, brain, Brassica, broccoli, bud, cabbage, Cabbage Moth, Calabrese, calcium, cancer, cauliflower, Center, cilantro, clubroot, cold, cole, companion, compounds, confuse, cool, cross, Cruiser, days, DeCicco, disease, dry, enegy, ethylene, eyes, fertilizer, fish emulsion, flavor, flower, foliage, fruits, garden, gas, genus, glutamine, Green Comet, Green Goliath, ground, harvest, head, health, heat, hybrid, January, John Evans, kelp, lb, leaves, lettuce, loam, macular degeneration, manure, maturity, moist, moose, mulch, mycorrhizal fungi, N, Nitrogen, Nutribud, nutritious, older, organic, pack, Packman, Palmer, pears, peppery, pH, pods, poison, pollinate, purple, rate, respiration, salad, sandy, seed, seedbed, seedling, shade, short, side shoot, sidedress, Soil, spacing, sprouts, stalk, stir fry, summer, sun, tall, tolerant, tract, transplant, University of Connecticut, urinary, valuable, variety, vegetable, vegetarian, veggie, Vitamin, Waltham 29, water, weather, weed, well-drained, winter, yellow, yield on January 14, 2011 | 2 Comments »
Broccoli may be the most nutritious of all the cole crops, which are among the most nutritious of all vegetables. Broccoli and cauliflower (and other members of the genus Brassica) contain very high levels of antioxidant and anticancer compounds. These nutrients typically are more concentrated in flower buds than in leaves, and that makes broccoli [...]