Bees and Earwigs

I wasn't feeling hot today, so I stayed home from work - I haven't had a sick day in a long time, and while it's never fun to be sick, it IS fun to be at home unexpectedly. I got a lot done. I'm not good at resting; I did watch an hour of TV and read a little. But mostly I puttered. I made a black-bottomed banana cream pie for a co-workers birthday, and brownies for the kids. I got bolognese sauce going early on and between all the chocolate and the tomato sauce, the house has smelled good all day. It's sunny and about 75 degrees. Something hard to ignore was all the bee activity in the yard. Big native bees, tiny native bees, and honey bees from the hive. All swirling and buzzing and foraging.

Ceanothus

Ceanothus

Western Redbud

Western Redbud

Borage

Borage

Lavender

Lavender

Wisteria

Wisteria

I saw some honey bees taking their first flight outside the hive, so the colony is definitely growing, hooray! We'll need to open it up and take a look this weekend.

But I didn't just gape at the bees. I also WENT TO WAR. Those damn earwigs. They are eating everything!  Here are my battle tools:

I got everything on sale, and this was the cheapest olive oil I could find. Everything I read online said to use olive oil, so I went with that instead of something cheaper, but in hindsight, I can't imagine that olive oil is the only oil you could use - the point is just to drown the suckers. I buried the bowls in the dirt, so that they are flush - three to each 4x8 bed. Then I added a layer of oil, a dollop of molasses, and a glug of soy sauce. I'll take a picture in the morning and show you the results. I'm hoping for mass destruction.

a bowl near the spinach. most of my greens are full of holes, this patch isn't awful.

a bowl near the spinach. most of my greens are full of holes, this patch isn't awful.

At this point, the greens with large leaves are going to the chickens (we're still eating the young, tender leaves), so it's no big deal if the earwigs eat them. What concerns me is that they are making babies, and every time I disturb the dirt, I notice masses of them. I don't want them here when I begin summer planting in a month. This is a preventative measure for the summer crops. 

I'm feeling slightly better, so back to work tomorrow, but my mind will be with the bees, flying in the flowers!

A Spring Frittata

It's raining!

California Honeysuckle

California Honeysuckle

I can feel the whole garden growing.

Hummingbird Sage

Hummingbird Sage

The broccoli is tall, but heading poorly. I'm thinking it's because I started it too late in the season. Anyway, I decided to cut off some of the blossoms, and pick some other veg, and make a Spring Frittata for lunch.

Spinach, Broccoli, Shelling Peas

Spinach, Broccoli, Shelling Peas

It's delightful to be harvesting out of the raised beds again. Baby turnips, for slicing and eating raw, nearly every day. Greens every day for sure, both for us and the chickens. (The heads of lettuce are filled with tiny slugs and earwigs - I tend to give those to the chickens, who love some protein with their veg. Luckily the kale, chard, and spinach is bug free, for now.) And now shelling peas, getting plumper every day, filling the trellis. I harvested another single asparagus stalk and took it to work to share with the kids. I don't think they liked it much. 

Ceanothus, or California Lilac

Ceanothus, or California Lilac

I'll saute the veg in some olive oil, add plenty of fresh eggs, salt and pepper, dash of cream, and freshly grated Parmesan cheese. With the heel of last week's sourdough, it'll be a delicious lunch.

our Apple Tree

our Apple Tree

We have a long list of outdoor chores to get to, but until the rain stops (and we hope it goes on for a long, long time), those will be on hold. We need to get the trellis for the hops built, as the ones already planted are coming up, and three more kinds are on order and will be shipped to us this week. I need to dig mulch out of the new raised beds to prepare them for the soil mix that is being delivered Monday afternoon. The Hosui Asian Pear I ordered will arrive this week and will need to be planted in one of those beds, as well as some rhubarb and lemon verbena, also arriving this coming week. I found a resource for local lavender; Mountain Valley Growers are sending me twelve plants this week, too. I have 50 herb starts going under the indoor lamp that will go in those beds, everything from Thyme to Savory, and they've all sprouted. So it might just be that I'm doing outdoor chores in the rain, whether I like it or not.

Old-Fashioned Rose

Old-Fashioned Rose

That's ok, it's fun to be busy in the garden and have lots to do. Makes me eager for summer and the bounty we'll have then. My tomato and pepper seedlings are spending the day indoors, as well. 

Seedlings

Seedlings

We've begun saving egg shells for tomato planting. I plan to put a dozen crushed eggshells around the rootball of each tomato plant, to help with blossom-end rot, which we had a lot of last year. My Epsom salt rescue came too late to fix the problem. Besides, we have no lack of eggshells here. Every time this bowl holds 12 (or 24 halves), I crush them and put them in a small container, then in the freezer. I'll be planting 12 tomato plants, so I need a minimum of 12 dozen eggshells. It wouldn't hurt to add eggshells to the pepper plants, too.

Rhode Island Red, Easter Egger, and Plymouth Barred Rock eggshells

Rhode Island Red, Easter Egger, and Plymouth Barred Rock eggshells

The calcium helps with the uptake and regulation of water in the tomato plants, and we could really use help with that, in our drought-starved area. I read a wonderful post by Garden Betty (also a Californian, though Southern) about how she prepares her beds for tomato plants, and was surprised to see that she adds a fish head to each hole. I'd love to do that, but I'd have Joe the dog and Tasha the cat (not to mention dozens of local raccoons, skunks, and coyotes) digging up my precious plants. So I'll skip that step. However I will follow her idea of spraying the leaves with dissolved aspirin tablets. I am also toying with the idea of using the Florida weave for trellising my tomatoes, rather than making new cages. I'll keep you updated, of course. All of this is just dreamy dreaming right now, but in a month, it'll be time to get these babies in the ground.

Borage

Borage

I've also spent some time re-doing the summer garden plan, but I'll share that with you when it's closer to planting time. 

Happy Saturday! Happy March!

Weekend projects - raised beds, planter boxes, and bacon

Guest post by Tom today.

This long President's Day weekend, I worked on a few different projects around the house. It's nice to take a break from working at a desk, and it's nice to work on some projects that you can look at afterwards and say "I did that".

First off, there's the new raised beds that Elizabeth has mentioned. Last fall we'd covered the last of the grass in our yard, and so this weekend was a good weekend to get the raised beds built. The space we had to fill was a little oddly-shaped, and we wanted to break out of the square and rectangular mold with these beds, so there's a large center diamond and four smaller triangular beds.

new_beds.jpg

The redness of the new redwood will fade to match the other raised beds in the background, and of course we still have to get a bunch of dirt and fill them in (and run some drip lines to them). Elizabeth's still finalizing what will go in here – some perennial vegetables, a citrus tree? It'll get some shade during the summer, so that's something to consider.

The next project was to work on some planter boxes for the back patio. I built four in total, taking inspiration from a simple planter box design I saw online. These planter boxes will form the basis for our backyard hopyard. I sketched up plans for a big ol' arbor, but then started doing math on how much the lumber would set us back, and decided that the planter boxes would be this year's construction, and that we'll go with a more economical trellising system using 3/4" electrical conduit.

I was fortunate to be able to go over to Elizabeth's dad's shop and take my big pieces of lumber and break them down into many small pieces of lumber. Here's how the boxes came together:

Side panels were made with 4 two-foot sections of 1x6, with a 1x4 crosspiece top and bottom.

Legs that were slightly larger than the side panels were attached, along with a horizontal cleat, using 2x2's. (Note: in the final version, I moved the cleat to be 12" below the top of the side panels).

After combining the four side panels, I put 1x2 slats evenly spaced across the cleats:

I then stapled in a double-thickness of landscape fabric across the bottom, to keep the dirt in but let excess water through.

The final boxes are substantial – they probably come in at around 30-40 pounds, and that's without any dirt. Some of that is the water content in this very new redwood I'm working with, but I'm hopeful that this will be a solid base upon with to attach our vertical supports for the hopyard.

The final project of the weekend was bacon! It's been almost a year since I took that salumi-making class with Angelo Garro, and I haven't gotten the wherewithal to actually follow up that lesson with any salumi-making of my own (mostly because I've prioritized other things over making a temperature- and humidity-controlled environment for aging salumi and cheeses).

Anyhow, a couple of weeks ago I got my hands on a copy of Charcuterie, by Michael Ruhlman and Brian Polcyn, which talks about how to make all kinds of meat products, from duck confit to salumi and sausages to patés and terrines to – yes – bacon! Of all of these, bacon seemed to be one of the more straightforward things to attempt – it cures at regular refrigerator temperatures, and while it'd be nice if I owned a smoker so that I could make hickory-smoked bacon, it's not strictly necessary. There's only one speciality ingredient, "pink" salt, which is salt mixed with sodium nitrite. Pink salt is used to stave off the bacteria that causes botulism, and is readily available online. (Note: don't confuse the curing-meat pink salt with that fancy himalayan pink salt).

I worked with the basic cure mentioned in the book, which is just sugar, salt, and a teaspoon of the pink salt:

I squared up the edges of the pork belly that I got, slathered over the cure, and put it in a big (2 gallon) ziplock bag:

Mmm...

Mmm...

It now gets to sit in the fridge for seven days, with me flipping it daily. After seven days, I wash off the cure, and then heat up the pork belly in a 200ºF oven until it reaches an internal temperature of 150ºF (this would nominally be the step where I'd smoke it, if I had a smoker). Cool it off, slice it up, fry it up, yum. If this works out, we could have some very nice BLT's in the summer.

Well, I think that's about enough for one weekend. Time to enjoy the product of a previous weekend's work:

A really nice homebrew IPA. I'm thinking of calling it Hoppy Corners.

A really nice homebrew IPA. I'm thinking of calling it Hoppy Corners.

 

Dog Damage

Lately I've been noticing more digging in the vegetable beds, and I've been trying so hard not to blame our dog Joe. I kept saying, maybe it's squirrels! because as you know squirrels are primo garden diggers. But today, my daughter caught Joe in the act. 

She came home on foot, from the bus - I was shortly behind her in the car, having taken my son to the orthodontist. Since the dog didn't hear the car, he didn't stop his digging until Kate walked through the gate and surprised him. At that very moment, I pulled in to the driveway and Kate stood frozen, pointing at the raised beds containing the beets. "It was Joe!" she said. And so, our perfect dog has slipped a notch in our eyes, now gaining the title 'Destroyer.'

One example, in the potato bed. This is the second time it's been dug up.

One example, in the potato bed. This is the second time it's been dug up.

In Joe's defense, I think he's a little bored. First he was suffering from a compressed disc, and we weren't allowed to walk him anywhere but our street. Then, even as he got better, I got busier, which meant that I was taking him on quick walks around the block, rather than out in the open spaces where he can run and chase sticks and smell all kinds of creatures. So no wonder he's digging. 

I don't want to leave him inside the house while I'm at work, though - it's nice for him to be outside in the fresh air - but I might have to change my mind on that. Meanwhile, I did some research on ways to deter dogs from the beds. The one I'm going to try first is spices, loads of ground chili powder and cayenne, sprinkled over the loose dirt. We'll see if this works. It's not the cheapest solution.

This is the beet bed, sprinkled with chili powder.

This is the beet bed, sprinkled with chili powder.

So the first thing I did when I saw Kate's frozen finger, despite my fatigue from the day and the dishes that need doing and the groceries that need putting away and the numerous other chores that need accomplishing, was load the dog in the car and head up to our closest open space, which is called Sugarloaf. (The most common name for any minor mountain around, right?) 

And it was glorious. I gripe and moan about the fact we aren't getting rain, but this warm weather is awfully nice, and the rain we have had has turned the hills the most amazing shade of chartreuse.

The Destroyer, eating his greens

The Destroyer, eating his greens

Wildflowers are coming up everywhere, in a few weeks things are going to be so colorful with blooms.

Blue-eyed grass

Blue-eyed grass

Wild mustard

Wild mustard

Hairy vetch

Hairy vetch

This all made me remember how much I like walking in the hills and I vow to do more of it, no matter how busy I am or how many chores need doing. 

In other news, I'm opening the last jar of summer garden salsa tonight to have with dinner. This is very sad. However I still have one jar of roasted sweet peppers left, and a little bit of garlic. Summer 2016 harvests really can't come soon enough.

Speaking of which, the tomato seeds have all sprouted. !!! The first one to come up was "Cherokee Purple" and it came up after only three days germination. Now the peppers are starting to come up as well. I've taken the heating pad out from underneath, but nothing else will change until they get their first sets of true leaves, at which time I'll thin them, transplant them into larger pots, and give them some liquid fish. Heavens, I'm going to have tomatoes ready to go in to the ground way too early. Well, live and learn. Maybe these will be container tomatoes. 

Looking forward to the weekend, how 'bout you?