Tuesday, November 10, 2009

Irony, the long version

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The 18 year old boy was in his first accident a few weeks ago. His was the 4th car in a 4 car accident in front of the college he commutes to every day. He got a ticket of course for "failure to stop within an assured clear distance" and the car was in the shop for about a week, and nobody was hurt. We didnt have collision insurance, so this was a very expensive lesson. I looked it up on the website for the municipal courthouse- the ticket was for 3 points on his license and about $250 in fines, so a scheduling hearing in front of a judge seemed like it couln't hurt.

So here's the thing-while on the court website, getting general information about traffic fines and license points, I noticed on the sidebar a little link for a "job posting". I thought what the heck, I printed out my resume, rattled off a quick cover letter and sent it out in the afternoon mail. It was a routine so familiar to me lately that I do it in my sleep. The very next day I got an email from the Court Administrator to come for a clerical test the following Wednesday. I went to the clerical test, and did pretty well apparently, because I was called back for an interview 2 days later on Friday. 10 days after that interview, Monday November 2 they called me at 12:30pm and offered me the job. Did paperwork Tuesday and officially started Wednesday Nov. 4. Holy crap!

I was elated to say the least, after both of us being unemployed for so long. I couldn't believe it, because it is a full-time, union job with complete benefits. Not the highest salary in the world, but-did I mention benefits? Not really my chosen specialty, but- did I mention benefits? There was no question about taking it or not. Me-deputy court clerk.

So, here's the irony. There are about a dozen deputy clerks in the courthouse, each assigned a specialization from a wide variety of different tasks, such as cashiering, data entry, filing, scheduling, etc. Guess what the new girl's very first task on her very first day is? Entering new traffic tickets into the system. I kid you not.

So I guess in a weird way I got this job thanks to my son's lousy driving. I never would have found out about the job posting had I not had a reason to go on the court website that day. Everything happens for a reason, so they say. It's actually for the same city I worked for 3 years ago so I know I got a good reference from my previous supervisor. In fact, I went to see the gang at my old department the Tuesday before I started at the courthouse. Thanked my old supervisor for any reference he provided, and he let me know that the court administrator actually called him on Monday morning for one. I had been regularly checking that city website for job postings for months, but for some odd unknown reason this particular court job was not listed on the regular HR page with all other city jobs. Never would have seen it, except for the boy's traffic mishap.

It's alot less responsibility than what I did before. In fact, a college degree is not even a requirement for this position. But less responsibility translates into less job stress, which is actually a very nice thing. Did I mention the benefits?

For my regular readers, expect fewer posts, and fewer posts about gardening...at least for awhile while we all re-adjust our lives. Now spouse is still contemplating what this will mean for him...now that he's relieved of the sole responsibility of providing health benefits for the family...he is for the first time in 19 years allowing himself to enjoy the thought and possibility of pursuing types of jobs that more suit his interest and aptitude, like commission sales, part-time teaching, or ventures that require risk or have long dry stretches between windfalls. Novemeber is turning out to be an exciting time for all of us.

Sunday, October 25, 2009

Garlic, Shallots and Potato Onions

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A sure sign that winter is on its way--allium planting time in the garden. Garlic and and shallots are planted in the fall, just like tulips and daffodils. So, after digging some bagged manure, high nitrogen fertilizer and peat into one of the old tomato beds, I laid out my new allium bed.

I got some French grey shallots from Southern Exposure Seed Exchange-never seen them at my local vegetable market, but I understand they are the ultimate gourmet shallot. I'm also trying something new I read about and found intriguing called "potato onions", which is a type of multiplier onion. They look like regular onion sets that you plant in the spring, except that when these grow the bulbs are supposed to divide, alot like garlic and shallots. Come next August, I could get 5-8 fair sized onions from a single bulb planted now, so they say. They're supposed to be very winter hardy, and excellent for storage. Word is, if you get your bed growing properly, and set aside a few bulbs at harvest for replanting, you shouldn't have to buy onions ever again. Sustainable agriculture. cool.

I am also going to start some garlic "bulbils" I got on the cheap from tomatobob.com. Bulbils are the topsets from hardneck garlic varieties that have "bolted"; not a clove from the actual bulb, so these will take 2 years to make a full-size head of garlic. The names sounded interesting: Shvelski, Music, Ontario Purple Trillium and Persian Star. And while I was at it, I threw in a few dozen cloves from the white supermarket garlic I always have on hand in the fridge. We shall see if there really is a taste difference between garlic varieties.



(8" apart-hope I didn't plant them too close together!)

Wednesday, September 30, 2009

Call Any Vegetable

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Tonight was last call for many of the frost-tender crops, as tonight marks Fall's first "frost advisory" for outlaying areas, with a forcast overnight low of 37 degrees. Remembering what happened the last time there was a forcast low of 37 degrees, I thought it best to err on the side of caution and haul in every tomato, green or otherwise, and eggplant, pepper, swiss chard, beans, okra, and I also gathered all the winter squash to spend a cozy night in the wheelbarrow in the garage. I probably could have left the squash outside without much damage, but they store much longer if they're not exposed to frost first. Noticing that the long term forcast has about 2 more good weeks after tonight's frost, I thought it wouldn't hurt to cover the pepper and eggplant beds with plastic, to try to force a few more weeks of production. The tomatoes are probably done for though, as there is no easy way to cover the seven-foot-tall trellises. Looks like I'll be spending good portion of tomorrow afternoon blanching and freezing. I need an appropriate soundtrack for such work.

Thursday, September 17, 2009

Pink and Purple Potatoes

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Tom Wagner's Paint Jar and Skagit Beets as french fries:
Skagit Beets were on the small side, and the skin had some sort of scab, but pared and cooked up they were creamy inside, crunchy outside, perfect for frying. Paint Jar, on the other hand, although the large smooth picturesque tubers lent themselves well to slicing, when fried they were disappointingly dry and mealy.
Which led me to believe that Paint Jar would be more suited for baking:

Technicolor dinner a few nights later: Salmon, baked potato and green beans. Talk about a feast for the eyes.


and yes, it tastes just like a baked potato!



Friday, August 21, 2009

Dog days

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I just got done tearing out most of the cucumber vines from the trellis. They didn't even grow halfway up, and were mostly decimated by powdery mildew and probably 5 other unnamed and exotic maladies. Also threw out 6 "gigante" kolrabi that had begun to elongate and therefore were past their prime. Tomorrow probably will be the melon trellis' turn, they look almost as bad as the cucumbers, and the pole bean trellis, which are being mercilessly shredded by bean beatles. Probably 50% of the sweet peppers we pick have pepper maggots. Mainly the Tequila Sunrise, which are thin-walled and not very tasty at all anyway, and the chocolate pepper, which makes me kind of sad. Purple bells, Giant Aconcagua and sweet cream peppers seem less affected. Every turnip, beet and radish I pull has little brown tunnels in it. The tomatoes, overall, are doing fairly well, all things considered. We have way more than we can eat, but that's mostly because after it rains I have to pluck the most badly cracked ones before they rot on the vine, and there have been alot of those. Lots of crackd half-ripe toms this year. The first round of corn was exciting, and pretty good, but a small harvest considering the 50 plants. The "2nd tier" ears that were left on the stalks to continue maturing are small, misshapen and now bugs have discovered them. Okras are finally producing, about a dozen pods every other day...the only problem with them is minor aphid infestation.

Ah, August. Time for the gardener to shift gears for the first time in the season, away from planting and weeding and nurturing, to pause and take stock of the overall situation, and begin making judgements, adjustments and plans for next year. I have already decided not to even try to grow broccoli, cauliflower or brussels sprouts. On the other hand, an entire 3x8 box dedicated to nothing but carrots is looking mighty appealing. I never will grow Coyote tomatoes again even if somebody paid me to. Sucrine is the only lettuce variety I have grown so far that is not rendered inedible by my summer heat. And the list goes on...

No pictures this time, just picture in your mind's eye diseased plants being thrown into one of those brown paper yard-waste bags.

Thursday, July 30, 2009

Remember Eighteen?

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Yeah I know. Couldn't find an "8" candle, so we used his sister's "7" candle from earlier this year, and added one more. Couldn't get much lamer if we tried. But then again we didn't really try.

Happy Birthday to my son.




Tuesday, July 28, 2009

Squash pollination update: not good

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See how it is yellowing? Not a good sign. It seemed to grow at first, it's about an inch and a half long, but it has not grown any in the past several days. I fear it will shrivel and fall off soon. The reason may be because the vine "upstream" from it is actually supporting several very large squashes already, and those have grown surprisingly quickly in the past few days. Perhaps the plant is getting maxed out, the squashes that have already set are approaching maturity and are sending out chemical signals that actually slow/inhibit the newly set fruits. Remember what they say about cucumbers, not to let any of them get ripe on the vine, because then the plant stops producing new ones? Seems to apply to squash too.
I also hand-pollinated another of my squashes, and it took right away and is growing nicely. It was actually the first fruit to set on it's vine. I started out thinking I was pollinating a "Type 1" of the Georgian Chestnuts ("Type 1" is growing on a trellis, apart from the "tangled mound"), but on closer inspection, we might actually be in for a "Type 4". There are actually 3 separate vines growing on the trellis, and the female blossom I pollenated was on a third vine, apparently the latest-maturing of the lot. I used pollen from the "Type 1" plant, though. Hmm. Maybe it's getting kind of late in the season to be doing this.


On a happier note, corn has silked!!! Luther Hill on the 24th, Ruby Queen on the 26th. I think now it's only 15-20 days to wait for fresh corn on the cob.

Sunday, July 26, 2009

Well That Explains Alot

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The house I live in 11 years old. And I know the way land is developed here is, they scrape away the topsoil (to sell it of course) and leave the hard barren stuff behind. Once the houses are built, it's up to the homeowner to put in sod, grass and whatnot, the builder rarely includes any landscaping in the price; and if he does, you know they're going to cut all the corners thay can get away with, and it's not going to be the highest quality installation. So my yard soil, beneath the 2" of sod, is most likely good ole' pure Michigan clay. High in minerals and pretty fertile, but extremely sticky and unmanagable in the spring, and hard as cement in the summer. Which is why I had some fancy high-priced "topsoil/compost blend" delivered from the local garden center to fill my new raised beds this spring. But I knew something was amiss lately when the squash and melons just weren't doing much.

Tested my soil yesterday with one of those do-it-yourself kits from L*we's. Checked pH, Nitrogen, Phosporous and Potassium. I knew that the nitrogen was probably on the low side, but I had no idea how low. Apparently too low to even register (the 2nd vial from the left). Not a even a hint of pink in the solution.
On the other hand, phosporus (3rd vial) was definitely high, I wonder if it's too high. Too much phosporus can manifest by inhibiting plant's uptake of other elements (such as zinc) and is exacerbated by higher pH, which I also have. My plants are kind of stunted from low N, but there are some weird symptoms that may be mineral-related, like strange leaf colorations on the beans, and some wirey and deformed growth in the nasturtiums. But high phosporus is generally good for things like corn.

And although I'm not sure if I'm reading the card correctly, potassium (4th vial) seems to be on the high side too. High potassium can interfere with calcium uptake, which may be manifesting in the minor blossom end rot I've seen in my tomatoes. Strange, because I have read that greensand, a high-potassium soil amendment, is often recommended for fruiting tomatoes.
pH is around 8, which was a little surprising (1st vial from the left). Healthy soil should have a pH around 6.5 for optimal microbial environment, from what I've read, which means mine is a little too alkaline. Sulfur or peat moss should fix that.
The general data provided by this quick do-it-yourself test is a good starting point, because now I know that if I just bought a balanced fertilizer (with a N-P-K ratio of 10-10-10) like I had originally planned, I would probably not be boosting the nitrogen enough, and at the same time overdosing on phosporous and potassium. Now I am more motivated to have my soil go through a more complete analysis by a laboratory, through the county extension office. Until then, I'm off to buy some slow-release high-nitrogen pelletized organic fertilizer, and maybe a quick-fix high-nitrogen liquid fertilizer too. Elemental sulfur will wait until fall.

2009 Seed Trials:

selected varieties grown for American Gardener

As of July 19, 2009:

CORN:
Luther Hill- Have about 25 plants, 3-4' tall now, tassels are showing, and on some I can see up to 4 shoots forming on a single stalk! very encouraging, pollen shed probably next week. No pests to speak of, and once seedlings were established I forgot about watering.

Stowell's Evergreen- Have about 40 plants, 5' tall, some signs of tassels way down in the funnel, still several weeks away I think. no pests but I didn't thin or loose many seedlings so they are kind of crowded in a 5'x6' square

CUCUMBERS:I have 2 or 3 of each variety lining a trellis, so far so good. Slow start to the season and vines have been slow to take off but seem to be doing well, striped cucumber beetles have been hanging around here and there but no major pest or disease problems. Vines are 2-4' long. If I'm going to save any seed, I need to tape and hand pollinate. varieties are:

Bianco Lungo- white fruit.
White Wonder- white fruit, ate one, mild
Delikatesse- the longest vine of the bunch, have not harvested any yet, they seem to be taking a little longer, but there is at least one fruit set at every single leaf axil, sometimes two, kind of remarkable, so this is going to be a huge harvest.
Earnest White- have 2 vines but one has white baby fruit and one has green baby fruit so I suspect crossed seed,
Dasher II- didn't make it
Lemon- shorter vines, no fruit set yet, anxiously waiting
Munchmore- I couldn't find much information on this variety, I suspect it is a cross of Muncher x Marketmore? anyway it has short vines, baby fruit looks thin, smooth and dark green.

MELONS:Tiny puny vines that don't even reach the bottom of the trellis yet but lots of flowers.

Prescott de Noir- again a variety with no information, is it a cross between Prescott a Fond Bland and an Noir de Carmes? If it is, it will be an interesting fruit! One plant with an 18" vine, healthy and flowering but gosh is it tiny.

Prescott a Fond Blanc- 3 plants, 24" long, flowering.

TOMATOES: All my tomatoes are being severely pruned and trained as a single leader, every day almost I am pinching off suckers.

Coyote- one of my taller plants, fair amount fruit production but not "loaded" , still green

Matt's Wild Cherry- 2 plants trained on a trellis, some beginning to turn

Snowball and
White Beauty- I was a moron and planted these out as seedlings on May 16, we had a severe frost 2 nights later which I blogged about excessively. These were both plants that had pretty much all leaves frozen solid, except for a tiny sprig near the base of it's stem. I left them in the ground, just to see what would happen. They are now setting lots of blossoms and FRUIT! These plants were let to branch and sucker as they liked, they seem to be bush-type plants but it's hard to know. Green fruit still small like an egg.

EGGPLANT:
Buchurestene-No seedlings survived, low germination

for the next 3 eggplant varieties, these were planted out in May with the tomatoes and got severe frost damage. they looked like dead sticks, all leaves gone. But I left them in the ground.

Danubiana- 2 of 3 frost damaged plants made it, totally resprouted leaves, have flowered and one has a 1" fruit on it with more following. black color fruit

Rosa Bianca- all 3 frost damaged plants made it, 2 have flowered and can see tiny whitish pea-sized fruit forming

Pusa Purple Long- 2 vigorous plants, flowering now

BRASSICAS:
Not a good year for brassicas for me, except kohlrabi.

Cabbage-Suttons earliest. 4 transplants, 2 died. not heading up,

Broccoli-Purple Broccoli. 4 transplants No sign of a head yet,

Brussels Sprouts- Irish Glacier. plants are 18" tall, after 12 weeks growing inside and 10 more growing outside, seemingly stunted, sprouts? none to speak of.

LETTUCE:We have been enjoying this lettuce all spring. It is too bitter now but none is bolting either, I might leave it alone and try for seeds, but actually I need space for fall crops, we'll see.

Red Salad Bowl- Dark red oak leaf type, high color

Red Sails-Very broad leaf, ruffly, starts out green but mostly red

Royal Red-very similar to Red Sails

Lollo Rosso- compact leaf type, less highly colored, leaves are fringed, almost a "mossy" look

Bambi- a small petite roundish green leaf, trying to be a romaine/too small if you ask me

Red Cos- Romaine with red blush on outer leaves, typical romaine

PEPPERS
There were only a few seeds of each type, I carefully nurtured the ones that did sprout under lights since early March, then again planted out in May and thought I killed them all when the frost hit, but to my surprise and delight even the hot peppers proved more hardy than tomatoes.

Bolivian Rainbow-1 plant survived, it's 3" tall, with purple foliage, no fruit yet but still hopeful

5 Color Pepper- not sure if this is the"Chinese 5 Color", but 2 plants survived and one has a few tiny fruit on it. it's only 4" tall but I call it a success.

Bols. Milk Pepper-What is "Bols." an abbreviation for anyway? This one plant is 6" tall has several light-colored fruits on it.

Sweet Cream Pepper- nearly 10" tall and LOADED with creamy colored fruits of differing shapes, but mostly elongated (think marconi-type).

SQUASH:

Jarrahdale- A single vine, with one ping-pong ball sized pumpkin so far

Guatamalan Blue Banana- One vine, and I have 3 cute little squashes forming. I hand self-pollinated, but did not isolate. this is also a Maxima I believe so may cross w/ Jarrahdale.

Georgian Chestnut (USSR) (moschata) I LOVE THIS SQUASH! I have some on a trellis, it is the tallest vine over 10' already, way bigger than all others, and I also planted some on the heap of sod (leftover from the new garden layout) in the back of the yard. IT HAS GONE NUTS, dozens and DOZENS of fruit under MONSTER leaves. yesterday I picked 2 squashes, over a pound each. mildly bell-shaped, they resemble cushaw, sort of in shape, thicker and shorter neck but it is NOT a mixta. I understand that some moschata types can be picked early and used as you would a summer squash. Cooked it today, briefly stir-fried w/ garlic, then tomato/chili added. WHY GROW ZUCCHINI WHEN YOU CAN GROW THIS??. It is absolutely delicious! richer flavor, firmer texture, not as watery but just as hugely productive (if not more so) as zucchini. even my husband liked it . Planted next to it is an upper-ground sweet potato squash (Baker Creek) also a Moschata, so crosing is inevitable.