Thursday, January 16, 2025

Planting Seeds

 


The other day a friend asked if I was eager to get into the garden. Not really. I'm happy with kicking back, sorting through files and doing things other than gardening. But it is time to make a list and check it twice.

It's that time of year when I go through my stash of seeds, make a list of what I have, then make a list of what I need.

I "need" only a few things, but I always buy more of some things to make sure I have a year or two ahead, in case something isn't available when I want it. Even though I have a " need to buy" list, and pretty much know where they're all going to come from, I still like to sit down with the seed catalogs. You never know... I might find my next favorite thing.

Catalogs with full-color photos make it so difficult to resist buying something different. However, catalogs with no photos can create such tantalizing descriptions that I'm lured in and snagged.

But this year I will exercise restraint. Because one can plant only so many things.

I can't resist looking anyway.

Here's the tomato list. I don't need tomato seed. I have what I need for this year and next year, and probably the next year -- Amish Paste, Sun Gold, Black Plum and a couple of Roma types, and Brandywine. No need to... 


And then I stopped... "Tasmanian Chocolate..." This catalog has no pictures... but how can I resist the name? "Small plant, large fruit," a dwarf tomato suitable for container gardens. Excellent flavor, they say. Chocolate?

Move along... move along.

Another catalog with small color photos. Again, the tomatoes... "Berkeley Tie Dye." I'm a sucker for interesting names. "Green metallic stripes over pink skin." Interesting. "Extremely robust hard to describe flavor: sweet, rich, tart, salty with a hint of smokey and a dripping juicy texture." I'm drooling.

But, no. I can't. I can't. Maybe next year.

So many different kinds of tomatoes!!! And this is only the second catalog.

Next, the Baker Creek Heirloom Seeds catalog. I've been looking forward to this one. All my gardening buddies call it "gardener porn" because contains large full-color photos displayed with great artfulness. Employees and family members show off the produce and flowers in some photos. I stayed up late last night so I could look through the Baker Creek catalog, but got so sleepy I made it only halfway through.

And that's all I've gone through. Several more catalogs sit in a pile. I must get around to actually ordering my seeds very soon. No time to dream wistfully with the catalogs. I always go to the online catalogs to order, but there's something wondrous about paging through the catalogs while sitting by the fire and dreaming. Today I sat on a stump near the garden, my feet in the snow, and envisioned the garden dressed in green instead of white.

I'm not feeling anxious to get into the work of it, though. Dreaming it will suffice at the moment.

On to the next catalog now, the 50th anniversary edition of the Seed Savers' Exchange. It looks juicy.

This means another cup of tea and curling up in my chair by the fire. See you later.



Friday, January 10, 2025

No Tears Here

 

No tears fall when chopping onion greens.

It seems that most of the people I know have food sensitivities or allergies, or have restricted diets for health issues or philosophical reasons. That can make cooking for potlucks a challenge. We've hosted enough potlucks that we know most of these restrictions for the people who are regularly invited, and we ask about food restrictions when inviting new people. 

Sometimes all that's needed is a simple substitution in a recipe, or simply eliminating an offending ingredient. Sometimes that means creating a second offering for one or two people. At other times it means separating ingredients for people to combine as it fits their needs. This works really well for salads. People can simply build their own.

One condition that requires certain restrictions is SIBO, small intestine bacterial overgrowth. In this condition usually beneficial bacteria and other microorganisms that are supposed to populate the large intestine, aiding digestion and nutrient absorption, have somehow moved in the small intestine where they don't belong. This causes gas, bloating and other digestive issues and requires minimizing foods that are high in certain "fermentable" sugars (referred to as FODMAPS) that feed the misplaced organisms in the small intestine and cause symptoms. Other intestinal issues also require restricting these foods, but SIBO is the one I know about.

Since this photo was taken four days earlier, the tops have 
grown to more than three times this height.

The issue with restricting these foods is that they're very healthful and tasty foods.  

Onions and their relatives -- leeks, garlic, shallots, etc. -- the white bulbs, anyway, are full of FODMAPS. It is difficult to cook without these vegetables (Alliums), as many recipes call for one or more of them. You can still get their flavors into foods, however, by using only the green leaves instead of the white bulbs. A plus is that you don't cry when chopping the greens.

Last spring I planted bunching onions, which are considered a perennial vegetable. Instead of pulling and using the bulbs, you use the greens of bunching onions. Bunching onions, I read, are not always truly winter hardy, so I planted two of the supposedly hardier varieties -- Warrior and Flagpole. So far Warrior seems the most robust. If you don't have garden space, bunching onions can be grown in containers. They don't have deep roots.

I sowed the seeds in the spring, probably late March, early April. I failed to note that on my calendar. I plan to plant more this year, as the two small patches didn't provide nearly enough greens. I hope that the ones I planted last spring come back and I can start cutting them earlier and get more greens. I dehydrated what I didn't use right away. You also can saute and freeze them. When using the greens to flavor your dishes, use more than you would of the bulb, as the flavor of the greens is milder.

I also dehydrated the leek greens when I pulled them. The year before, when I had a lot more leeks, I sliced and dehydrated the white part. Very tasty, almost like onion rings. (By the way, it's about time to start your transplants for regular onions and leeks.) 

This year I will cut and dry garlic greens. However, we'll soon have fresh ones. I planted a bunch of cloves in potting soil in a pot and set it on the windowsill. We can snip the greens as needed. I also have a potted clump of chives by the window. I dug and potted it after the weather turned pretty chilly and we had a freeze or two, so the chives weren't in the best condition. They dried up right away, but are now growing green and can be snipped to toss into salads or garnish other dishes. Chives have a milder flavor than other allium greens, and are best left uncooked. Garlic chives can be potted up, as well, for a mild garlic flavor.

If only it were this easy to substitute other problematic foods.


Tuesday, January 7, 2025

 


When life brings snow, you can choose to find joy in it, or to resent it. If you resent it, you will receive just as much snow and much less joy. (Seen online.)

So I'm taking joy in the snow and ice. I find so much beauty in the transformation of the landscape when the snow falls. The sunlight sparkles on the ice-coated tree branches.

Wind sculps drifts and curves, creating new and fleeting landscapes. 

On Sunday, as I walked through the falling snow, this stone in the middle of the garden beckoned me to sit a while. Behind the stone in this photo, you can see depressions where my footsteps were filled in after I took a rest.


Digging out will take a while. Yesterday we dug paths to the garden, sauna and bird feeders, as well as cleared the concrete pad in front of the garage.... not that we're going to drive anywhere in the next couple of days. All that digging pretty much gave us clear passage to deep drifts. Haven't seen the hill in our driveway yet. That could be treacherous to clear -- or not. Because trees on either side of the hill also hang over it, the snow might not be as deep, but ice still lies beneath it. Wherever the snow has been cleared, the ice will melt in the sunlight, even when it's below freezing.

I guess we'll see you all after the spring thaw.


Monday, January 6, 2025

The Morning After

 


The morning after the big snow storm -- 7 degrees Fahrenheit at 8 am. The birds were crowding at the feeders before sunrise. I stepped onto the porch to snap a few shots. Yes, I was barefoot.

The ice-coated trees turned silver as the sun rose behind them. I tried to get a few shots of sunlight glinting off the ice at the tips of the closest Eastern red cedar trees, but it did not work. I will head out later for a walk, a cardio workout of shoveling a foot of snow and tall drifts, and take a few more shots.

I'm seeing reports that this is among the heaviest of snowfalls in the past 100 years. 

Crews are out clearing roads, but remember that beneath the snow lies a treacherous sheet of ice. Stay safe. Stay home. Build a snowman/woman/monster. (Check out Calvin and Hobbes for ideas. 😄)


Enjoy the day. Do some cooking. Take a nap. Whatever you think you don't have time for, do it.

Me? I'll do yoga. Do laundry, although I won't hang anything out on the line today. It will hang on drying racks near the fire. The purge will continue. Meditation, and who knows what else. 

Take a Snow Day. You deserve it.

The Silver Woods.


Sunday, January 5, 2025

A Crowd at the Diner

 


Winter arrived with a vengeance in Kansas. A few hours after this photo was taken the snow was much deeper. I nearly had to stop and rest on the short way to the garden because the snow was so deep.

I did make it to the tree line, however. Walking through the woods was easier because the snow wasn't quite so deep. I didn't stay long because the wind blew snow in my eyes. So I hugged a few trees and trudged back in. A good Sunday's work.

Wednesday, January 1, 2025

Happy New Year

 

Summer Fireworks -- last year's crop of Zinnias.

May you plant with intention seeds of Beauty, Nourishment, and Love. May all you plant grow healthy and strong. May the year bring True Peace, Love, Compassion, and Joy.

May all around you be filled with Love, Compassion, True Peace, and Joy. May you Dance with every step.

Walk in Beauty. Walk in Love. Walk in Health.

So mote it be. 💚

Monday, December 30, 2024

Mushroom Foraging

Not edible. Not edible. Not edible. Anyway, I don't think it is.

 One of the many joys of my garden is foraging.

Dandelions grow rampant. Chickweed (my fave) glows green in my strawberry beds right now, allllmost big enough to cut. I can't wait. In a couple of months I'll find young wild violet leaves, and later their flowers. Ok, ok, I'll grab a bit of henbit, too. It's the most abundant of all. Summer brings in lambs quarters and sour grass. 

Did I forget anything?

Most people think one must wait until April to forage for mushrooms, the rare and must sought after Morel. According to one of our neighbors, several other kinds of mushrooms can be found here at different times.

The one pictured above doesn't seem to be an edible species. The photo was taken just after mid-November, in a brome field we'd burned about three weeks before. A couple of weeks before this photo was taken I started seeing one species of edible mushroom, one of the several types of puffballs, underneath some Eastern red cedar trees.

White puffballs in the red cedars.

I had seen puffball mushrooms growing there in years past, and knew they're edible. However, I was always uncertain about harvesting them. This year, I decided, was the year. I consulted with a mushroomer neighbor about how to tell when they're good to eat.

Puffballs must be firm and white. They also must be white inside. The first ones I foraged had a lovely white interior with a texture akin to Wonderbread. 

I sliced them up, sauteed them and added them to some veggies. The puffball had little flavor of its own, but soaks up other flavors nicely. Then a couple of weeks later I discovered more, about eight fair-sized ones -- bigger than the first ones I found.
Puffball mushroom ready to sliced and cook.

Some had a skin with a bit of tan color. Most of those were discolored when I cut into them. Disappointment. However, I did find several perfect ones. So... Yay!

It intrigues me that I find them in this dense grove of red cedars, where even poison ivy is almost non-existent. Hmmm.

I keep hoping to find more, but alas, they seem to be done for the year.

Maybe next November. 

I don't know which species of puffball mushrooms these are. They certainly aren't the "Giant Puffball," because, well, they aren't giant.

It doesn't matter to me which species they are, though. They're definitely edible, and that's what counts.