Showing posts with label barn. Show all posts
Showing posts with label barn. Show all posts

Wednesday, August 31, 2016

Community Garden Scenes

Lots of produce is being harvested at the Community Garden -- tomatoes, beans, beets, carrots, eggplants, peppers, onions... Despite (or maybe because of) the hot and dry weather, the vegetables have thrived. 

It's a different world at the Garden -- so peaceful and quiet. I love going there to work the plot, water and harvest the crops, watch the goldfinches and butterflies on the sunflowers and zinnias. It's like a little slice of heaven.


Reflection of the sunset on nursery greenhouse

Some of our produce

View of the barn from the Community Garden.  It would make a nice painting!

The cherry tomatoes have been a great success!

This summer's weather has been good for the onions.

Nursery sunflowers at entrance to Community Garden

Have you ever seen a white eggplant?  I haven't, until now. This is in our neighbor's garden.

Our hot banana peppers in all colors. Spicy!

Saturday, July 30, 2016

Community Garden Update



There's a garden where the peppers
Were all growing on the vine,
The tomatoes and the pumpkins
And the string beans very fine.
Harmony had been so perfect
In this garden where they grew;
And the sunshine and the showers came to nourish them, they knew...
~
Gertrude Tooley Buckingham









The Community Garden is in full swing this time of year, producing a continual harvest of organically grown vegetables and flowers. Basement grow lights enabled me to start the Cherry Baby and Big Beef tomatoes from seed in April, ready to plant in our parcel the end of May after danger of frost.  The cucumbers, Marketmore 76, resistant to a variety of diseases, were seeded directly into the ground. I usually direct-seed the beans, but had good results this year from little nursery-grown starter plants.  The lettuce is a slow-bolting crisphead variety that is resistant to the heat, called Superior 1.  



In addition to the above vegetables, I planted Spanish onions, red onions, hot banana peppers, sweet bell peppers, beets, eggplant, carrots, dill.  The flowers in our parcel include violas, zinnias, stock, marigolds, milkweed and cornflowers to attract butterflies and bees.