Re: Tennessee 2024 Garden
sounds delish.
- Gary350
- Super Green Thumb
- Posts: 7445
- Joined: Mon Mar 23, 2009 1:59 pm
- Location: TN. 50 years of gardening experience.
We picked almost 1 gallon of ripe strawberries this morning. I pulled up all 150 Pac Choy a woman from the community garden can and got them to give away.
1 experiment leads to another. Irrigation to the left potato row for 30 minutes then rotate hose to the right potato row for 30 minutes. It beats standing there for an hour with a water hose.
1 experiment leads to another. Irrigation to the left potato row for 30 minutes then rotate hose to the right potato row for 30 minutes. It beats standing there for an hour with a water hose.
- Gary350
- Super Green Thumb
- Posts: 7445
- Joined: Mon Mar 23, 2009 1:59 pm
- Location: TN. 50 years of gardening experience.
I am learning new things about strawberries. Allstar strawberries are very large, they look very good but the good strawberry flavor is not there. Commercial growers probably love these plants they have fewer leaves this makes ripe berries very easy to see, fast berry pickers can probably pick a basket of grocery store berries in 30 seconds. Wait and see if flavor gets better.
The heirloom strawberries are smaller and slower to pick. Leaves need to be pushed left right back and forth to find ripe berries. With practice I am getting faster. If a plant has 1 ripe berry it usually has 8 more ripe berries. All the plants do not have ripe berries at the same time. The baskets laying on their side shows heirloom on the left and Allstar on the right.
I picked 1½ gallons of berries yesterday, I picked twice, about 8 am and about 6 pm. This morning I picked another gallon of ripe berries. I will pick again about 6 pm.
2" of heavy rain is forecast for tonight. If I fertilize strawberry plants again it will be with 0-20-20 plants do not need more nitrogen. Garden might be too muddy to pick berries tomorrow morning, wait and see. I ordered a berry slicer $8 free postage.
The heirloom strawberries are smaller and slower to pick. Leaves need to be pushed left right back and forth to find ripe berries. With practice I am getting faster. If a plant has 1 ripe berry it usually has 8 more ripe berries. All the plants do not have ripe berries at the same time. The baskets laying on their side shows heirloom on the left and Allstar on the right.
I picked 1½ gallons of berries yesterday, I picked twice, about 8 am and about 6 pm. This morning I picked another gallon of ripe berries. I will pick again about 6 pm.
2" of heavy rain is forecast for tonight. If I fertilize strawberry plants again it will be with 0-20-20 plants do not need more nitrogen. Garden might be too muddy to pick berries tomorrow morning, wait and see. I ordered a berry slicer $8 free postage.
- Gary350
- Super Green Thumb
- Posts: 7445
- Joined: Mon Mar 23, 2009 1:59 pm
- Location: TN. 50 years of gardening experience.
This morning I picked 3 baskets of ripe strawberries about 2½ gallons. I will need to pick berries again this evening about 6 pm berries are ripe twice a day. Yesterday I picked 2 baskets of berries. Day before that 1½ baskets of berries. The 2" of rain we had made potato plants grow 1 ft taller. Garden soil is still very wet and we have 4 days of rain in the forecast starting Friday. If I leave the garden hose run 12 hours I can not do what mother nature does with 1 rain. I hope it continues to rain once a week until June 15. Potato hills are loaded with large cracks new potatoes are like 100s of hydraulic jacks take push the soil apart.
- Gary350
- Super Green Thumb
- Posts: 7445
- Joined: Mon Mar 23, 2009 1:59 pm
- Location: TN. 50 years of gardening experience.
Last summer I was thinking about making strawberry wine but this year I'm not. My interest in wine comes and goes it gives me something to do in bad weather. Good wine needs to age 3 to 5 years I already have 36 gallons of wine waiting to be bottled and 200 empty bottles are taking up a lot of space and 200 bottles of wine will take up a lot of space also. We moved to a smaller house 10 years ago I don't have a good place to keep 200 bottles of wine. I need to start bottling wine to see how it tastes then many give some away if I don't like the flavor. Most wine goes through a phase where it taste worse before it taste better the wine books call the the dumb phase. Blackberry is known to go through a dumb phase it taste so bad after 3 years it tasted like it spoiled and needs to be trashed then 1 year later it tastes much better and 2 years later it might we first place in a wine contest. I don't like white wine as much as red wine white has its own flavor. I made strawberry wine from a Wine expert kit 25 years ago I gave most of it away. I am curious about wine made from home grown strawberries it might be fun and might be good and a mix of blackberries and strawberries might be better. The only wine I can make from scratch that is better than factory wine is 1 year old Elderberry and 5 year old blackberry. I drove 90 miles on gravel country roads last summer looking for Elderberries they are extremely had to find, they use to be easy to find. I would like to have all this wine out of the house it is so easy to buy 2 bottles of good wine once a week, it takes up less space and taste better than anything I can make. At the moment I am not motivated to do anything with wine but I might make 1 gallon of strawberry wine and 1 gallon of 50/50 strawberry and blackberry. Wife has 6 gallons of strawberries in the freezer and I am trying my best to eat as many as I can 3 times a day. 36 gallons of wine has totally taken over bedroom #3 in our house I guess 38 gallons won't be very much worse, after wine is bottled it takes up more space. If I can get motivated again I might make 2 more gallons of wine.
- Gary350
- Super Green Thumb
- Posts: 7445
- Joined: Mon Mar 23, 2009 1:59 pm
- Location: TN. 50 years of gardening experience.
Romaine lettuce & mix lettuce are starting to get bitter, is hot weather doing that? We have been having 83° to 89° weather. Now we have 7 days of rain in the forecast. Chicken sandwich with a whole Romaine lettuce plant was good for lunch. We have been watching a Robin family in the nest on our patio, today about 12 moon the 1st baby flew from the nest then about 1 pm the 2nd baby flew from the nest babies are 12 days old. Last summer Robin family had 3 eggs 3 times = 9 babies we have no clue if this is the same family. Babies can not fly yet it seems like a miracle if babies survive the night.
- Gary350
- Super Green Thumb
- Posts: 7445
- Joined: Mon Mar 23, 2009 1:59 pm
- Location: TN. 50 years of gardening experience.
Wow LOOK the potato plants have blossoms. My potato plants have not had blossoms in 45 years. We are having rain every day, sky is very dark and over cast. 45 years ago when I was growing potatoes in a stack of 3 car tires plants always had blossoms. Tires have places that hold water I bet that was good for keeping a continuously water supply for potato plants. My neighbors potato plants have blossoms the west end of his garden is full shade from about 10 am to dark, he plants his potatoes in the shade. I plant my tomatoes in shade it works. It is hard to duplicate mother nature rain & dark over cast sky, I can not duplicate mother nature with a water hose. If I give each potato plant row 100 gallons of water plants still have no blossoms. Rain and over cast and cool temperatures seem to be very helpful for potato plants. We have had no temperatures above 89° yet. Next year I will plant potatoes March 1st with all the potato rows on the west end of the garden under the shade tree plants will get sun until 12 noon the coolest time of the day.
- applestar
- Mod
- Posts: 30567
- Joined: Thu May 01, 2008 7:21 pm
- Location: Zone 6, NJ (3/M)4/E ~ 10/M(11/B)
When lettuce starts to go bitter (milky sap is an indicator) I like to (roughly chop first) quick toss/sauté in frying pan of butter and/or olive oil just until coated in oil and brighter in color, add a little liquid (water or tomato juice or broth) then a splash of balsamic vinaigrette dressing (you can use your preferred dressing). I prefer if there still a bit of crunchy texture left.
Great as side dish, on sandwiches, or on pasta with or without pasta sauce.
Great as side dish, on sandwiches, or on pasta with or without pasta sauce.
- Gary350
- Super Green Thumb
- Posts: 7445
- Joined: Mon Mar 23, 2009 1:59 pm
- Location: TN. 50 years of gardening experience.
We have a few cicadas there is probably 1000 on the sides of the shed. Wife blows the patio several times a day to try to keep them gone but they return within 2 hours. Dog is eating them. A woman on TN FB keeps claiming cicadas will cause intestinal blockage and kill your pets. Everyone keeps telling her, its free dog food there is no blockage but may be a little diarrhea. I see no cicada damage to the garden they seem to grow wings and die. It is hard to relax on the patio cicadas climb up my legs and fly and land on us, I don't mind them they don't bite.
- applestar
- Mod
- Posts: 30567
- Joined: Thu May 01, 2008 7:21 pm
- Location: Zone 6, NJ (3/M)4/E ~ 10/M(11/B)
I’m sure there’s a difference between eating them fresh out of the ground while soft and eating the week old hardened and spent ones that fall out of the trees. I’ve heard that chickens, pigs, horses and cattle would eat the tough, crunchy, spiky ones too.
I posted a while back about a club in Tokyo Japan that get together to gather the just emerged pale, soft cicadas … just after dawn in public parks and cook them up right there to try eating in different ways.
I think the article said the consensus is they taste best directly tossed into hot oil to fry without batter or flour coating and immediately scooped up… if you want to try?
I think they made different flavors by tossing the fried crispy cicadas in dry herb and spice mix, sugar, cheese powder, cayenne hot pepper powder, habanero, wasabi, etc.
I posted a while back about a club in Tokyo Japan that get together to gather the just emerged pale, soft cicadas … just after dawn in public parks and cook them up right there to try eating in different ways.
I think the article said the consensus is they taste best directly tossed into hot oil to fry without batter or flour coating and immediately scooped up… if you want to try?
I think they made different flavors by tossing the fried crispy cicadas in dry herb and spice mix, sugar, cheese powder, cayenne hot pepper powder, habanero, wasabi, etc.
- Gary350
- Super Green Thumb
- Posts: 7445
- Joined: Mon Mar 23, 2009 1:59 pm
- Location: TN. 50 years of gardening experience.
I collected 70 gallons of rain water in 5 gallon buckets in 30 minutes from the roof. Garden mud is worse than before it will take a whole week of hot sunny windy days to dry out. I think potatoes will be good with all this water but not the strawberries. I usually plant corn & beans about May 10 but not this year. Potato plants have fallen over I'm not sure if they will stand them self up again.