Archive for eco friendly gardening
My Organic Garden and the Late Bloomers
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Cherry Tomatoes
Welcome back to another installment of the trials and tribulations of my organic garden. What comes to mind when you hear the term “late bloomers”? Adolescence, right? Well in my garden, it now refers to my tomatoes – the quintessential late bloomers. You see tomatoes normally take seventy to eighty days to ripen once the started plant (not seeds) are placed in the ground. My tomato plants were quite large when I planted them into the garden. In fact, my tomato plants were eight to ten inches high when I planted them so they had a great start in life. I also started them right on time for our zone which was the third week in May. So, there was no excuse when these plants were not producing. They were pruned, staked, tied, weeded, fed organic plant food, fertilized and lovingly watered; yet no fruit. I was about to give up hope as we were well past eighty days and actually into the nineties. We did see a flower, so there was a sign of life, but no cherry tomatoes when out of nowhere they started to grow!
Now these were not your traditional cherry tomatoes that were growing – these were turbo cherry tomatoes the size of plums. The oddity here, and there is always an oddity with my garden this year, is that I planted two varieties of cherry tomatoes and both produced fruit much larger than expected. They produced delicious, meaty cherry tomatoes that have the ripe sweetness of homegrown tomatoes you hope for but they are so large you can slice them for salads or sandwiches. So there we were in late August with only had a handful of jumbo-sized cherry tomatoes that must have sparked a growth competition of sorts because suddenly all my tomato plants were taking off.
Tags: Eco Friendly, eco friendly garden, eco friendly gardening, eco friendly living, eco-friendly lifestyle, ecofriendly, Green Living, greener lifestyle, organic garden, organic gardener, organic gardening, planet forward, sustainable lifestyle, Sustainable LivingMy Organic Garden – It was the Best of Times, It was the Worst of Times
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Swiss Chard
Greetings fellow organic gardening enthusiasts! I’m taking a break from the arbor/Sicilian zucchini drama this week to discuss other garden news like the uprising of the brussel sprouts. I didn’t think it was possible but they have somehow gotten even larger and leafier since I last mentioned it. The brussel sprouts have completely taken over the poor unsuspecting basil and I fear that we will need to mediate the upcoming turf wars. On the bright side, I have red tomatoes! Yes, slowly (and I do mean at a snail’s pace), the tomatoes are turning red. With the amount of sun and extremely hot weather we have had this summer in Southern Ontario it confounds me. I have no idea why they are taking so long – over the course of a week they barely turn from dark green to a slightly lighter dark green. At this rate my tomatoes should be red in or around November.
Also, I have planted the largest cherry tomatoes on record. I thought I was growing little cherry tomatoes as I do every year, but the labeling skills at the nursery left much to be desired and my cherry tomatoes are the size of plums. That’s right, plums. They are very sweet though and are the perfect topping to a pizza with a little tomato sauce, fresh basil (from the garden) and a smattering of mozzarella cheese so I’m not complaining. There is nothing like picking something out of your garden and then eating it right away. Unfortunately that’s not happening as much as I would like this season but I digress.
I was given an heirloom tomato plant, and was excited to see what became of it as the seeds were apparently very old. This plant has grown to an impressive four and half feet tall and it is leafy, full and I prune it lovingly. Do you know that all this tender love and care has yielded me? One tomato! That right, one tomato is all it has grown. Now that I have picked that one tomato, it has grown two flowers so there is still hope. Maybe it’ll decide to give me another tomato before frost comes.
Tags: Eco Friendly, eco friendly gardening, eco friendly living, eco-friendly lifestyle, eco-gardening, ecofriendly, green gardening, Green Living, greener lifestyle, organic gardening, planet forward, sustainable lifestyle, Sustainable Living, Sustainable Practice, sustainable practices, urban gardens, zucchini gardenMy Eco-friendly Organic Garden And Mealy Tomatoes
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In August, I was finally able to pick my very first eco-friendly organic red beefsteak tomato from my garden. I was faced with that to do with this little miracle – make bruschetta? No. Tomato and cucumber salad? No. Given it was fresh picked, I decided to go the purist route, a tomato sandwich. I toasted and buttered the bread and gave the tomato a hint of black pepper and salt. Anticipating sweet fresh tomato goodness, I bit into my sandwich. I soon realized it was mixed with slight disappointment – can it be that my eco-friendly organic tomato that I tended to and cared for was, dare I say, mealy?
I wondered if my tomato was an anomaly or if this could be an indication that most of my tomatoes were suffering the same fate. I soon realized the latter was true. How could this be? Why would my well tended eco-friendly organic tomatoes become mealy? Well, in June and July we received 20% less sunshine as those two months normally get, which translates to 100 fewer hours of sunshine than normal. As you know, the sun gives plants the heat and light they requite in order to make sugar that makes them sweet and delicious. Since, we have had the coolest July in 17 years, here in Ontario, it is no surprise that our tomatoes are mealy and the corn is wimpy.
Tags: beefsteak tomatoes, eco friendly garden, eco friendly gardening, eco-friendly organic, eco-friendly organic apples, eco-friendly organic garden, organic beefsteak tomatoes, organic garden, organic gardener, organic gardening, organic tomatoes, planet forward, sustainable product, sustainable solutions, tomato, tomato crop
