Winter in the Garden

As winter slowly slips in we are starting to transition into the internal senescence of the season.  The leaves are falling, blanketing the world & garden for a rest.  As a human being I too will rest, though I continue to eat all winter long and love to provide, as least a little fresh food for my family.  I believe in letting go, but I also like to hang on, just a little.  The key is just consolidating so you can conserve your resources and maximum energy in all forms. Here are some of my secrets for high desert winter food production.

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Plan:

Timing is what makes a winter garden.  Planting your winter vegetables in August will ensure good hardy plants that you can protect and keep harvesting off into the winter.  Planning ahead is really what winter gardening is all about. If you got a late start, transplanting can be done into the fall, but don’t expect much growth till spring, your plants will most likely live, but may not thrive until spring…however they will have such a head start you will be eating from them when it is technically still winter, most likely March.  Last year I made my own calendar with sowing dates for year round high desert harvest and sold them locally.  I am working on the 2014 one right now which you can preorder, just send me a note that you would like one in the comment box.

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Plant:

You can still plant perennials in the fall and early winter. October is a beautiful month to plant, garlic, bulbs like tulip and daffodils, Perennials & Fruit Trees.  It is also pleasant, as most nurseries have big sales on perennials this time of year so they too can consolidate and converse labor in the coming months.  Perennials will need to be watered in the winter, but no more than a good watering every 3 weeks( unless they are covered in snow and then you get the day off!).  In the spring they will have a beautifully established roots system and be stronger against harsh spring conditions.  As for seeds, I honestly do not plant any seeds from Fall Equinox to Winter solstice, remember, mother nature needs to rest too.  If you do have ways to cover your beds or have cold frames, established plants, or even starts can be covered of put in cold frames in the fall.  After November 15th though, I would probably hold off till February for this too, as it is really hard for a little guy to go through transplanting shock in the cold season.

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Gather:

Building soil and adding organic material is our main goal as gardeners, especially here in New Mexico.  Learning wild foods is of course crucial, but if we want to eat cucumbers originally from India and Lettuce from the Fertile Crescent we must provide the tilth and nutrients needed for these delicacies.  To do this we must gather, save and cycle as much organic material as we possibly can into our systems.

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Leaves– for mulching beds, making compost and general building organic material on your site.  Bags are lining the streets right now, you have a trunk in your car, right?  Mine get delivered to my front yard; after years of living under the same big tree my neighbor and I have figure out the perfect harmony.  He rakes the leaves that fall in his yard, bags them up and throws them over the fence into my yard.  I dump them out onto my beds and give him back the bags to reuse!!

Jaengy smashes the toasted egg shell for me in the clay mortar and pestle, one of his weekly tasks

Jaengy smashes the toasted egg-shells for me in the clay mortar and pestle, one of his weekly tasks

Egg Shells– Every time you crack an egg put it on a cookie sheet in the oven, the pilot will dry them out and when the sheet is full they can be crushed to a powder and saved in a mason jar for calcium amending later.  I have found them very effective in preventing blossom end root in my tomatoes. Last year I saved a gallon full and it turned out to be perfect for 100 tomato plants, one handful per plant.  Since tomato planting time ( May) I have already gathered almost a gallon…luckily there are some other amazing uses for eggshells.

The sweetest smelling soft country roses outside my front door

The sweetest smelling soft country roses outside my front door

Coffee grounds– Great for acid loving roses.  They can be applied directly to the soil around the rose during the year, or you can cycle them through you compost system.  Worms love them too!

Compost– If you garden and don’t have a compost, start one.  You will be amazed at how much less garbage leaves your house and won’t have to worry about stinky, leaky garbage bags anymore.

Compost:

I usually start a new pile of compost every spring, so that by fall the old one is fully decomposed and can be harvested.  Making compost where you would like to have a garden the next year is ideal, as the soil is being worked & amended for you.  To harvest compost I usually take off the top ‘cap’ of leaves or straw, (used to keep moisture in a pile and keep in any smell) dig out the ready compost and pass it through a shifter over a wheel burrow.  This can be out of a chicken shed, worm pile or just plain old compost pile.  If the compost has sat all summer, it is probably ready to use, though sifting gets out any bigger pieces that have not decomposed which can be added to the new pile.  Shifting also gets out the worms so they can be added to a new pile.  Then sprinkle the beds with about an inch of compost and turn the compost in a bit.   By harvesting compost now you also can store it in a container so you have it on hand for potting mix in the late winter.  Trust me, you will only wait till January to harvest compost once, it is no fun at all!

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Turn soil:

This can be done with a pitch fork or a broad fork, which doubles your efforts and can be bought locally here.  If the compost has fresh manure in it, it will break down and leach over the winter and should be plenty safe for spring planting.  Fall is a great time to dig, fork or loosen beds, as the soil is warm and often moist from the fall rains.  If you wait till spring, the ground may be frozen when you are ready to plant your early crops.  perennial crops do not need tilling, and prefer not, but annuals do seem to respond best to lightly fluffed soil with good titlth (texture) and well broken down organic material so nitrogen isn’t robbed in the process of decomposing other things.  Here is a whole post on bed prep, oriented towards spring, but you will get the idea.

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Mulch:

Once this is done, heavy mulching really helps retain moisture, keeps the soil a bit warmer, as well as suppresses weeds in spring and build organic material.  Leaves & aged straw, are my favorites and usually free.  Cleaning, Composting, turning and mulching a bed now helps for early spring planting.  Once you do all these steps in the fall when the weather is still lovely, your beds are ready for early spring planting and you need not spend too much time out on the April wind chipping at frozen ground.

Lazy gardening- the self mulching bed.

Lazy gardening- the self mulching bed.

Row Cover :

I often will cover up my fall crops with row cover in late September before the first frosts, but most of the listed crops below are cold hardy and can take a few light freezes, so they can be ignored for a bit while you focus on rescuing the summer crops from the cold.  First you make little hoops from 9 gauge wire that you can buy in a spool from the hardware store.  Cut 3-4ft pieces and bend them to be a half circle.  Stick these in the ground about every 3 ft and then wrap with your row cover.  I get the heavy weight floating row cover from Plants of the Southwest for $3.50 a yard.  It is 12ft wide so you can cut pieces that fit over your beds…remember to leave extra on the edges so that it can be well weighted buy soil or stones- any strong breeze that catches under the covers will create a sail affect which could tear or remove your covers altogether.

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Let the Sunshine in:

Once I do cover my beds, I cover them for good, as protecting them from wind, and cold is important, the air moves freely, so no need to open and close them every day.  The fabric also keeps in moisture and with cooler temps you need to water less.  When I do open them up, I do it in the hot part of the day, as some plants actually freeze and thaw in the cold season.  Winter watering will need to be done, just like summer watering, when you scratch the surface of the soil and stick your finger in and the soil is dry a fingers depth, you should water, unless of course the soil is frozen.  I usually water my in-ground garden beds every 3 weeks in the winter.  Snow is a great thing for your veggies and there is no need to water if there is snow on the ground, just remember it also may not be the best time to harvest your plants either.

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Select Cool Season Crops:

Winter gardening really just mean keeping alive summer and fall crops.  Winter gardening for me starts in August when I start planting all my crops.  It can also mean prepping the soil in fall, heating it up early with cold frames and planting in late winter early spring.

In New Mexico, before or during the monsoon season is ideal for planting fall crops because the soil opens up and receives the rains and so do your seeds.  The moisture and cooling that season brings is great for fall crops and the plants thrive in the lessening light.  Choosing cold hardy varieites is key to a hardy winter garden.  In his book Four Season Harvest Eliot Coleman lists all his winter varieties and most seed companies now have lists of cold hardy crops like at High Mowing Seeds

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How low can they go?

When you do open them up, do it mid day, as the plant enjoy the sun and may even be some what frozen.  If you harvest them like this they will turn to mush, but if you wait till the thaw they will be fine! It is kind of amazing to watch during the day.  I have negelected to cover my Chard yet and it looks totally dead in the morning but by the afternoon it is perky again and ready to harvest.  Different vegetables have different cold cold tolerances which are useful to know.

The hardiest of the winter vegetables are Kale, Collards and Spinach which can take Temps as low as low 20’s and in the high teens.

Broccoli, Brussel Sprouts, Cabbage, Kohlrabi, Mustard Greens, Parsley, Radish, Parsnip, Turnip can all take temps 28-25 degrees.

All of these can survive under thick row cover all winter, though they may not show many signs of growth, they will start to spring new leaves in February.

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Other semi-hardy vegetables are Beets, Carrots, Cauliflower, Celery, Chinese Cabbage, Endive, Lettuce, Radicchip, Rutabega, Salsify, Bok Choy, Tatsoi and Swiss Chard, tolerant of Temps from 32-29degrees.  These can usually be harvested till Christmas under heavy row cover, but will need to be replanted in the spring under row cover as well.

Cold Frames:  Cold frames can be built in all kind of ways and there are some great designs out there you can easily be guided by.  I would start by reading Eliot Coleman’s books.  There are glass, plastic, straw bales, adobe and even some pretty sweet custom made ones by our local ‘Grow Your Own’ veggie man, Ken Kuhn.  I love cold frames and could talk forever about them.  But the first thing to think about tis your winter reality.  How much do you really need, how much are you really willing to do and how far are you willing to go.  I recommend finding a nice south facing nook close to your front doorstep where you can reach out in your bathrobe a slippers, raise a lid and snip a few fresh leaves on a cold winter day.  Now doesn’t that seem nice.  I wrote a whole post on making those greens last.

 So hopefully all this should get you started.  Stay tuned for the ‘Late Winter in the Garden’ post in a couple of months when you & nature are really ready to get growing again.

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Stoking the Home Fires

I lit a fire the night before Halloween.  The cold air blew into these high desert foothills, just in time to chill all those tricky treating children out there…(we were cozy inside, as Jaengus at 2.5 years old is not quite hip to Halloween yet and as far as I am concerned that is just fine:)  Image

That very fire, it is still going, rising and falling, as the sun warms us through our big southerns windows it wanes and right before bedtime it rages.  Now that the clocks have been set back, tonights winds and rains blowing the last leaves off the trees, it feels official, winter is here and it is time to keep that fire going all winter long.

Now we have been heating with wood for years, growing food for even more, buying as little and caring as much as we can, for, well ever I guess…but creating a family and staying at home to tend them has deepened my understanding what stoking these home fires really means to me.Image

Tending these very symbolic embers has been my main focus and main teacher for the past two years.  My friend Kyce often calls this stage of life, the Mommystery, and rightly so.  In the mist of millions of things to do, I have lots of time and space in my mind to Chop wood, Carry water, churn the problems of the the world inside and out and ruminate over what I am going to do ablaut them as I hang my laundry out to dry. Slowing, steadying myself  and my wild mind is the only way to be a solid parent, partner and friend and let me tell you, it is taking a lot of conscious inner work and I still have a lot more laundry to dry.

One of the first big blows of this journey was how isolating life could be.  Luckily, I had learned to grow my food, gather my herbs, chop my wood, and carry water earlier on, deeply dedicated to self sufficieny as a life path….but all the sudden I was all alone, well me and my boys, chopping all the wood and carrying all the water.  Which I love, truly, yet as a community oriented gal, I had no idea this romantic idea of tending my own hearth would leave me feeling so isolated.  I wasn’t working, which normally takes place in schools and community gathering spaces, so without that contact, I had a hard time imagining how the fires I was tending at home would warm the whole world and how I, though warm from within, won’t die of isolation much less self judgement, oh that wild mind!

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Well, luckily that storm has passed.  My son and I go out on the town; to work, to volunteer and to connect lots these days, but one of the sweetest gifts I received in those early days in the Mommystery was the gift of Motherkin.  Like minded mamas who were willing to drive out of town and wander the lane with our babies on our backs.  Mamas who were willing guinea pigs for my tea cake recipes while we deconstructed homemaking in a post feminist time.  Mamas who were educated, conciencious, active citizens who were choosing to make change by opting out of consumer culture and attempting to create new culture from their own homes.

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Sarah, Kyce & Arina, I am feeling the love and want to say your names for the world to hear, you are my Radical beacons and without our almost weekly conspiring, I would not be as solid, centered and committed to where I am and the work I am doing inside and outside and always feeling at home.  So graciously, I thank you for being such Radicals, reclaiming homemaking as a conscious prayer for a new world.

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So the story goes on to say, I am not alone in these choices or in my daily practice anymore.  In fact I am feeling VERY connected these days.  We are building up the fires with a few folks so that our community can grow and hopefully spread out like seeds into a world that desperately needs us right now.  So this weekend, come stoke the home fires with us at our first humble Home Fire Retreat.  I am so looking forward to us meeting each other where we are at, building our community, sharing ourselves and supporting each other whereever we are on this journey of renouncing, reclaiming and rebuilding a new world together.

PS Today is the last day for Early Bird Registration Fee!!

Swapping the Sweetness

Yesterday we swapped, today we ate…homemade sourdough bread, fresh goat cheese, pear ginger butter, and homemade cultured butter…yep, all in one bite!!  Image

I know, I should save all these goodies and slowly dool them out over the year, but hey, it feels like time to celebrate.  Not just the food, but the efforts, the thought, the attention that when into all this bounty.  Everyone one who came this year put so much time into their offerings, and some serious creativity.  Image

I am talking tinctures that have been steeping for months made from wild crafted herbs, cheese made from Almonds, Mushrooms gathered from the mountains, Mustard made and labeled by homeschooled hands, homemade, frozen and indivdiually wrapped cinnamon buns that just need to be heated up on that special Sunday morning!!!  I mean really, this was above and beyond anything I ever dreamed of when I was staring at my pile of green tomatoes wondering who, oh who might be willing to trade for something, anything!!

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OK, I admit, I do have some amazing friends, but it is not just that.  What amazed me the most is that all of the swappers stepped off the hamster wheel of consumer culture, stepped into their creative capacity, whipped up some magic and yes, gave it away!!  All in the name of sharing.  To give and receive comes so naturally to us human beings, we work so hard with our children on these fundamental human skills, and yet when I look around in most of the messages our culture is sending us, I see very little authentic generousity.  It’s mostly ‘ get yours’ ‘every man for himself’ and ‘you gotta look out for your own’ which all negate all that we learn in kindergarden about ‘doing unto others as you would have them do unto you’.  There are many days that is feels hard parenting a child to share in a world that may later tell him otherwise.  But yesterday, It felt so good to see reciprocity in action and to know that at least for today, we are setting a good example.

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I just want to say Thanks to these folks who came out on Sunday morning with their arms full of their precious handmade and home grown to share.  We all left with boxes full as well, all mixed up with herbs, spices, seeds and fruits of other peoples labors of love.  I am starting to see a tiny glimmer of new economies, new possibilities, new options.  Sorry Whole Foods, I don’t see hand rendered Beef tallow on your shelves!

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After some of the sampling I had a brilliant idea…. to make a Santa Fe Harvest Swap Cook Book, but then I quickly realized, no I don’t want Lisa’s Mustard recipe, I want Lisa to make my Mustard, and Sarah to make my pepper jelly and Kyce to make my medicine and Becca my butter!!  I want us to nourish each other deeply and truly like we did yesterday.  I want that for all of everyone and all of our children.  I will do whatever it takes to make that happen, weather it put on more swaps, weave more webs, or construct more soap boxes….I see now my true passion is bringing our gifts, our talents, and our hearts together, because all this goodness needs to be shared and spread, onto a piece of Ty’s homemade bread!!  If you are up for more learning, sharing and co-creating, make sure to check out what else we are up to here.

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Ode to October

This glorious golden light, I receive you with open arms

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As you ripen every last fruit, you ripen me too from the inside outImage

and I am so grateful you are here.

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These are the days we have been waiting all year for, the seeds planted so carefully now in full bloom.Image

There is no loss to be spoken of in this all this abundance, all struggle forgotten in these glorious days.Image

The canning pot still boiling over into cool evenings and crisp air.

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And though rest may evade me, I ride this wave of generosity, may it last inside me till the end of the year.

A feast for the eyes & pantry

I love gardening, canning, picking and preserving….but I also just love taking pretty pictures of all this bounty.
A simple sharing of the beauty these autumn days have brought me.

Fresh picked Calendula in my hand

Fresh picked Calendula in my hand

Pink Brandywines, my new love

Pink Brandywines, my new love

Put up for the long winter ahead

Put up for the long winter ahead

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Vegetable portraits on slate shingle

Bounty by the pounds

Bounty by the pounds

Canning on my coleman

Canning on my coleman

And that pretty much sums up this glorious autumnal day.

Gigi’s hats

Sitting in front of the sewing machine on this rainy Saturday morning I set to making the 4th ‘Eddie Cap‘ for Jaengy.  So many people have asked me about this hat I swear I could have sold 100 right off his head… However I have no ambitions of making 100 hats, so I thought I would post where I got the pattern so you can make your own, and give credit where credit is due…  the pattern is another mama’s and you can find it on her blog Mushroom Village.  My versions are a lot less refined; not lined, without a firm brim, and I shortened the brims substantially, but her tutorial is what got me here and for that I am forever grateful.IMG_9794

This hat making journey started because my son was born with a huge fuzzy head.  It still is very large (90%) and he still has very little hair.  This precious nogin seems very important to cover and care, to keep him warm and protect all those developing thoughts.   So I began with my own rendition of a pixie cap when he was a baby, made from the sleeve of an old beloved cashmere sweater from Salvation Army I had worn for years but was developing a hole in a very conspicuous spot– ( though would have been great for winter breast feeding..hehe)….

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He rocked that one for many moons, probably everyday of the first year.

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This one I knit in about an hour was the back up, cute though not as soft.

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When summer came I attempted a little Boy bonnet but improvised my own version and it wasn’t going very well.  I knew it was time to go back to the drawing board when I took him out in public and the guy who runs the local coffee shop said plainly,”What do you have on you son’s head!!”  I couldn’t help but laugh and admit defeat!

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With some serious searching I luckily came across the ‘Eddie Cap’

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This one was made from an old cotton button down of his dad’s and it turned out to be perfect for summer.  After this, I was on a serious re-purposing mission and was lucky enough to come across this handsome wool Pendleton on a thrift store run.

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It looked like it had been shrunk so no grown man could wear it, but it was perfect for us.  I did some made up in the moment moves to leave on the collar, button strip and wrist cuffs.  I just cut off the sleeves and reattached them much closer in.  I then sewed up the sides to fit a 18 month old and hemmed it appropriately.

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I then lined it with an old cashmere robe I had to cut up because wool moths had found it and it made me look pretty sorry wearing it around the house.IMG_7783

Totally inspired from my Pendleton experiment I cut a ripped sleeve off of one of Joel’s Pendletons and made it a short sleeve.

I then whipped up this ‘Eddie’ with the other sleeve.

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Lining it of course with the cashmere robe as well.

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I must admit, I sure was pleased with myself at how warm I kept my little nugget that winter.

FYI, If you find old Pendletons at thrift stores that are nice but size small, they serve perfectly for re-purposing, or you can of course mail them to me and I will use them gladly.  This little boy has many more winters ahead!!

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This hat was the winter back up made from the left over yard from his 1 year sweater( not pictured)

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And of course a matching one for cousin

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Then there was the most recent ‘Eddie‘, which was worn without fail every day this summer, and notice the 2 year old version doesn’t have a chin strap, he is so used to hats now he voluntarily puts it on when we leave the house.  This beauty served us well all summer, though sadly was lost last week.

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So enter the Fall/winter 2013 version….Well I am not done yet, so that will just have to be another post altogether.  But I hope this inspires you all and gives you a  place to start with your own hat adventure.

Harvest Swap 2013

Last year at this time, fruit was falling from the trees faster than we could pick it.   The old abandoned apple across the road that was breaking bows under the juicy weight now stands solemn with one lonely apple.  Noticing these cycles just reminds me that there are fruit years and there are root years, there are times to work outward and times to go in, as is said through many faiths, there is an in breath and an out breath to all life, each as important as the other.  I may miss the baskets overflowing with sun ripened bounty, but I am not in mourning as there are so many other things to reap and process, both inside and out this year.

digging roots

digging roots

My garden has been slower, more steady some how this year, struggling in ways, longing for more sweet rain water, but self-sufficient in other ways it hadn’t been in the past.  My composting, de- weeding, cultivation and care are now showing an independence and more resourceful roots.  inseparable am I from my eathern ground, this growth is reflected inside my own being too.   Now 2 years into motherhood and finally finding a stride, after much heavy watering and tilling up inside, this earthen woman is setting roots and showing signs of another bloom.

growing up

growing up

So in the spirit of gathering, swapping  and sharing ourselves and our harvests, as our work, our hearts our offering the Harvest Swap is on this year.  It is an opportunity to meet each other where we are, for us to gather what we have in excess and receive what we may be needing.  This effort is to celebrate the wealth we have collectively and shift ourselves from an independence to an interdependence.

gathering together

gathering together

I come forth with herbs, both wild and grown, maybe because the medicine I need is in them and encouragement to slow down the coffee pot and sip more tea!!  What is it that you have been tending and reaping this year, what do others have that you need?  Can’t wait to swap and share, grow and gather in our inner and inter wealth and gratitude.  Sign up for this year’s harvest swap here.

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“In these times of hyper capitalism, it is a radical act to harvest apples from my yard, preserve them and trade them for eggs with my neighbor down the street, to rely on each other in place of the current systems.  [The swap] stimulates the part of us that remembers those bygone times when economies of scale and self-reliance were the norm. The part of us that knows that social capital via community connections are at a premium in times of social, ecological and economic turmoil.”- Sarah Ghoirse Harvest Swap 2012

Labor of Love!!

Wild plums and Calendula

Wild plums and Calendula

Labor day has come, the end of summer, yet somehow the harvests just seems to be rolling in.  Now I have to pick daily instead of weekly and the abundance feels well-earned after a long wait.  I spend Labor Day setting up the outdoor canning station…Canning on the Coleman keeps the heat out of the house and in the yard with the rest of the radiant sunlight.

Canning Peaches on the Coleman campstove last year

Canning Peaches on the Coleman camp stove last year

The tomatoes have finally decided to show their true colors and I just have to keep up!!  The pesto is being processed by the case load in preparation for the Santa Fe Harvest Swap Oct 20th!! (Yes we are doing it again, but have yet to send out the sign up…coming soon of course!!, stay tuned) Summers gifts are carrying us into fall and I am grateful to finally have some food to put by!  Hope your summers have been generous and filled you up to carry us into the new season and may your Labors be those of love.

 

30lbs on one side 20lbs on the other!!  That's a whole lot of love!!

30lbs on one side 20lbs on the other!! That’s a whole lot of love!!

Edible Education

ImageI just thought I would share the my job at SFCC Culinary Arts Garden is going quite well. Back to school next week and the garden looks….well awesome!!  All the food is planted, cared for and harvested by the students and I and all of it goes to the Culinary Art Department for cooking classes and processed for the Student Run Cafe. I even started a blog to give it voice and scope and I am hoping to connect lots more students to growing good food this fall.  Check out the blog and if you have free time and want to learn to garden from me, volunteer afternoons are Tuesdays from 3-6pm and open to all!!  

Where to begin… by reflecting

We have been gone for 2 weeks, traveling to the verdant valleys of Vermont and Coastal Maine.  It was lush and luscious, drinking in the green and being totally present to play with my little guy and (big guy), wandering the rivers, lakes and playgrounds without a care in the world.  Now that we are home our world has transformed too, from desert dry to jungle garden green.  I am so happy to be home, feeling like this is the start of a new year, fresh and ready to begin again….but with this renewed energy just don’t know where to start…shall I prune the tomatoes, make pesto, pay the bills, write my upcoming class curriculum, …….or just finish that book I started on vacation? Well, those decisions can wait till tomorrow.  For now, just a glimpse of the places we went and the fun we had so I can savor the beauty we were blessed by and remember to savor the sweet slowness of life when you are simply taking in all in.

Jaengus just had to sit on every idle tractor in Vermont, he even founfdthis one just his size at the Von Trapp Dairy Farm

Jaengus just HAD to sit on every idle tractor in Vermont, he even found this one just his size at the Von Trapp Dairy Farm

VON TRAPP FARMSTEAD

The abundant Waitsfield Famers Market

The abundant Waitsfield Famers Market

Waitsfield Farmers Market

Every Eco- Homemakers dream- Hand Made clothes pins that hang on tight! Vermont Clothes Pins claimed to be the only MADE in AMERICA clothes pins left on the market- yes I did treat myself to this fine and functional gems

Every Eco- Homemakers dream- Hand Made clothes pins that hang on tight! Vermont Clothes Pins claim to be the only MADE in AMERICA clothes pins left on the market- yes I did treat myself to these fine and functional gems

VERMONT CLOTHES PINS

Jaengy found another cool piece of farm equiptment at Center for Whole Communities to sit on and take in the views

Jaengy found another cool piece of farm equiptment at Knoll Farm to sit on and take in the views

CENTER FOR WHOLE COMMUNITIES at KNOLL FARM

Our talented and hardworking new farmer friends, Helen and Stan giving a localvores tour on their new Elderberry farm- Three Springs Farm

Our talented and hardworking new farmer friends, Helen and Stan giving a localvores tour on their new Elderberry & Herb Farm- Three Springs Farm-Yes the Echinachea IS waist high!!

THREE SPRINGS FARM

Then off to Glover for world best circus in the sun- Bread & Puppet!!  Totally nostalig for me, as the last time I attended was well- half my life ago and it seemed perfectly the same- some things really shouldn't change!

Then off to Glover for world best circus in the sun- Bread & Puppet!! Totally nostalgic for me, as the last time I attended was, well,  half my life ago and it seemed perfectly the same, preserved in time, old New England hippie style- some things really shouldn’t change!

BREAD & PUPPET

Enroute we found an amazing nursey burgueing over with blooms called aptly- the 'Labor of Love'

En-route we found an amazing nursery burgeoning over with blooms called aptly
the ‘Labor of Love’- run by a woman who seriously knows her blooms

Labor of Love Landscaping

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We even made it the Atlantic to kiss the sea on Bailey Island and the Driftwood Inn

THE DRIFTWOOD INN

We were blessed with a perfect dawn over the ocean on our last day- the perfect end to end our trip and begin again, refreshed, reminded and  re-ignited

We were blessed with a perfect dawn over the ocean on our last day- the perfect end to our trip and begin again, refreshed, reminded and
re-ignited