Lettuce begin – the 2011 growing season is underway!
Check these out:
My first baby seedling shoots of 2011!
They’re Winter Gem lettuces – planted a little late in their growing window but they wouldn’t have germinated in the super cold of December.
We grew them last year too – planted about now – and they formed tasty greener-than-the-picture heads by early April – just when we wanted to start eating lots of salad but before our spring salad leaves were ready.
(I’d intended to start a batch on 1st Oct, 1st Nov, 1st Dec & 1st Jan to see where the sweet spot was for planting them and how early we could enjoy the heads – but didn’t get around to it. Maybe next year.)
I think these little tiny shoots delight me because they represent the start of the 2011 growing season – before we know it, we’ll be up to our ears in courgettes, tomatoes and all sorts of salad & greens.
After a chilly few days this week (the ground’s been frozen since about Tuesday), it’s supposed to be warming up a little over the weekend – which means, hopefully, I’ll be able to get into the garden. I’ve got a few baby fruit bushes to plant on and a couple of inherited, overgrown shrubs to pull up to replace with fruit trees/bushes.
I’m also going to try to get ahead of myself and fill lots of pots with my starting soil mix so they’re ready for seeds when the time comes. My “to plant in Feb” and “to plant in March” seed packet piles are rather extensive so any help I can give my future self will be gratefully received!
Have you started growing anything in 2011 yet? When does your growing season start?
And since at least a few of you are on t’other side of the globe so are in the opposite situation, have you been planting anything for overwintering?
Read MoreThe weekend’s pottering
Some of the things we’ve done this weekend:
- Started crocheting a new blanket – I got some “kool kotton” yarn a few months ago and think it’ll make a lovely blanket. I’m doing a granny stripe, about 5ft long — not sure I’ll have the patience to make it 5ft square (it takes nearly half an hour to do each stripe!) but if I get it to about 3ft wide, it’ll be perfect for using on the sofa. (I’ve already doubled the stripe count since I took this picture.)
- Took two boxes of books and misc stuff to the charity shop – they’ve been sat in the dumping ground on the landing for about three months. Would be nice to get that space decluttered and usable!
- Chopped down a sycamore tree – we planned to cut it down about six weeks ago when it lost the last of its leaves but weather & illness stopped us. It’s now cleared the way for an apple tree.
- Bought two blackcurrant bushes – for some reason blackcurrants have been popping up in conversations recently and I felt inspired to buy them. I’ve realised I left a few decorative shrubs in the garden last year – they can come out and be replaced with fruit bushes like these. I’m also tempted by some raspberry canes – it’s definitely going to be the year of fruit this year (or more accurately, fruit year minus one, since things will need time to get bedded in).
- Sorted out my seed box – cor, I’ve apparently got high hopes for this year! Lots o’ seeds! I’m going to try to be realistic about my space/workload – I’ll give away some seeds now and probably some seedlings too, depending on how germination goes. Some stuff needs to be started in January – so I guess I’ll do that next weekend, weather permitting.
- Restocked our spice cupboard after a trip to Pakeezah – been running low on a few things – should be good for a few months now and at a fraction of the cost if we’d bought them at one of the big three supermarkets.
- I was at a drama rehearsal until 10:30pm on Friday and John cooked spare ribs for when I finally got home – they were pretty good and we’ve got some ideas on how to make them perfect. Every now and then I get severe cravings for good ribs and up til now, they’ve been one thing we can’t really cook at home – will be good to crack them!
- Had Kheer for the first time yesterday – sweet, creamy rice pudding with cardamom and pistachios, and John thought some rose water too. Yum! Will have that again – and will see if I can work out a recipe as well.
- Finally caught up on the sleep I’ve missed out on over the last fortnight – woo!
- Got overly proud at finding 5 eggs in the nest box yesterday morning – either Lime is back laying again after her moult (unlikely at the moment) or both of the new batch Black Rocks are laying now. We’ve had 4 eggs a day for the last few days, so going up to 5 was a thrill. Just Buff – who will lay white eggs – to debut now.
Aside from that and some other good eating, it was a lazy one. Was good though :)
Read MoreMy Really Good Goals for 2011
I have set myself a list of goals for the year ahead – written up on my personal blog because they’re not all simple/DIY living related.
I did the same last year and found it useful – even if I did pretty much mentally abandon some mid-year. The most useful ones that weren’t a specific tick-off-done goal but one’s that helped shape my whole life – for example, I had a goal of “make a meal entirely out of things I’ve grown, raised, caught or killed” and in order to achieve that, I grew veg & herbs, raised chickens for the eggs and foraged for wild food.
My list is very simple/DIY living heavy this year! Here are the relevant ones:
- Increase the food output from our garden and cook a meal using things I’ve grown/raised/caught/killed completely off-grid
- Learn how to successfully take and propagate cuttings from every applicable type of perennial plant/shrub in the house/garden
- Make a piece of furniture for the house (woodworking)
- Make an entire outfit (to include conquering sewing patterns)
- Go fishing in the North Sea
- Buy no more than 12 items of clothing across the year*
- Specific food makery and/or eatery (because if I did them all separately it would take up half the list)
- Bake at least once a week
- Grow a sourdough starter and make bread from it
- Make a hard cheese
- Try ten vegetables (or veggie wild foods) that I’ve not tried before
- Build a cold smoking cabinet, try cold smoking more stuff & try hot smoking too
- Participate more in the real world – engage more with our local community and meet some internet people in real life
(* I’m going to explain this more fully tomorrow)
There were a few things I also really, really want to try but I didn’t think warranted goal status on that limited list:
- Keep records to track our usage of consumables – I mean, I want to know how many toilet rolls we use in a month, how much soap, how long it takes for us to get through a 10kg bag of rice etc. I might record absolutely everything we use for a month or so, and use that hardcore exercise to decide what is worth tracking longer term
- Have regular “eat only from the pantry & garden” weeks in the spring/summer, probably once a month
- Have more conscious “no spend” periods – minimum fortnights, possibly months, throughout the year
- Find a solution to the dog poo problem – something more useful than a cork up Lily-dog’s bum. Probably a dedicated wormery. Collect and store more rainwater for use on the garden – we can’t use the main gutter at the back for rainwater but could still collect off the greenhouse, from a gutter at the front and possibly off the extension area too. To be explored and implemented.
- Make my own soap – something that’s been nagging at me for a little while
- Make my own vinegar – for some reason, I have a really strong desire to make pineapple vinegar (probably the efficiency of using up the scraps)
- UPDATED TO ADD: Make conscious efforts to reduce food waste at home – probably a period of monitoring it closely to see what we throw out (which I’ll post on here) as well as better menu planning.
It seems like 2011 will be a busy one!
I’m hoping that the last goal – getting to know more people locally and meeting internet buddies in real life – will help me meet some of my other goals — I’d love to find mentors for some of my learning-new-skills goals. If you fancy mentoring me, let me know! :)
What have you got planned for 2011?
Read More2010 – A Really Good Year
Everyone else is doing end-of-year round-ups and it’s inspired me to do one too. Feel free to skip if you don’t like introspection ;)
While my life as a whole has been up and down (mostly up but some deep downs), 2010 has been a fantastic year from a simple/DIY living point of view.
Growing
Our first growing season in our new house, this year was one of experimentation. We had fresh produce from the garden from March through to October – and have a cupboard full of preserved goodies as well as potatoes in store. I’ve written about our growing successes and failures before – our overall output was disappointing but my, my, I learned so much. I’m pretty jazzed by the potential of what we can achieve now we know more about the conditions etc.
Chickens
Our first four chickens arrived in June and we got another four (which soon depleted to three) in November. They’ve been ace!
They’re a lot of fun – such personalities! – and the egg output has been awesome. From the day they arrived in June until the middle of December, the first four provided about 3.6 eggs a day (ie, most days one each but sometimes just three between the four of them) – they’re still laying now just less than that (especially as one has entered an early moult). The new girls have yet to start laying but hopefully they’ll start soon – and that’ll provide cover for when the rest of the originals going into moult.
Aside from the extra winter workload, I’ve been stunned by how little work they are – food & water are topped up once a day (they always have more than enough), quick visual inspection of the coop every day-ish (remove any giant piles of poo/top up straw & shavings as appropriate) and a full clean out once a week. It’s an hour a week in total, max. I do typically spend more time with them though – because as I said, they’re so much fun. Their arrival has been one of the highlights of 2010 for me.
Cooking
Read MoreSummer will come again, it will, it will
Hurrah, in the midst all this fervent frugality and frozen frigidity, I’ve been reminded that summer – and growing – will come again.
Yesterday, as the snow was coming down pretty hard, the postman delivered an parcel of live plants which I ordered back in November – a baby lingonberry bush, a baby cranberry bush and 12 strawberry runners (not pictured).
As I’m new to fruit and as it’s pretty damn chilly out there, I post an “arggh! what do I do with them?” message on Twitter and on UKVegGardeners, and the wonderful Jan told me exactly how to look after (but not molly-coddle) the strawberries. Thanks so much Jan!
I have a bit more faith in the lingonberry and cranberry making it through the winter in one piece since they’re both cold climate plants – I’m going to keep them in their current pots during this cold spell, and in the unheated sunporch rather than the greenhouse (it gets a little heat from the house but more importantly, it’ll be easier for me to keep an eye on them) and plant them into bigger containers when it gets warm enough for me go into the garden without my teeth chattering. I’m expecting a dwarf cherry tree as part of the same order – I’m kinda hoping it doesn’t arrive this side of Christmas now as that’ll involve digging out a big old shrub thing — not going to happen in this weather!
As well as those arriving, on Wednesday, my also-ordered-weeks-ago oyster mushroom dowel spores. I’m very excited about these – I’ve spent the last year reading and learning a lot about finding and identifying wild mushrooms, but not finding a whole lot of edibles near here. These will allow me to cultivate some of our own – and hopefully further utilise the shaded far end of our garden. Although as it’s currently being used as part log store/part bonfire-in-progress, I’m going to have to clearly mark my inseminated logs!
Speaking of which, I have to find some logs for inseminating – they need to be a hardwood, ideally oak, beech or birch, about 10-15cm in diameter and cut within the last six weeks or so. I’d hoped I could use sycamore as we have several thin-and-pointless sycamores that I could cull but apparently sycamore isn’t advised. I think the neighbours have a silly, never-going-to-grow-up silver birch in the neglected bit of their garden so I might ask if I could have in return for the promise of mushrooms at a later date.
(In other food-from-the-garden related news, the chickens seem to have succumbed to the winter – we’re only getting one or two a day from the four layers now, and the new girls still haven’t offered up anything, not even a wonky shelled one, even though they’re probably about 21 weeks old now. (They’re noticeably bigger than when we go them.) I’m going to give the original girls a good fondle this weekend to make sure nothing is wrong with them physically – I don’t think there is, just the lack of light. Hopefully they’ll pick up again as the days start lengthening.)
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