After three nights of three hour boiling sessions, we ended up with about a gallon of sugary water. From there, the operation heading inside and the filtering and refining happened.
Monday, March 30, 2009
Sweet!
Monday, March 23, 2009
Asparagus bed under construction
The rock wall behind it (foreground) was completely redone by Pat and me, which was good because I was able to expand my bed outward another foot or so. Hopefully when we get out of these unseasonably cold temperatures early this week, I'll be able to build a rock wall in the front and finish prepping the soil. Asparagus loves basic soil, so I limed the hell out of it and ended up wheel barreling in four loads full of sand from another bed we built last year. That bed was put in near where our shed is (background of above picture) and the soil there is very sandy from when they built it. So, I moved some of that vegetable hating sandy soil and relocated it for my sand loving asparagus. I'll replace the soil I 'stole' with better loam later in the spring.
I ended up buying 25 - one year Jersey Giant roots from Burpee for $29. I figure with shipping that is only about $1.50 per plant. I'm sure a few will die, so I'll be happy with twenty plants. I could have gone with the cheaper Mary Washington variety, but those are more prone to fusarium wilt and root rot and only yield about half the Jersey variety does. When the roots arrive in a few weeks, I should have the bed done and the soil prepped. In the meantime, I'll have the enjoy waiting for the two surviving roots to sends up shoots.
Sunday, March 22, 2009
Spring has sprung
The raised rock garden bed they are in was built last fall - it was the last larger project of the season. I bought the two dozen bulbs at Wal-mart and planted them in October. They seemed to have all survived the sub -10 weather we had on a couple nights this past winter. No doubt the multiple inches of snow that were on them throughout the winter provided enough insulation to protect them.
It is amazing to me how well snow insulates. Last spring I planted a couple rows of carrots and I was able to dig them up all winter long - the ground was barely frozen under the snow. I'm planning on keeping the carrots underground again this next winter to harvest throughout the season - I just need to better mark where they were. One cold afternoon in January I was digging where I thought they were only to find out I missed them by a foot - no fun when it was only 10 degrees out. I was very surprised how well they kept - they cooked up great too.
Next posting - Asparagus