Danielle Meitiv's Barefoot Blog

Writing and life… without shoes


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I’m Diggin Friday: Squash Happens (a lot!)

Welcome to I’m Diggin’ Friday, a weekly feature here at Danielle Meitiv’s Barefoot Blog that explores the ins and outs of Barefoot Gardening, a fun, family-friendly, low-stress way to grow fresh produce right at home!

As any home veggie gardener knows, when squash happens, it REALLY happens. That is to say, unlike eggplants or bell peppers, which produce in modest amounts, when you plant squash you almost always get more that you bargained for.

Pumpkin on the walkway

Pumpkin plants spilling onto the path and the first orange pumpkin of the year.

Now, this isn’t necessarily a bad thing. Barefoot gardening is all about getting the most food and fun out of the least amount of effort. Squash definitely fits the bill, especially summer squash. They’re easy to grow from seed and have relatively few pests.

(I’ve had problems with squash vine borers wiping out my plants in August, but I got a good harvest before then).

Squash are members of the cucurbit family, which includes cucumbers, cantelopes and melons. There are two basic types of squash: summer and winter. They’re named not for when they grow – both types need warm summer weather to grow and ripen – but for when you eat them.

Summertime – and the squash is prolific

Summer squash include the “soft” squashes like zucchini, patty pan and yellow crookneck. These kinds don’t store well unless you freeze them. They are super easy to grow and VERY prolific.

Let me repeat that for those of you who are tempted to rush out and plant two or more plants: they are VERY prolific.  Even a family of dedicated veggie-eaters couldn’t eat the number of zucchinis that 3+ plants would provide. Ratatouille, zucchini bread, stir fries and the like are nice – but everyday???

Sweet potato and summer squash foliage

The really large leaves closest to the hose and rain barrel are summer squash plants. (The rest are sweet potato vines).

Also, they grow so fast that the cute 2″ long zucchini you admired last week will be a 18″ long club as thick as your calf if you so much as look away. So whatever you do, don’t blink!

(Bonus points to the geeks who can ID that reference).

That said, I planted some in my garden this year, after swearing that I wouldn’t because I get dozens from our two CSA shares every summer. They grow so fast and produce so much they make you feel like a freaking gardening genius!

(More on CSAs or community-supported agriculture in a future post. Summary: They’re AMAZING!)

Squash for fair weather OR foul

Winter squash are the hard-skinned varieties, which can be stored for months. There are dozens of varieties including : butternut, acorn, delicata, spaghetti and of course pumpkins.

Four pumpkins hiding

Can you spot the four pumpkins in this picture?

These guys take a lot longer to grow and are usually not as prolific as their summer cousins, but their still pretty easy and totally worth it if you have the space – they’re vines tend to spread out, unless you plant a variety that is specifically bred to stay contained.

Come Halloween, what could be more fun than decorating a pumpkin you grew yourself?!

I did not plant ANY pumpkins this year.  I planted a few butternut and delicata seeds, but I knowing that pumpkins took up more room than I was willing to give them, I held off.

This morning I counted seven soccerball-sized pumpkins in various shades of green and orange and at least half-dozen tiny ones. They’re growing beneath platter-sized leaves on vines a half-dozen feet long or more in two different beds.

Clearly, it was not up to me.

The eggplant and potato beds

On the right: volunteer squash (and tomatoes) taking over the potato beds. Luckily the last spuds are ready for harvest.

No, my family did not sneak out in the middle of the night and sprinkle pumpkins seeds liberally throughout the garden.  They’re ALL volunteers – plants that came up on their own because their seeds were dropped on the ground sometime between last fall and this summer.

These particular seeds came from a pumpkin that my son brought home from a school trip to a you-pick farm last fall.  We kept it on the porch until it started to get soft, then tossed it in the compost pile.

Now its progeny are taking over my yard. I even found one climbing up a weigela bush and it’s already set a little pumpkin

A pumpkin plant on a bush

A pumpkin plant growing up a bush! Note the little pumpkin already forming at the base of the flower.

The vine won’t be able to support a full-sized pumpkin, but I’ve read about fashioning a sling from an onion bag or an old pair of stockings. (I’ll let you know how that goes).

I’m not really a big fan of pumpkin pie, so what am I going to do with all these pumpkins?

The ones that are babies now will be perfect size for carving come October.

The others? We’ll eat them, of course, but since they store well, we can do so over a number of months. Whew!

When they think “pumpkin”, most people think of only sweet dishes. But pumpkin and other winter squash because a favored part of my diet when I had an Afghani dish that features pumpkin cooked in olive oil, garlic and salt.

My husband also makes a great millet and pumpkin dish.

Basically, pumpkin can be used in any recipe that calls for squash. Try it in a pureed curried squash soup. Delish!

How does your garden grow?

Confession time: have you ever gone crazy with the squash? Had so many you were dropping them on your neighbors porches in the dead of night, slipping them into open car windows? Or maybe you’ve had the opposite problem: vine borers or some other pest doing away with your crop before the first zucchini could make an appearance.

Let us know – in the comments below!

I’m also open to any all and garden questions. If I don’t know the answer I’ll try to find someone who does. Those also go in the comments below.

A hardy thanks to all the folks who have piped up so far – keep those questions and blog topic suggestions coming!

BONUS: July Poster Giveaway

This month’s special giveaway is this fabulous out-of-print NOAA poster, Marine Mammals of the Western Hemisphere. Everyone who leaves a comment between now and the middle of July gets one entry in the drawing. Link to this site on your blog and get two entries. Get your comments in now!

Danielle Meitiv is a writer, marine science geek, gardener and mother who goes barefoot whenever possible. Danielle is also a huge fan and sales affiliate for Holly Lisle’s online courses: How to Think Sideways: Career Survival School for Writers, and How to Revise Your Novel. Follow @Danielle_Meitiv on Twitter, and on Facebook: Danielle Meitiv’s Barefoot Blog, and Danielle Meitiv.

 


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I’m Diggin’ Friday: Digging Potatoes, Multiplying Tomatoes and a Devilish Book Party!

Digging potatoes: purple, red and gold

The first potato harvest came up this week! I didn’t intend to dig them up, although there were signs some of the plants were ready (past flowering and starting to brown).

I was reweaving the soaker hose through the bed when I saw a smooth purplish thing sticking out of the dirt. At first I thought it was a kid’s toy.

Some digging brought up more than two buckets full of purple, red and golden tomatoes!  I was only planning to dig up one bucketful but when the kids saw them, they insisted on digging some, too.

Eating our new spuds!

My daughter enjoying new potatoes with dill and garlic - all grown in our garden!

We’ll be eating potatoes for weeks to come. (Months if we don’t eat them all ASAP. When their skins are intact – that is when you don’t have a 3- and 6-and-a-half year old helping you dig them up – they store very well).

This is my first successful year growing spuds.  Tried last year but put them into the ground way too late (late April through early June). The temperature was too much for them in the steamy DC region: the plants wilted and the seed potatoes turned into gooey gummy blobs – gross!

White potatoes like to have “cold feet” – they need cool soil temperatures to develop well. This year I started putting them out the week of St. Patrick’s Day and finished by the end of March. Even my latest potatoes will be ready by mid-July.

Multiplying Tomatoes

Planting potatoes early also means that their beds will be available next month for more plants. I confessed to my husband that I didn’t know what to plant there and he looked at me with an indulgent smile, shook his head and said: “tomatoes, of course.”

A new tomato sucker - soon to be a new plant!

A new tomato sucker - soon to be a new plant!

Of course and not just because we love tomatoes.  From years of experience he knows that regardless of how many tomato plants I start with, dozens will be producing fruit by summer’s end. So how do these amazing plants multiple across the yard?

Suckers! (no that’s not an insult).

A sucker is the little plant that starts from notch between a leaf and the main stem. I’m a  big fan of removing these and trimming my plants  down to one or two stems, for ease of harvesting, to keep them upright, and to prevent them from becoming too bushy.

(This is true only for indeterminate tomatoes, the kind that will grow long rambling vines all summer. Check your seed packet or plant label or ask at the nursery or garden center if you’re not sure which kind you have).

Summer in my area can be very humid. Trimming the tomatoes helps air circulate around the vines, reducing mold and generally keeping the plants healthy. Trimming also results in lots of suckers that can be sprouted and planted to produce lots more tomatoes!

Tomatoes wirh small roots

These tomato plants are sprouting new roots after a week in water.

You can remove the suckers with clippers or pinch the small ones off with your fingers. Put them in some water. I prefer a glass jar so I can see the roots develop.

Some folks say that you don’t need to do this, they’ll just develop roots in the ground.  I tried that last year with only limited success.

Suckers are an important part of the barefoot garden – super easy to propagate easy and free! So pinch off those suckers and grow yourself some new plants.

A devilish party

This coming Tuesday, June 21st, YOU are invited to a devilish celebration, a worldwide party to celebrate the launch of the latest SIGMA Force novel, The Devil Colony, by fantabulous New York Times bestselling author James Rollins.

The Devil Colony is #7 in the SIGMA Force series, which revolves around a division of highly trained operatives and  expert scientists whose primary focus is fighting terrorism and protecting sensitive and confidential information.

The SIGMA series includes Map of Bones (May, 2005), Black Order (June, 2006), The Judas Strain (July, 2007), The Last Oracle (June, 2008), and The Doomsday Key (June, 2009).

jamesrollinsdevilcolonypartySo where’s the party? Online! Rollin fans everywhere will gather for twenty-four hours on Twitter under the hashtag #DevilColony. What’s the party’s theme?  You guessed it – Devil!

Dress fancy or put on your tails and horn,s and post pictures  of your devilishness online. Eat deviled eggs, create devilish cocktails for you and yours, and let us know!

James will stop by throughout the day (and night!) to chat with fans. He’ll check out the pictures, selecting favorites to post on his site’s Wall of Fame.  The best pictures will win a big mystery prize!

Never attended a cyber-party? Here’s your chance! Head on over to #DevilColony on Tuesday to see what it’s all about.

To get into the party spirit, follow @jamesrollins on Twitter. and check out this great interview between social media maven Kristen Lamb and Rollins right here.

See you on Tuesday!

BONUS

This month’s special giveaway is this fabulous out-of-print NOAA poster, Marine Mammals of the Western Hemisphere. Everyone who leaves a comment between now and the middle of July gets one entry in the drawing. Link to this site on your blog and get two entries. Get your comments in now!

Danielle Meitiv is a writer, marine science geek, gardener and mother who goes barefoot whenever possible. Danielle is also a huge fan and sales affiliate for Holly Lisle’s online courses: How to Think Sideways: Career Survival School for Writers, and How to Revise Your Novel. Follow @Danielle_Meitiv on Twitter, and on Facebook: Danielle Meitiv’s Barefoot Blog, and Danielle Meitiv.


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I’m Diggin Friday: Strawberry Patch Play-By-Play

I’m digging this Friday. Literally. I started a post early this morning, but took a break to work in the garden before it got too hot. It’s been in the upper nineties all week, with record-breaking temperatures over a hundred for the last two days. Today’s forecast is “only” for the low nineties and I’m praying that the promised rain really comes.

My goal was to prepare a bed for my four new strawberry plants. We already have a strawberry bed on the other side of the house, started last summer with just four little plants from a friend’s garden. (Well, six originally but two died). Those plants produced tiny, very sweet strawberries that were best right off the vine – so that’s how we ate them! They’re just now reaching the end of their harvest, but man, was it a good one.

In addition to those yummy beauties, we wanted some larger strawberries that we could freeze or make into jam. (As if they would last in my house without being eaten! But one can always hope.) Since I was already at the farmer’s market for some pepper, tomato and eggplant plants – you can read this post about my poor seedlings to learn why – I picked up some strawberry plants as well.

A big thank you to the wonderful folks at Waterpenny Farm in Virginia for hooking me up with some great plants this year. (Check out their website to find out what a waterpenny is and why they chose that name for their farm).

It took me a week of wandering around my yard to find the perfect spot for my new strawberry venture.  No, not because my property is that big but rather because it is so small.

Strawberries are perennials – whatever real estate I gave over to them would be out of the annual rotation for good. And since they like sun, that meant giving up prime garden space.

Or creating it.

The perfect spot

Bare patch in front of the rain barrel

I found the perfect spot. It was a weedy patch between the sweet potatoes and a shrub that now has lots of sun under it, thanks to the large branch that Mother Nature took off during a storm last winter. It’s too small and inconvenient to use as a regular part of the garden rotation, but perfect for establishing a nice patch of strawberries.

I started by loosening the soil with a garden fork, one of my favorite garden tools. This part isn’t totally necessary but I wanted to be sure to get out the roots of some vines that liked to climb up the shrub. They’d been annoying me for a while and I didn’t want them bugging my new strawberries.

Next, I wet the ground thoroughly. (See the rain barrel in the back – convenient, eh?) Over the damp soil I laid a thick layer of newspapers (6-10 sheets) to smother weeds and create some great habitat for earthworms. Some folks suggest wetting the pages first so they’re easier to handle and don’t blow away, but I didn’t bother. (Translation: I forgot).

I covered the newsprint with some rich yummy soil and…wait, you’re wondering where the rich yummy came from? Ah, so you noticed the baked clay in the early photos. Yeah, it’s true. In Maryland you either hand sand or clay and I’m stuck with the latter. But that hasn’t stopped me from getting lots of great produce through cheap barefoot gardening (a redundant phrase, BTW – barefoot gardening is all about being cheap. And lazy :-) ).

Getting good soil

If you don’t have good soil – import it! Many towns and counties sell compost and mulch dirt cheap. What did you think they did with all the leaves they collect from your curb every year?

I get mine from neighboring Prince George’s for $20/cubic yard plus delivery – last year that amounted to $75 and a HUGE pile in my driveway that I’m only now using up. Even if you don’t want that much, local garden shops will often carry the local stuff in bags.

It’s wonderful rich sifted compost that’s broken down so far that it’s basically soil. And that’s how I use it. So, as I was saying, I hauled a wheelbarrow of the stuff over and raked it over the paper. How thick? 4-6″ for small plants, up to 12″ for big guys with deep roots, like cabbages.

I used about 4″ because that’s how much there was when I spread the wheelbarrows’ contents. (Did I mention that I’m a lazy gardener?) Then I put the plants in, spaced about 12″ from one another. Over the summer, they’ll send out little runners and fill in the space between them with new plants!

Transplanting

A note about transplanting: when I pop the pants out of their little black plastic pots, I like to loosen the soil a bit before putting it into the ground – just to give the roots a little space. Then I fill in the hole and make a little well around it to catch the water. This is especially important in this spot, which is on a bit of an incline.

Completed strawberry patch with mulchFinally, I got a bucketful of wood mulch and covered the whole patch, so it wouldn’t dry out. Many counties also sell leaf mulch, but we make our own. Given the amount of shrubs and trees we trim, my husband decided to invest in a second-hand chipper we found on Craigslist.  It’s definitely not a requirement in the barefoot garden – rather one of those fun little extras.

Robin in the sweet potato patch

The whole process, from garden fork to mulch took less than an hour, including filling the wheelbarrow and pausing to turn the drip hose on the potato bins.

While I was working, this robin kept stopping by to check on my progress. Clever bird knew that digging humans and freshly-turned soil meant yummy worms and grubs coming to the surface. Help yourself!

Sheet mulching

Sheet mulching is a wonderful technique that is a mainstay of every barefoot garden. You don’t even have to dig up the grass or weeds! My husband laid whole sections of newspaper right on top of a section of lawn last year and now it’s growing peppers and tomatoes! Only use the black and white pages (remember this is for food plants – the black ink is soy based and safe. who knows what’s in the colored ink).

I learned about sheet mulching and other wonderfully lazy gardening techniques from Ruth Stout, the grandmother of barefoot gardening. Her classic book, “Gardening Without Work,” is out of print, but Mother Earth News published an excerpt, which you can read here.

(Ruth took barefoot gardening to a whole new level, having tended her yard au natural – a technique I would not recommend without a lot of sunscreen and very tolerant neighbors). Ruth died in 1980 at the ripe old age of 96, so maybe she knew something we didn’t, eh?

How does YOUR garden grow?

Setting out plants? Establishing a new bed? Gardening in the buff?  Let us know in the comments below!

Danielle Meitiv is a writer, marine science geek, gardener and mother who goes barefoot whenever possible. Danielle is also a huge fan and sales affiliate for Holly Lisle’s online courses: How to Think Sideways: Career Survival School for Writers, and How to Revise Your Novel. Follow @Danielle_Meitiv on Twitter, and on Facebook: Danielle Meitiv’s Barefoot Blog, and Danielle Meitiv.

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