Thursday, May 27, 2010

Peas and Potatoes

Peas, peas, glorious peas! I am suddenly grateful the peas at the Druid Hill garden were eaten as the Fox St. peas have completely exploded. There are still more than a few plants blooming too, so if we don't destroy them picking the current crop, we might get another good-sized one. If we do demolish them (or decide we simply have had enough peas), they'll come out, and cucumbers and more beans will go in. I guess it's time to really hurry through our canned beans from last year.

And now, on to the potatoes. Neither of us have tried to grow potatoes before, but a few people at the Fox St. garden did last year, and it seemed easy enough. It was also hugely gratifying to pull the plants up too. So much so, in fact, that I have trouble trying not to peek (rip up and ruin, in other words) at our current potatoes. If I remember correctly, we chose the caribe and purple viking potatoes to begin with. According to Landreth's instructions the dirt should be raised around the plants after they are something like 8" tall, then again after they've grown a bit. Apparently this prevents the potatoes from growing out of the dirt. We are not sure if it actually encourages greater potato production by increasing root growth from the now-buried stem, but we're hoping that's true. Depending on how things go this year, we will do the experiment next year and just not bury a plant or two. As of today, the potato plants are huge, and are beginning to flower. I guess in a few weeks we could harvest baby potatoes, but for full-size ones we'll have to wait quite a bit longer. Might have to rip a plant up anyway just to see how they're doing...
While I'm on the subject of dirt, E and I recently realized that extra dirt is hard to find in the city. When you have a yard, you dig up some dirt, throw it on your potatoes, and there you go. When you don't have a yard (or a large enough yard, I guess), you go buy dirt from Home Depot (yeah, actually *pay* for dirt), bring it home in the truck, then dump it on your potatoes. Getting rid of dirt is also surprisingly difficult. So far, no solid plan there, except for some vague idea of a dirt swap between the chickens' bed and the garden. That, and perhaps driving the extra dirt to Mavid's.

Reminders:
  • Do the experiment!
  • Sweet potatoes

2 comments:

  1. you guys are WAAAAAAy ahead of us. We barely have anything in the ground... a few lettuce plants... onions... and whatever made it over from last year (our kale plant has gone gang busters!)

    But if you need dirt come on over!!! it's not the best quality but it's free!!! oh and we'd LOVE to see you guys!

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  2. We have dirt, straight from the woods and compost. It is great. we constantly add/remove. Help yourselves...Let us know if you want to come and we will leave orange flags at dirt sites.

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