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Showing posts from October, 2020

2020 - A great year for potato

I have been growing potatoes for 3 years now and 2020 was just off the charts with production. These boxes of potato were 1/4th of what we harvested this year: Kennebec, French fingerling and Lindtzer. Delicious, home-bred potatoes!   As usual I sourced a lot of different breeds of potatoes from Eagle Creek Farm . They have a ridiculously wide selection and you are just spoiled for choice. As I am learning, I keep ordering different types, but I can confidently say I have a few favorites.  The packages with the precious load in them! Kennebec stores well and tastes great. It also yields me huge tubers. Kennebec and Norland give me the best yield, one seed potato being able to produce sometimes 10 tubers on its own. But Norland does not store well, so it is a delight to eat and in 3 months it is trying to sprout everywhere in your kitchen and pantry! Better eat it fresh. In second place comes the fingerlings. Fingerling potatoes are usually waxy, a great type for salads, soups ...

Final summer harvest

September 2020 experienced 3 days of frost! That really does signal fall, together with those lovely days of sunny 14 degrees and a cold wind that can chill our hearts. The inevitable conclusion is to start closing for summer crops, because choices have to be made and I am so bad at that. I should have cut my bean plants much earlier to give some carrots more light and space, but the plants were so vigorous! I cannot just kill them... Hopefully the hidden carrots will pick up fast It took me a full day to go around the garden to harvest and remove plants, pile them in the compost. And I am glad I did it since the very next day, a new frost advisory came and it was a true frost, as per crystal tips on top of o my brussels sprouts. It never gets old to take a stroll into my yard and come back with fresh produce! A great summer mix to eat fresh!   The front yard is now the spot that receives most hours of sunlight and unsurprisingly the production continues. Fall crops are in full p...