Sunday, February 27, 2011

Last minute freeze


Well, Vancouver woke up to snow again today. Snow is pretty rare here, usually, and normally not so late into the winter. This snow most likely has damaged many overwintered plants, because they would have already come out of dormancy and started growing by now. I will be watching with curiosity, which ones come back to life and which ones falter.
Weather events like this weeks makes me begin to think about how I would feed myself, and my family, if we didn't have access to cheap imported foods. Our current diet is so conditioned by the fact that "its summer on the other side of the world," this morning for breakfast we had bananas from Ecuador, grapefruit from Florida, green tea from China, and pancake mix from who knows where. Other than some of our left over frozen garden pumpkin, the only strictly Canadian thing on the table was Maple syrup, and that still had to cross the continent to reach us on the West Coast. Myself and many people around the world have been thinking about these issues recently, and we benefit from a healthy local food movement because of it. But, it we actually had to put our food security system to the test, especially this time of year, I suspect that more than just our taste buds would suffer.
Historically, spring famines were a significant worry and incentive to try to put away enough in the fall, but weather and nature are unpredictable, and even with the best intentions some times families would starve. And this was in the times when these people knew how their food was made and where it came from.

Saturday, February 26, 2011

The War on Lawn

As the winter winds down many lawns in Vancouver look like they've been dug under, as if they're all going to be turned into garden beds soon.

But, of course that is hopeful thinking and really its the birds, raccoons and squirrels tearing up the grass to eat the grub of the English Chafer beetle.

It is kind of too bad though, I'd much rather see winter veg growing here than this half effective chicken wire mulch. Oh well...


Friday, February 25, 2011

The 2011 Seed Trials

Remember, way back in the fall, when I put so much effort into saving and storing some seeds, well now I put them to the test, and see if I did it right, if they are still alive and will they grow?
To do this trial I used a recycled plastic asian pear container, that was too nice to just toss. It has eight compartments and a lid that snapped shut. I lined every compartment with moist tissue, and then labeled each compartment with the variety of seed that they are to hold, and added the seeds, 10 to a compartment for the smaller seeds, 5 to a compartment for the large ones. I sprayed them with more water and worked to keep them moist for the next two weeks.
After two weeks I check on them and count the number of sprouted seed to the number of unsprouted seeds to obtain my germination percentage.
Giant Sunflowers, that I saved from a flower in the park across the street from my house
4/5, or 80%
Quinoa, from what I could salvage from the crop in my backyard
10/10 or 100% (but I wouldn't bet on it in the field)
Chiapas Wild tomatoes, the first attempt to save tomato seeds
0/10 or 0% boo!

Basil, from my own pot in the backyard
0/10 or 0%, but Basil takes longer that two weeks to sprout, or Im hopeful still
Ardwyna Paste, that lovely paste tomato that lived through the terrible tomato year
8/10 or 80%, trying this one again
Zebra Green tomato, from a tomato I bought at a Farmers Market
0/10 or 0%, so much for free seed while enjoying a salad, may try it again
Black beans, from my garden
1/5 or 20%
Flax, from my garden, 
10/10 or 100% I loved how simple it was to grow, its gonna make a comeback this year too.

I'm a little sad that there were so many failures, but this is a skill that I think will take a few years to get right, I'm looking forward to seeing my results next year.

Tuesday, February 22, 2011

Winter Planning


I've been enjoying planning the garden for the summer, working with what is already planted, what I already have to plant, and what I absolutely need to try planting (peppers, this year.)
I buy predominantly from two different seed companies, WestCoast Seeds and SaltSpring Seeds and love reading a wide variety of gardening and agricultural books. Then I brainstorm and write down all my ideas into my garden journal, which helps me plan my planting schedule and also helps me determine what should go where.