We are eating like royalty, and very, very local. The chard (some of you call it silverbeet) is gorgeous and tasty, the onions are bulbing nicely, and we picked our first little mess of carrots. Today at lunch we had green beans, onions and potatoes, all together in one pot, and all from our garden. We ate the first zucchini of the season yesterday. The 'good' apricot tree began dropping fruit this week. We have eaten plenty, plus I've put up 3 jars of apricot and 3 apricot-almond jam, I have my 2nd batch of 'cots in the dehydrator, we have a bottle of apricot syrup (I'm thinking cornmeal waffles for that!) and ice cube trays of pulp for smoothies! Our potato plants are gorgeous, and nothing is bothering them (yay!). Well, nothing except me. I side-dug a few tubers for our lunch today, but I'll try to leave the rest of them alone until they are actually ready. (It was totally worth it, though!)
My oldest lettuce is starting to bolt, but fear not! I have baby lettuces filling in quite nicely. I pulled up the peas last week and planted spinach, more chard, more carrots, as well as some late green beans, cabbage and broccoli. It's all sprouting now, so if the blizzards wait until November, I should be able to put up a lot of yummy stuff!
Coming soon...we have wee cucumbers on the vine, and a watermelon the size of a marble! The other melons are blossoming, so they'll be along soon. Yellow squash and patty pans are just starting to blossom, so they should be here in a week or two. The winter squashes are starting to form and the corn is tassling. There are green tomatoes on all the plants. I have San Marzanos that look wonderful, a few roma plants, a jellybean hybrid (Kitteninhat insisted on getting them because they're called 'jelly bean') and, best of all, the Red Currant tomatoes. They are so wee, so sweet, and they are my most favorite of all! Also, the early cabbage is heading, the broccoli is starting to form heads, and the 2nd planting of greenbeans is starting to bloom.
In the 'I'm so disappointed' department, I don't have a pepper plant to my name. It's embarrassing, living in the Southwest, and not being able to grow peppers, but every year, I fail with them. Mleh. Also, I tried blackeye peas this year - got seed from my aunt in KY. They came up fast, but the leaves are wrinkly! Every new leaf that comes on, same thing. I don't remember that from when I was a kid. I wonder if it's the altitude. They are growing, though, so maybe it'll all work out. I hope I don't get wrinkly peas!
So...anyone else here with a garden? How is yours doing?
