Tag Archives: Yukon Golds

Sweet Corn, Blueberries, and Taters

I planted corn this spring in my little greenhouse to get the earliest start I could in hopes of beating the expected mid July stinkbug invasion of my garden. I left some in the greenhouse, hoping that if all else failed, I could close it up and foil the bugs that way. The corn transplanted quite well into the garden rows, without any setback at all, and grew better out there than what I left under plastic. We have had so much rain this season that it could not help but grow well. We put cardboard down between the rows to keep the weeds down and covered it with the chicken yard and horse barn cleanings for mulch and fertilizer. We ate our first corn June 28th and it got better and

Corn on the young side
Corn on the young side

better. It was a little on the young side the first night. We had to leave for the family vacation on July 4th and I spent the evening of July 3rd, steaming, cutting and freezing all that was ready, which amounted to only 5 quart size freezer bags. Lots of ears were still coming on out in the garden though and I really hated to leave it. Who plans vacations in the middle of summer harvest? Luckily, after 6 days away, the corn was still good. It had been cool the whole time and slowed it down some. So we got to eat corn every night for dinner from the 11th through the 18th and I gave a few dozen ears to friends too.

Fresh Corn Ready to Eat
Fresh Corn Ready to Eat

Our tomatoes are still not ready since I did not push them, but I got some tasty homegrown ones from a stand on the way home from work. You have to have fresh tomatoes with fresh sweet corn. There is nothing better. Our yellow squash is ready now too , along with peppers and green beans. The last two years I have not been able to get enough green beans to can because the stinkbugs got to them first. Yesterday, I put up 14 quarts and there is a big bag in the fridge to eat fresh. Perfect, unmarred, long straight green beans. Yum.
The potatoes I planted in the pallet bins grew way too fast for me to keep up with burying them every time they poked through the soil and I was worried it might not work at all, considering how close I planted them, so I also planted some rows in the garden. I used the left over Yukon Golds from last year that had sprouts about a foot long and planted them whole. They were mostly small ones. I always use the biggest prettiest first. They are so much easier to make a meal with. I am going to step out there right now and see if we have any taters yet. Even though I am clean and cool and it is really hot and humid out there. Just a quick check. Be right back…
OK, so the taters in the garden rows seemed to have done really well. I just pulled up the remains of one plant and brought in 2 good sized ones and left the other 3 that I could see poking up down in there. The bins aren’t looking too good. I found some small red ones in bin number 3, but when I poked into bins 1 and 2 where the Yukon Golds were, I came up empty. I will check back later since I was not wanting to mess with the wet soil much and it is miserable out there right now. They may have rotted with all this rain.
The blueberries have been producing pretty well but are about done

Blueberries
Blueberries

now. We froze 8 gallon bags and have been eating a lot of fresh ones for breakfast. I lost a couple of plants, maybe to the rough winter we had, maybe to the Ph getting too high. I need to check it again and will probably need to add some sulphur to bring it back down. They are under planted with strawberries and we were able to freeze a lot of them. I have not counted the bags but the freezer down in the basement is very full. I freeze them on cookie trays and then bag them into gallon bags so they don’t stick together and you can pour out what you need each time. We use them for breakfast smoothies every morning. I also made a batch of low sugar jam.

Strawberry Jam, Low sugar
Strawberry Jam, Low sugar

The blueberries mostly get dropped in hotcakes and local Maple syrup for French toast.
Our sugar snaps did well this year too and are also all gone. I don’t like them frozen or canned so we eat them all fresh and gave away the extras. I dip them in Humus for lunch and that along with a hardboiled homegrown egg makes a pretty good meal. Sometimes I add some cheese and crackers or some nuts.
The chickens are laying about a dozen eggs a day (that I find, anyway). They should be laying more but it does not bother me. We have plenty and I sell the extras to folks nearby. It looks like there may be a few hens missing and some of them are getting a few years on them. I only count them when they are roosting and there are at least a few that roost up on the wire under the main roof. It is possible that a fox has picked off a few (without my wonderful, useful dogs noticing) but as long as we have enough I will not worry too much. We have chicken fed fox around here sometimes. Just doing my part for the wildlife. Usually, when I clean out the freezer at the end of each winter (which I have neglected to do so far this year) I will throw any freezer burned old venison out by the fox holes in the fence line. They have plenty of dens nearby and usually need extra food for the kits in early spring. I know one woman who used to put wormer in her fox feedings to help them that way. One of my dogs got in a tussle with a fox a few years ago and caught sarcophagal mange from it. The poor dog had to be dipped in a smelly lime sulphur mixture weekly for 6 weeks. No one would go near him, he smelled so bad, and he got depressed. Eventually it wore off and it did cure the mange. Maybe that is why he doesn’t do all that great of a job keeping the foxes away these days.

Growing
Growing

July always makes me remember how impossible it is for me to keep up with the rampant growth of my gardens and pastures. In the spring it seems like it might be possible to keep it all weed free and under control, but by mid July, I can no longer pretend. The good thing is that no matter how weedy it gets, I always seem to get what I need out of it. And then there is next year, when I will undoubtedly try again.

-Wendy lee

Writing at https://www.edgewisewoods.com

Planting Potatoes in a New Way -March 22, 2015

I have decided to try, once again, to make gardening a little easier on us this year.

Wheelbarrow and Bins
Wheelbarrow and Bins

I hope it works. I have given over more space to the blueberry/strawberry patch the last couple of years and space is getting tight in the garden, which is already plenty big enough, in terms of taking care of it. We always try to grow enough potatoes for the entire year and they take up a lot of room grown in the 10-12 single rows.  It is also a lot of hard work to keep them weeded and hilled up and then digging them up

Last Years Potato Patch
Last Years Potato Patch

at the end of the season. I have been using cardboard between the rows as mulch and covering that with barn cleanings and we had a great crop in 2014.
I have been reading about growing various vegetables vertically instead, which seems like a great idea because it will make them easier to dig and also less prone to being smothered with weeds, besides taking up less space in the garden. So today, I hauled out some old pallets from the front barn and tied them together with bailing twine to form two bins out in the garden. I loaded each bin with a wheelbarrow load of composted barn cleanings and dropped hay and set the already sprouted taters on top, rather thickly.

Sprouted Taters Laid Out
Sprouted Taters Laid Out

Then I covered them with another load of fairly dry chicken bedding. The plan is to keep adding soil, compost to cover the potatoes as they grow, so that they grow a very long stem with space for the tubers all along it. We should be able to harvest a lot of potatoes in a much smaller space by going up instead of each plant only making a few in the shallow space of the rows.

We always plant Yukon Golds, they are the best tasting potato I have found and we had enough left from last year so we don’t have to buy any. However, from what I have been reading it looks like Yukons are not the best choice for growing vertically, as they are “determinate” and won’t produce spuds the entire length of the buried plant

Potato Bins Ready
Potato Bins Ready

stem as I had hoped. So, it looks like I will have to buy some seed potatoes of another variety after all and plant a third bin, just in case. They will

still take up far less room than usual and we will just have to see how it goes.

-Wendy lee,  writing at:     https://www.edgewisewoods.com

Some useful links:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yukon_Gold_potato
www.motherearthnews.com/diy/no-space-potato-barrel-

Yard, Garden and Road Work at Edgewise Woods

Yard, Garden and Road Work at Edgewise Woods

Wendy lee Maddox – March 23, 2014, writing at edgewisewoods.com

It has been a productive few days. After digging up and moving all the daffodils last weekend we were finally ready to have some topsoil brought in to raise that bed. The topography had changed during the construction we had done on the house back in 2004 and water had been pooling there ever since. I could not get it delivered on short notice last weekend so set up a time this past Friday for them to come. I wanted to raise the bed at least a foot and it is about thirty feet long so I ordered seven yards of the topsoil Leafgro mix from Potomac Farms in Shepherdstown. The mix they brought me was excellent quality and the driver was able to spread it down the bed as he dumped it so we don’t have to move it around much. Leafgro is compost made in Dickerson Maryland from all the leaves they collect in Montgomery County. I have used it as a soil amendment for many years in my landscaping business and it is good stuff. I used to order it twenty yards at a time direct from the plant. Now all I have to do is decide what I am going to plant there and find the plants.

Seven Yards of Topsoil/ Leafgro ready for planting
Seven Yards of Topsoil/ Leafgro ready for planting

I am thinking either three hardy, red Crepe Myrtles or possibly some native Halesia caroliniana (Silverbells) or maybe Viburnums with an under planting of perennials and bulbs. I also thought about putting some HighBush Blueberry in there but their form is a little too scraggly for such an entrance bed. I want a neat appearance, blooms, fall color, and winter interest as well, so it will take some thought. At least I am finally ready to plant whatever I find.

We have a gravel drive about 600 feet long leading to our house. It goes through the neighbors’ property on the way to ours and is technically a road but since it is just the two houses and we share maintenance we keep it simple. Our neighbors used to put gravel on their portion of it fairly often, every few years. We however, have only put down gravel one other time in the last twenty years and that was right after we had some major construction done on the house about ten years ago. This winter has been a little rough on the road though, with lots of snow and serious bouts of freezing and thawing. It also did not help that we took a ditch witch last fall and dug a trench down the center to lay our new phone line. That brought some subsurface clay up to the top. So I started looking for guys to haul gravel, first on Craig’s List, then on Google and was not having a lot of luck. Gravel guys do not seem to do the internet thing very well.

Then I remembered to look in the “house repair” folder in my filing cabinet and actually found the receipt from ten years ago, for 18.75 tons of gravel. I called the number, which still worked, and left a message with C.W Gray Trucking in Martinsburg. They called back a short while later and we set a day for him to bring me out a 20 ton load and spread it. We both took Friday off from work, using our built up credit hours, and set the day aside for puttering about the yard. The driver called ahead to confirm the night before and the truck arrived only about 45 minutes later than he planned. There are always variables to consider in construction and trucking, such as how many are ahead of you in line at the quarry. I showed him the most important spots and he walked it to calibrate the speed he would need to drive in order to spread it at the proper depth and length. He set the tailgate chains so it would only open about a foot at the bottom and headed out the drive at a pretty good clip and did a really nice job of getting an even spread.

Newly graveled drive
Newly graveled drive

It looked so good I wanted to get another load and do the rest of the drive too. He was able to drive back to the quarry, pick up another twenty tons, and spread it for us an hour later. This time we had him leave about 3 tons of it in a pile so we could fill nooks and crannies and be sure to have a deeper area of gravel in the muddy spot where I usually park my pickup. The total cost  worked out to about $16.50 per ton and was well worth it.

Jeff spent Saturday hauling wagon and wheelbarrow loads of gravel to low spots, out to the mailbox, and in front of the garage doors. I raked the bits of gravel that had bounced into the grass back in to the drive along the whole length of it and smoothed out his piles.

Newly planted Early Veggies
Newly planted Early Veggies

I also managed to get in the veggie garden and plant ten pounds of Yukon Gold potatoes, a short row of Sugar Snap peas, a half pound of yellow onion sets, and some spinach and lettuce. I don’t care if it IS supposed to snow on Tuesday. I am calling it Spring.

Crocus
Crocus

We were both exhausted and sore at the end of the day and treated ourselves to a smoothie from Mellow Moods in town. We collapsed on the couch and watched an early movie, “After Earth” with Will Smith and his son, which was pretty good, and were in bed by 9:30.

It is very satisfying to have the whole drive freshly graveled and it will last another ten years I am sure.