As I write this, I am sitting in front of an open window,
enjoying the pleasant coolness of the very early morning thanks to a 5 AM
wake up call by my 3 year old. She’s gone
back to sleep, thank God, but I remained awake and thought I’d get something
more useful than lying in bed trying in vain to go to back to sleep. As my mother reminds me, just as soon as she
starts sleeping to a reasonable hour in the morning, she’ll become difficult to
wake up in the morning.
enjoying the pleasant coolness of the very early morning thanks to a 5 AM
wake up call by my 3 year old. She’s gone
back to sleep, thank God, but I remained awake and thought I’d get something
more useful than lying in bed trying in vain to go to back to sleep. As my mother reminds me, just as soon as she
starts sleeping to a reasonable hour in the morning, she’ll become difficult to
wake up in the morning.
This column is about gardening, not children, though. The first frost will arrive within the next
month, and it’s time to think about preparing for it. Open windows at 5 AM will no longer be
pleasant, and fresh from the garden tomatoes, cucumbers, and peppers will be
gone for another season. I’ll have to
fill my girls with as many cucumbers as possible before they are gone. If you grow cucumbers, you know that they
grow from tender, edible vegetables into tough behemoths overnight, and the
chickens have certainly enjoyed eating the overgrown ones.
month, and it’s time to think about preparing for it. Open windows at 5 AM will no longer be
pleasant, and fresh from the garden tomatoes, cucumbers, and peppers will be
gone for another season. I’ll have to
fill my girls with as many cucumbers as possible before they are gone. If you grow cucumbers, you know that they
grow from tender, edible vegetables into tough behemoths overnight, and the
chickens have certainly enjoyed eating the overgrown ones.
If the first frost finds you fortunate enough to have green
tomatoes on the vine, pick them before frost touches them, wrap them in
newspaper, and store them in an unheated, but above freezing, area. It’s easy to preserve bell peppers by chopping
them and sautéing them briefly, then freezing them. Try to lay the bag flat in the freezer, and
to move the peppers around a bit so they don’t freeze into one huge ball. When your recipe calls for chopped cooked
peppers, use some of yours from the summer.
tomatoes on the vine, pick them before frost touches them, wrap them in
newspaper, and store them in an unheated, but above freezing, area. It’s easy to preserve bell peppers by chopping
them and sautéing them briefly, then freezing them. Try to lay the bag flat in the freezer, and
to move the peppers around a bit so they don’t freeze into one huge ball. When your recipe calls for chopped cooked
peppers, use some of yours from the summer.
Although I have enjoyed the abundance of lima beans this
summer, they do take a very long time to shell.
My daughters and I shelled about
1 ½ quarts of lima beans last week, and with their help, which was actual help,
not hindrance, it took us about 30 minutes.
Do not complain to farmers at the market about the cost of shelled lima
beans. I will be glad for a break from
shelling lima beans; I can’t stop picking them until frost comes because I do
love to eat them.
summer, they do take a very long time to shell.
My daughters and I shelled about
1 ½ quarts of lima beans last week, and with their help, which was actual help,
not hindrance, it took us about 30 minutes.
Do not complain to farmers at the market about the cost of shelled lima
beans. I will be glad for a break from
shelling lima beans; I can’t stop picking them until frost comes because I do
love to eat them.
My sweet potatoes have taken over the garden. At the beginning of the summer, a rabbit
nibbled the new vines. I believe he even
dug a home for himself near a hole created by a rotting tree stump near some
asparagus. He didn’t do any serious
damage to my garden, and now he’s too fat to get through the wire into the
garden. We enjoy seeing a real “Peter
Rabbit” in the yard, and his cuteness, and lack of serious damage to any
plants, saved him. Before the first
frost, I’ll dig my sweet potatoes.
Temperatures much below 50°F damage the tubers, so I’ll get them out of
the ground within the next couple of weeks, let them air dry for a week or so
in the garage as long as temperatures stay warm, and then I’ll store them
inside the house in a dark closet.
nibbled the new vines. I believe he even
dug a home for himself near a hole created by a rotting tree stump near some
asparagus. He didn’t do any serious
damage to my garden, and now he’s too fat to get through the wire into the
garden. We enjoy seeing a real “Peter
Rabbit” in the yard, and his cuteness, and lack of serious damage to any
plants, saved him. Before the first
frost, I’ll dig my sweet potatoes.
Temperatures much below 50°F damage the tubers, so I’ll get them out of
the ground within the next couple of weeks, let them air dry for a week or so
in the garage as long as temperatures stay warm, and then I’ll store them
inside the house in a dark closet.
I’ll also take cuttings of coleus, geraniums, and other
tender annuals that I will root in water and then transfer to soil and save
over the winter. My husband does enjoy
having an empty tub in our bathroom in the summer, when all the houseplants go
outside for a vacation, but I’ll soon fill it, which is positioned in front of
a south-facing glass block window, with houseplants and other tender plants I
hope to protect throughout the winter.
tender annuals that I will root in water and then transfer to soil and save
over the winter. My husband does enjoy
having an empty tub in our bathroom in the summer, when all the houseplants go
outside for a vacation, but I’ll soon fill it, which is positioned in front of
a south-facing glass block window, with houseplants and other tender plants I
hope to protect throughout the winter.
Go ahead now and find a place for the houseplants indoors,
and spray them with water to remove the insects that might have found a home in
them for the summer. Shake them to
remove dead leaves, and repot any that need it.
Plan for the arrival of the first frost, and that way, the night before
the frost will find you relaxed instead of dashing about in the twilight,
filling your entryway with plants, and picking vegetables you are desperately
trying to save.
and spray them with water to remove the insects that might have found a home in
them for the summer. Shake them to
remove dead leaves, and repot any that need it.
Plan for the arrival of the first frost, and that way, the night before
the frost will find you relaxed instead of dashing about in the twilight,
filling your entryway with plants, and picking vegetables you are desperately
trying to save.