Showing posts with label Asparagus. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Asparagus. Show all posts

Thursday, 19 March 2020

Gardening In The Time Of Covid-19*

I have felt a deep affection for our garden during the past ten years, so it's challenging to express how much more I presently love it as France completes its third day of lockdown while spring makes its much awaited appearence.

Foreground: off the patio white sweet alyssum, red tulip, abelia, irises, ivy-covered pergola pillar; background: lawn and that wide, brown smear is the asparagus bed.

Our larder and freezer is well stocked allowing us to refrain from food shopping (which is permitted but only if carrying a self-signed certificate printed from the government's website) which is mutually beneficial for us and others. But fresh can't be beat and the seven-year-old asparagus bed has begun in earnest last week popping out spears. Though their delectable taste lessens each day of storage, cutting off the woody ends (trimmings can be used for making stock), placing the asparagus upright in a jar with 2.5 cm (an inch) of water, and covering with a plastic bag keeps their flavour longer. In this way enough can be harvested to make a soup.


Rhubarb will soon be on its way.


In about a week, pea shoots will be ready for picking. Ah, fresh greens!


In about two months, raspberries born on last season's canes will be ripe. Once harvested, those canes will be cut almost to the ground, and new ones will grow enabling a second crop for September.


Strawberries will be ready by beginning of May.


I haven't planted any new tulips last autumn and hope what is in the ground will do their thing soon. Presently, there are single show stoppers like an Apeldoorn Darwin Hybrid bud peeking out in between an ivy-covered fence and a Leyland cypress hedge . . .


. . . and this sprightly Seadov Triumph tulip sprouting on the compost under a rusty pole . . .


. . . and finally this Purple Dream lily-flowered tulip gracing the front garden.


A sizable expanse of low-growing, evergreen periwinkle (Vinca minor) just off the front entrance staircase is full of their lovely blue blooms. 


À la prochaine!

* Yes, Love In The Time Of Cholera by Márquez inspired my post title!

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Baked Parmesan Asparagus Polenta Sausage Frittata




Thursday, 13 June 2019

Late Spring Garden 2019, Part Two

It's lovely to have home-grown goodies in the freezer. Here's an ample portion of rhubarb crumble (my recipe) with strawberries fresh from the patch drenched in cream; all which goes well with coffee.


The two beds of peas have been harvested/shelled with most of them parboiled and frozen. The spent plants have been ripped up, put on the compost, and soon the beds will be prepared for carrot and beet sowings. Yup, you are seeing right, that's two peas in a pod!


Despite the weather being more stormy than not, I took the shelling project outside under the pergola.


Partly curious, partly seeking shelter, Eli the Cat jumped up on the table to sniff and inspect more closely.


The pink flowers on the left are penstemon while those feathery, tall plants on the right are asparagus. Many young shoots were harvested back in March, but some were left to develop into what I consider to be a summer hedge. A hedge until . . .


. . . the storm. Their height has been reduced sharply and a good number have snapped at the base of the plant. I am trying to rehabilitate the ones remaining by freeing those trapped under the dead stalks and mounding the soil around them so they have a chance of resuming an upright position. Most importantly, regardless of trying to reclaim a hedge effect, the focus is to keep them alive because without fading autumnal foliage, the roots will not receive required nourishment, threatening the next season's crop.



However, the penstemon so far has weathered the storm perfectly.


The lavender in the front garden is blooming. Bees love it and there are a few in the photo below!


I love to catch a glimpse of lavender haze through other bushes, in this case, through the graceful, mahogany-branched, airy-leaved abelia also beloved by bees.


I have been trying to order this deep-mauve osteospermum for a couple of seasons from my online nursery but they sell-out this item before I can order. Not this time! They will bloom all the way through October/November.


À la prochaine!

Thursday, 24 January 2019

Midwinter Garden 2019 Part 2

Just after I sowed a pea bed, frosty winds came bearing down, so before twilight deepened any further, the bed got a cozy horticultural fleece tucked snugly around it. This morning, the cover was stiff with ice. Here's hoping the shallowly planted pea seeds are still viable.


One of the first perennial food crops that gets attention is asparagus. A violet-tinged spear tip here and there means their patch needs some work.


Since the six-year old asparagus planting lustily overgrown its original border of terracotta roofing tiles, the tiles have been removed hence I am in process of digging a trench around the bed, heaping the displaced soil onto the bed itself. Heaped soil is great for asparagus by keeping the bottom of their stalks in the dark, thus blanching them a bit.


Moss fills the space between lichen-covered pavers.


You would be forgiven if you mistook these glorious skeletons of hydrangeas as a flurry of glasswing butterflies.


Lamium galeobdolonone of its several common names is yellow weasel snout (!)has turned its veins burgundy.


A cyclamen unfurls a burst of crimson, laughing at the wind and the cold.


Shade-loving, fragrant sweet violets have spread along the west side of the house forming a carpet because of their powerful way of seed dispersal: their pods snap open, injecting seeds far and wide.


A pop of yellow is always welcome. Thanks, stonecrop!


Each year, I keep adding what is regarded in horticultural jargon as green bones. We talkin' evergreen. One of the older and venerable 'bones' is this yucca which spent the first half of its twenty years in a pot on a Grenoble balcony and the second half in Angoulême soil. It now has several trunks and is close to my height.


À la prochaine!


  • Diana Studer's profile photo
    Will you change from G+ comments on your blog? That is going to sunset too.

    I nurture one pot of violets.
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    17h
  • Michelle Beissel's profile photo
    +Diana Studer , if Google allows the maintaining of past comments, then since I hardly get comments outside of G+, I'll opt for the status quo as I really love re-reading old G+ comments when I check past posts (my blog is my recipe book). If not, then all those comments will disappear and that would be sad. Yay for that pot of violets!
    REPLY
    17h
  • Diana Studer's profile photo
    I think the G+ comments will disappear. But there has been NO feedback from Google.
    Maybe edit the comments you value into the text of the blog post? (Which is what I did when I edited posts from my former blog to the current one)
    REPLY
    15h
  • Michelle Beissel's profile photo
    +Diana Studer , excellent idea. Thanks!
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    15h
  • Diana Studer's profile photo
    and do it soonish ... they keep jumping the date forward!
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    15h
  • Kim Quinn's profile photo
    The hydrangea leaves are so beautiful! I enjoy your posts so much and keep 2 small garden beds, 3x6 and 3x8. They were allowed to rest this past year with a cover crop of hairy vetch, clover, tillage radishes (pods on stems, yummy!) and supposedly field peas. Never saw any of those. It was mixed in April and broadcast over and just whacked 3 or 4 times through the summer when it hit knee height. Now, I am dreaming of herbs, Kale, chard, tomatoes herbsherbsherbs. Wish I had a bona-fide rosemary hedge!💜
    REPLY
    13h
  • Michelle Beissel's profile photo
    +Kim Quinn , thank you so much!

    Your garden interface sounds wonderful (I enjoy whacking cover crops, too). Keep dreaming (and doing). Rosemary is easy to propagate so all you need is a starter plant. If you run out of soil, and you have some cemented area, you can make a potted hedge.
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Diana Studer
1 day ago

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We have a potted hedge on two sides of our kitchen patio. Third side is an in the ground planter (and the fourth is garden) Ours is spekboom Portulacaria afra (which is also edible in salad, a different taste and texture)