Off to the Food Bank

There were just too many nice large tomatoes ripening.  We found a solution — the local food bank.  After spending the better part of an hour picking what basically five plants had to offer, we had a carload to take over to the local food bank.

 

There are still some that will be ripening over the next couple weeks.  Plus lots of bruised and worse that will go out past the fence for the deer and other critters to have.

 

 

too Many Tomatoes!

After processing what I picked last weekend, there were even more today. Plus many more ripening on the plants. Some of these fruits weighed in at over 1 pound, so it is way more than I can possibly use.

 

 

Harvest Time

The corn in the photo is a partial harvest from two 4′ by 8′ raised beds. These grew from seeds left over from last year. But last year the corn stalks grew only 4 to 5 feet tall and they produced few and small ears. This year the plants are 6 to 8 feet tall with plenty of large (grocery store sized) ears. It is a pleasant surprise. I wish I understood the reason and can duplicate in in future years.

This year’s garden is very different from that of the past few years. First, it got off to a later than usual start as we were making some changes to the fence line and adding some additional raised boxes. The weather this summer has been consistently cool. Gray, drippy mornings with sun breaking through around 10 or later and the fog rolling back in the evenings. The only hot spell was less than two days. Ground squirrels invaded and wiped out multiple attempts at squash, peas, beans and several other crops. But we have had good luck with tomatoes and corn — although those are ripening later than usual due to the late start.  The stone fruit was sparse — few blooms in the spring and the bushy tail critters also attacked much of that. However the pears have been bountiful and it appears apples will be likewise.

The tomato plants have grown much bigger this year than last year, I have been running a sort of trial to find varieties that do well in our climate. The previous best tomato is one Burpee stopped offering, so plants from 2016 seeds are competing against two Oregon university developed varieties and two new options from Park’s seeds. Thus now that the plants are producing, we have way too many tomatoes for our needs. At this point, it looks like one of the new Park’s varieties is going to be the winner. Next year, I will plant only two or three tomatoes plants instead of twice that.

More on the Garden Expansion

In the expanded garden area towards the driveway, we created a space for grape vines and the vining types of berries.

Garden Expansion

So it took a few years, but we finally got the garden fence finished so it connected to the house in both front and back.  We can walk out the back door and are in the garden.  No additional gate.

Also four additional raised beds for the veggies were added as planned.  And since there was enough lumber left, we also added a bed for the surviving blueberries and three shallow beds to use for the raspberries that were not doing well at the fence below the orchard.

As it was in the past, it took a huge pile of planter mix to fill the new beds.

The front fence was extended further along the driveway and then turned to meet the front corner of the house.

We need to install retaining walls in a number of places to keep the hill where it should be.  This is the trial version.