The April-to-May transition is one of the most stunning in St. Louis. Despite unseasonably cool weather (including two frost warnings), the garden, in the words of farmer and poet Wendell Berry, ‘Like a tide it comes in/wave after wave of foliage and fruit/the nurtured and the wild".
Showing posts with label homestead update. Show all posts
Showing posts with label homestead update. Show all posts
Wednesday, May 13, 2020
Monday, April 20, 2020
Homestead Update 4/20/20: Pretzels, Pesto, and a Rain Barrel
![]() |
Parsley waiting to be planted, violet simple syrup, and sweet potato slips |
Yesterday (when I actually drafted this blog), I woke up early, grabbed my jacket and headed straight outside. I wandered barefoot through the backyard, listening to house sparrows twitter, watching a robin turning up earth, brushing my hands along the cool clover rustling in the breeze, and breathing in the green smell of spring. I plucked diseased leaves off our nectarine tree, pulled up a few maple seedlings, watered patches where I'd planted flowers, tore up some comfrey to scatter around some of the trees as slow-release fertilizer, and savored the beauty of the morning.
Sunday, April 19, 2020
Our Yard: Late March vs. Mid April 2020
The garden is really taken off now! The last frost is past, warmer weather is here, and rain is on the way. Here's how the yard has changed over the past couple weeks (and look for a full homestead update tomorrow!).
First, the backyard:
First, the backyard:
Saturday, March 28, 2020
Homestead Update 3/28/2020: Spring Is Not Quarantined
![]() |
The kale is a-growin'! |
I don't have to tell you it's been a crazy month. The whole global pandemic thing is not only causing death and throwing a serious wrench in everyone's plans, but stirring up a giant cloud of anxiety and helplessness and paralysis that often feels suffocating. All too often I find myself glued to social media, willing my stress and anxiety to make things better.
![]() |
Nectarine blossoms— our tree was covered in all sorts of bees and wasps today! |
Fortunately, though, my garden has other plans for me. More than ever, I've been struck by what an incredible privilege it is to have a bit of earth to garden. A place to grow food, a place to play in the dirt, a place to sit and watch birds picking at my compost pile and squirrels digging holes in my garden beds. Our fruit trees are green with buds, and the nectarine tree has unfurled pink blossoms. The elderberry is sending up shoots. I'm finding mint poking up several yards from where I planted it. Our stinging nettle (a tasty wild green) has propagated itself all along our side yard. Our little suburban homestead is bursting with abundance, even with very minimal tending, and I don't think I've ever been more grateful for that.
![]() |
Elderberry |
Yesterday I gave a snapshot of what our backyard looks like, so today I thought I'd start with a quick panorama of our front yard. We have big plans for this lovely patch of earth!
![]() |
Empty garden bed (still need to figure out what to do with it) with an asparagus bed at the end. Chives are growing nicely! See next photo to hear about the very green grass... |
![]() |
The northern side of our yard, with our hardy fig, lots of volunteer kale, a smattering of spring greens, and two hazels. |
![]() |
Our elderberry and strawberry bed |
Other things we've been up to…
Digging a pond
Zach has been wanting to make a pond in our yard for multiple years now ("But where will I grow my tomaaaaaatoes?!" I've been whining), and a couple weeks ago, he finally dug one in the southeast corner of our backyard! It took him a couple hours and he hit some sort of water pipe (even though the utility guys didn't mark anything there), but we now have a pond-in-progress! We decided against using a plastic pond liner, and Zach's been experimenting with using clay to seal it off, with limited success. In the meantime, we're running rainwater from our garage roof into the pond, and will be getting some water plants soon to fill in the edges. I'm excited to see how the biodiversity in our yard will increase when this is up and running!


Spring crops!
My spring crops have sprouted, and some of them are getting tiny true leaves— maybe I'll be eating some fresh chard, spinach, carrots, and radishes soon! In the meantime, I'm making good use of the perennial greens: kale (which survived the winter), dandelion, violet leaves, clover, and henbit have all made their way into my pesto this week, and soon I'll be able to harvest plantain, stinging nettle, and (hopefully) asparagus. We're hoping to add more perennial crops to our garden this year, but they are surprisingly hard to find online, and the shipping is very expensive. So we're trying to figure out another source. (If you happen to know where I can buy sea kale, skirret, perpetual sorrel, Turkish rocket, or Good King Henry, please let me know!)
![]() |
A polyculture in between the clover: some mixture of kale, radish, spinach, chards, and peas |
![]() |
Spearmint emerging from its slumber! |
![]() |
Comfrey, an important mulch/biomass plant, is coming up nicely in several places. |
![]() |
Stinging nettle— the cooked greens taste like spinach and are waaaay easier to grow! |
Indoor summer seedlings
Our seedlings indoors have really taken off— tomatoes, peppers, flowers, valerian, lovage, St. John's Wort, tomatillos, sweet potatoes, and a few others are making good progress! Some we'll plant as soon as the last frost is over, while others (such as the tomatoes) will need to wait until early- to mid-May. I've been growing them in 4" pots— I've tried growing them in smaller cells, and I had to repot them halfway through, not to mention that they dry out and die much more easily. But growing them in the larger pots seems to be working well so far!
Propagating plants
I've been trying my hand at dividing some of my perennials to plant elsewhere/give away. So far I've tried stonecrop sedum, oregano, thyme, and mint: I just dug up some of the roots, pulled them apart, and stuck them in moist soil. We'll see if any of them survive.
What have you been up to lately?
~~~
Friday, March 27, 2020
Our Yard: Early March vs. Late March 2020
(To see last year's garden, check out this post!)
I thought it would be fun to post pictures of our garden in progress— thanks to mild weather and lots of rain, March has been an amazing growing season for us so far! It's wonderful to see how much the yard has grown in just a few short weeks. I'll be posting a full homestead update tomorrow, but in the meantime, enjoy!
P.S. If you're interested in learning more about any of these plants, or gardening/permaculture in general, please don't hesitate to leave a comment. I'm not an expert but I'm slowly gaining experience, so I want to be as helpful as I can!
I thought it would be fun to post pictures of our garden in progress— thanks to mild weather and lots of rain, March has been an amazing growing season for us so far! It's wonderful to see how much the yard has grown in just a few short weeks. I'll be posting a full homestead update tomorrow, but in the meantime, enjoy!
P.S. If you're interested in learning more about any of these plants, or gardening/permaculture in general, please don't hesitate to leave a comment. I'm not an expert but I'm slowly gaining experience, so I want to be as helpful as I can!
![]() |
March 1st: Our cherry, elderberry, and false indigo trees, with raspberries in the foreground and the mulberry to the far right |
![]() |
March 27th: Look at all that lovely clover! You can also see comfrey coming up. |
![]() |
March 1st: Mulberry, hazel, and pear trees. Our old chicken coop still had Jerusalem artichoke stalks in it |
![]() |
March 1st: Pear trees, false indigo, apple |
![]() |
March 1st again |
![]() |
March 27th: Bulbs along the fenceline are up (not sure what they are, they never bloom), and some comfrey and mint are coming up! |
Thursday, March 5, 2020
Homestead Update February 2020: Maple Syrup, Seeds, and More Swapping
Another little interlude for a long-overdue Homestead Update! Here's what we've been up to lately…
Things We Learned Whilst Attempting to Make Maple Syrup:
1. Tapping trees is super easy. It's a lot of fun to see the sap running out through the spile into the bucket!
2. But then comes the part where you have to reduce it by 40 times to make the syrup.
3. This cannot be done successfully over a campfire with a stock pot.
4. It cannot be done inside in one go because the vapor will increase the humidity in your house too much.
5. So we had to do it a tiny bit at a time, over campfires, with our rocket stove, in an open crockpot, and finally on the stove. It took for-ev-er.
6. This is on our "do not try again unless you have a better set-up" list until further notice.
7. However, we still got a lot of syrup! We thought we had half a gallon, but it's very thin so we'll have to reduce it again. But it has a complex flavor and was very tasty on buckwheat pancakes.
Planting spring seeds
This year I swore that I would not fuss with spring crops, as I have have very little luck with them in the past due to St. Louis's weather pattern of nightly frosts, a week of "spring," and then 95 degrees from April until November. But I also had a ton of seeds picked up from the seed swap, as well as leftovers from our attempts to grow spring crops last year in Portland (they failed there, too). So on a warm day, I emptied all the seed packets into a single bowl, mixed them around, raked some soil in the back yard and front yard, and sowed the seeds, raked them in, watered them, sprinkled them with some fertilizer, and called it a day. We'll see if any of them grow!
Planting summer seeds
We also got some tomato and pepper seeds set up in the basement, on top of heating pads and underneath grow lights. Some of the tomatoes and one pepper just started sprouting last night!
We were originally going to have a couple more varieties of tomatoes, as well as tomatillos, but the post office has continued to refuse to believe that we live here, and has sent our package from Baker Creek Seeds on a marvelous adventure to who knows where (this is the third time we've contacted them to confirm that we actually do live here). I was pretty bummed about that, but am trying to remind myself that we can buy seedlings in May when planting time comes.
Another swap n' shop
Following on the heels of the previous swap n' shop, another one, this time at my church! About 15 people showed up and filled up seven tables full of fun stuff. I came home with a dart board, some candles, a nice glass storage jar, and a ton of home goods for a friend who is currently furnishing her house. Everyone seemed to have a great time, and we've agreed that we should do this quarterly! Most people had never heard of this idea before, so I was happy that I got to share the fun (as well as the household goods).
One last sunchoke harvest
On a warm day, we put on some gardening gloves and harvested the remaining sunchoke tubers! We got two five-gallon buckets for eating, and at least that many for replanting and giving away. Sorting through the soil in search of tubers feels like a treasure hunt!
I'm excited that spring is coming and that we'll get to see a gardening season (more or less) all the way through this year. Here's to the 2020 season!
~~~
Saturday, November 16, 2019
This Week (Leaves and Snow, Water Kefir, and Pasta)
(Well, past couple weeks— but who's counting?)
Anniversary trip
Zach and I have been married seven years now, which kind of boggles my mind! We took a mini road trip (in our electric car!) which involved hiking during peak leaf season as well as visiting Cahokia Mounds, the largest ancient earthenworks in North America (I'd only visited once when I was a kid, and was not impressed— coming here as an adult, I was completely blown away!).
![]() |
Pere Marquette State Park |
![]() |
Monk's Mound at Cahokia |
![]() |
View from Monk's Mound: see the St. Louis skyline in the distance? |
Dismantling the compost pile
After two years of "cooking," our compost pile was ready to be taken apart so we could get some of the goodness inside. We pulled apart the pallets, raked off the woody stuff, and excavated more than a cubic yard of beautiful black soil! We hauled this to our front yard and covered half of it with a new layer of compost, into which we seeded some winter rye. The rye didn't get a chance to sprout, though, because sub-freezing nights and then an inch of snow hit soon afterward— crazy weather for this time of year! (We also harvested like three sunchoke plants and already had more tubers than we knew what to do with.)
![]() |
Zach trimming our 15-foot-tall sunchokes |
![]() |
Getting started on the front yard! |
![]() |
First sunchoke haul of the year |
![]() |
Sunchokes pickling (bottom right) next to some daikon and carrot (bottom left), and sauerkraut and pickled beets up top |
Water kefir
We got a new fermented pet— water kefir, which is a symbiotic colony of bacteria and yeast (SCOBY) that feeds on sugar water, and with some care can produce a sweet carbonated drink. I'll write a more detailed post on it later, but suffice it to say that it tastes like soda with a fraction of the sugar, so Zach is very happy to be working with it!
![]() |
The "grains" we got in the mail |
Homemade pasta and experimental lentils
I'd been wanting to try pasta-making for quite a while, and in the past couple weeks I've tried it out three different times, with success! My favorite recipe is this one because it doesn't require eggs (meaning I'm more likely to have the ingredients on hand to make it), although I used an egg-noodle recipe to make pierogis. Other kitchen adventures included lentil burgers and lentil loaf (like meatloaf), both of which turned out pretty well. We have a ton of lentils in our pantry for some reason, so I'm looking for ways to use them up!
What have you been up to this week?
![]() |
Lentil loaf with sweet chile sauce, quinoa, and sauerkraut |
~~~
Friday, August 16, 2019
Lessons from a Failed Garden
Four months ago, excited and filled with thoughts of delicious homegrown food, Zach and I plunked down some cash to be allowed a 12'x12' plot in one of Vancouver's many community gardens.
We laid out bamboo pathways, cleared the biggest of the rocks, and went seed-shopping, our minds spinning with the usual rush of beginning a new gardening year. Although we were complete newbies to growing in this climate, we figured that was okay— we'd dived headlong into gardening with little experience before, and always managed to get a good crop of something (usually kale).
We planted seeds, and they sprouted— along with approximately eight billion weeds. We spent long hours tending, clearing ground, pulling wild radish, watering, babying the tiny vegetables, and steadily watching our garden crumple under a never-ending assault of unwanted plants.
Four months later, the broccoli and kale are still baby-sized. I've harvested exactly one stunted bell pepper. The summer squash, beans and corn we planted two months ago are still less than a hand's-breadth tall. The nasturtiums grew two inches tall, put out a single flower each, and then died. We got some peas, but not many, and some lettuce, but it was mostly bitter. The carrots, cucumbers and green onions never came up. The only garden vegetable really alive at the moment are tomatoes, which look sickly and brown but are valiantly putting out a few fruits each.
![]() |
(The squash and corn in the background are on our neighbor's plot) |
(Contrast this with our garden back home, which looks like this without us even trying.)
We've had better luck with the garden in the backyard; I harvested peas until a few weeks ago, and I can pick a handful of kale every once in a while. The herbs are doing fine, and the borage is blooming like crazy. But all told, though, this year's garden leaves a lot to be desired.
Failure is only really failure if you don't learn anything from it. And so I've been going to the garden a few times a week, watching the drama unfold, harvesting a couple tomatoes at a time (Sungold cherry tomatoes are delicious!), and considering what I've learned. For instance…
1. If the soil ain't happy, ain't nobody happy. The ground in the community garden has been seriously abused: it's had to produce tons of vegetables every year, with nothing but artificial nutrients and perhaps some compost put back into it. I've been spoiled by the rich river-bottom silt at our house in St. Charles. Dealing with the exhausted soil in the community garden made me realize that I can't take good soil for granted. If I plant in a community garden again, I will definitely spend a few weeks beforehand adding some serious amendments: preferably a foot-deep layer of autumn leaves and a bunch of vegetable scraps.
2. Tilling is very, very, very bad for soil. Humans have been tilling the ground for so long that it's considered the only way to garden— and farm— but seeing firsthand the toll that it takes on the ground is staggering. Tilling breaks up the mycelium that weaves everything together, destroys soil life, and breaks up the "tilth" of the soil. When you till, you let weed seeds surface, and they quickly colonize the bare ground. Then you either have to apply herbicide or till again (destroying yet more soil structure) to deal with the weeds before planting. Tilled soil needs tons of input. In contrast, by building up soil over time— with cover crops, chop-and-drop crops, and mulch— and avoiding too much disturbance, you can create much richer earth, full of nutrients and soaking up water more readily.
![]() |
Early girl, green zebra, and San Marzano tomatoes |
3. When working with poor soil, never plant anything from seed. In comparison to weeds, garden vegetables are very delicate, so we were asking for trouble when we placed the seeds in the ground and expected them to compete (even though we weeded the planting areas first). If you're working with bad soil, it's much better to begin with a start. That way, you can clear the ground, plant the start, plop down cardboard and mulch around it, and give it a fighting chance.
4. Digging swales around the plants is helpful. Zach was tired of the water running straight off the dusty soil, so he dug shallow troughs around the downhill sides of the plants (the plot is at a very slight slope). Now when we water, the troughs (swales) fill up, keeping the water in place to slowly seep into the plant's roots. The tomatoes seem to appreciate it.
5. Even a failed garden can be good for the animals. Bumblebees, honeybees, beneficial wasps, ladybugs, and all sorts of other bugs have made our failed garden their home. Some of the weeds have beautiful flowers— we even have sunflowers blooming! Clover has moved in, capturing nitrogen from the air and storing it in nodes on its roots, which will benefit the future plot-holder. Our plot may be a failure as a vegetable garden, but it succeeds as a garden that nurtures life.
The takeaway? I'm glad we had this experience. Next time I will add much more organic material, grow only starts (with cardboard mulch), and use swales for watering. But in the meantime, I enjoy the tomatoes, smile at the sunflowers, and appreciate the little weed sanctuary for what it is.
~~~
Saturday, July 20, 2019
Our Yard: April vs. July vs. July
![]() |
Why yes, that is a 12-foot-tall forest of sunchokes behind me... |
A couple weeks ago, I was able to spend a few packed days in St. Louis after my tour with Insomniac Folklore. It was wonderful to catch up a little (though not enough!) with family and friends, and as a bonus I also got to visit our yard to see how it looked after a summer of basically no inputs.
As you can see, the result was a bit stunning.
For contrast, I've included photos of the yard from when we first planted it in April of 2018, then photos from July 2018, and then photos from July of this year. Enjoy!
![]() |
July 2018: Corn and squash, with the addition of elder and false indigo. |
![]() |
July 2019: Hibiscus, cherry, false indigo, huge elders, tons of vetch. |
![]() |
April 2018: The *sniff, sniff* chicken coop. |
![]() |
July 2018: False indigo, elder, mulberry, hazel, volunteer squash. |
![]() |
July 2019: Elder, mulberry, ridiculous forest of sunchokes (Jerusalem artichokes), including several in the foreground; a never-ending carpet of turnips, kale, and vetch. |
![]() |
April 2018: Pear trees, apple trees, nectarine. |
![]() |
July 2018: Volunteer squash, sunchokes, tomatoes, with all the above trees. |
![]() |
July 2019: Same as before, but with an ungodly amount of turnips and kale, massive comfrey plants, and volunteer groves of black-eyed susans. |
![]() |
April 2018: More of the same, from a different angle. |
![]() |
July 2018: You can see the edge of the "pond" we made here, as well as the wildflower garden. |
![]() |
July 2019: See how big the nectarine tree is! Also a volunteer maple tree and a mess of comfrey. |
~~~
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)