Roots and Bulbs

Promises of glory at Smith College Bulb Show
Promises of glory at Smith College Bulb Show
 

 

 

            Mary McClintock, with her Root for Your Favorite Root project, has made me think a lot more about the root vegetables I plant than usual.  I’ve also been thinking about root crops in general because many of them are good keepers. They can be stored in the fall without a lot of laborious processing if you have a cool cellar, or can provide the necessary root cellar conditions.

            Today, as I watch the snow slowly disappear from my landscape, for the moment anyway, I’m planning my garden layout. Where will I plant what? 

            Root crops need a good deep soil that will allow the carrot, beet or turnip room to form and grow easily. All of these can be among the first veggies to be seeded in the ground.

            Beets and turnips are ready for harvest in as few as 30 days if you like baby vegetables, but most will be mature in 50 to 55 days.  Carrots take longer to mature. Depending on the variety carrots can be harvested in 50 to 75 days.  This means that these roots can be planted throughout the season, and as they are harvested that space can be used for something else.

            Last year I planted lettuce, peas, broccoli and radishes on April 23.  A week later I planted beets.  It felt wonderful to get seeds in the ground early.

            There was a time when a beet was a beet.  There weren’t a lot of choices, but now there is Touchstone Gold; the Italian Chioggia with a red and white candy striped pattern; Blankoma, a white beet; Forono, a long cylindrical beet; and Bull’s Blood which has deep burgundy leaves that add some colorful interest to the vegetable garden.

            I grow carrots and the biggest challenge they present to me is thinning.  I bow down before anyone who keeps their carrots properly thinned.  I would rather spend the afternoon moving wheelbarrowsful of woodchips than an afternoon thinning carrots.

            This year  I can’t help looking at the huge variety of carrots that are available.  Parmex is a small round carrot that freezes well.  Kinko is only  4 inches long; Nectar is 8 inches long; Sugarsnax is 9 inches long and very high in the antioxident beta carotene.  Napoli has been created to be sown in the summer and harvested in the winter. 

            Orange is not the only color for carrots anymore. Purple Haze, an All America Selections winner has dark purple skin with an orange interior; Purple Rain has even darker purple skin and flesh, but may have a golden or white core; and the name White Satin is self explanatory. So many choices.

            Turnips are easier with fewer choices. Purple Top is the most familiar but there is Scarlet Queen Red Stems, and the white Hakurei that can be harvested in 38 days and be used raw.

            Radishes are a root crop , but I hardly even count them when I plan the garden. I just stick some here and  there through the season. But, of course, there are more than plain old Cherry Belles.  There are white radishes like Ping Pong, long red and white radishes like D’Avignon, and long white radishes like Miyashige daikon radish.  The most unusual radish that I like is sometimes called Red Meat which is not very appetizing, or Watermelon which is better, but I prefer the name that was used in China when we were there, Beauty Heart.  The radish is the size of a turnip with a green exterior and beautiful pink flesh.  In China it was usually served as a pickle and was delicious.

            Those are some of the roots to consider planting this spring, but the place to admire roots that are flowering right now is the Smith College Bulb Show that will be running for another week, through March 22 from 10 am to 4 pm daily.

            Somehow the Lyman Plant House staff is able to manage and coddle crocuses, daffodils, tulips, hyacinths, irises, and even peonies, with light and temperature control so they all bloom at the same glorious minute. This is spring magic indeed.

            The benefit of a show like this is the evidence of the immense variety of color and form in every plant species. The daffodils, properly named narcissus, range from the simple and elegant pheasant eye daff to ruffled bicolors.  There are familiar hyacinths, and a vast show small gold and orange Lachenalia hyacinths.  There are tulips that look like a child’s drawing with simple clear lines to the glamorous ‘broken’ tulips.

            In addition to the living fragrant bulbs, the Church Exhibition Gallery is host to Tulip Mania: Five Centuries of Mystery and Madness. Interspersed with the history of the tulip are lithographs of ‘broken’ tulips with their feathering and color breaks by Rory McEwen for Wilfred Blunt’s book, Tulips and Tulip Mania, displayed courtesy of the Smith college Mortimer Rare Book Room.

Don’t Forget the Master Gardener’s Spring Symposium Feed Soil, Self and Soul on March 21 at Frontier  Regional High School in South Deerfield. Noted landscape designer Julie Moir Messervy will be the keynote speaker, and there will be workshops on lilacs, bees, rock gardens and much more.  I’ll be there with my worms.

March 14, 2009

Home to the Garden

After my time away from home, tending my daughter with her broken ankle and her two sons, I have come back home to find the first real signs of spring. The herb bed next to the piazza in front of the house faces south and is very protected. It doesn’t look like much from a distance, but if you get up close . . . Here is autumn crocus sending up leaves as early as spring crocus, but the foliage will die during the summer and the blossoms will appear in the fall. Some call them Naked Ladies because the flower grows directly out of the ground.

Of course the herb bed has herbs: chives,

garlic chives,

lemon balm,

and bee balm of the bright red variety. This is a strong spreader and I always have plenty to share.

I raced to the vegetable garden, and I can see I will have to wait a little while more before planting. This is a 15 x 15 foot plot that I started when my hip was giving me so much trouble. After the hip was replaced we added a new raspberry patch next to it. Last year we added on an extension, but you can’t see it from this angle. Right now I am full of plans and impatient, but I can almost smell planting season.

My Pleasure Ground

Julie is the glamorous one on the right.

Julie is the glamorous one on the right.

Last Saturday was the Western Mass Master Gardeners Spring Symposium.  I was honored to share the bill with Julie Moir Messervy who was the keynote speaker. I spoke about my worm farm and she spoke about garden design and her new book Home Outside.

Julie had a lot of helpful things to say, but she struck the tone immediately for me in her talk and in her book when she said her aim is to help us create our own Pleasure Ground.

A Pleasure Ground is exactly what I am aiming for in my garden. There is the Rose Walk which is a glory in June when the peonies are also blooming. That’s when we have our Annual Rose Viewing and invite our friends and anyone passing to share the pleasure of stopping to smell the roses.

Apart, a rugosa, is one of my favorites. There are 70 others.

Apart, a rugosa, is one of my favorites. There are 70 others.

There are the pleasures of watching the children play on the lawn.

Drew and Anthony preparing for croquet.

Drew and Anthony preparing for croquet.

 There are the pleasures of resting in The Cottage Ornee, after weeding, for Sunday breakfast and newspapers, or for an nap on a hot summer afternoon.

There are the pleasures of an abundant vegetable garden.

Abundant may not be the right word.

Abundant may not be the right word.

We all find different pleasures in our gardens, which is the pleasure for me of visiting gardens of the other bloggers. I can’t wait to see this new season unfold.

My Pleasure Ground

Last Saturday was the Western Mass Master Gardeners Spring Symposium. I was honored to share the bill with Julie Moir Messervy who was the keynote speaker. I talked about worm farming and Julie talked about garden design and her new book, Home Outside.

Julie had a lot to say, but she set the tone immediately for me in her talk and in her books when she says that her aim is to help us all create our own Pleasure Ground.

A Pleasure Ground is exactly what I am aiming for in my garden. There is the Rose Walk which is a glory in June when the peonies are also blooming. That’s when we invite in friends and anyone passing by for our Annual Rose Viewing to share the pleasures of stopping to smell the roses.


There are the pleasures of watching grandchildren play on the lawn.

There are the pleasures of resting from chores in the Cottage Ornee.


There are the pleasures of an abundant vegetable garden.We all have ways of defining our own Pleasure Grounds – and it is a pleasure for me to visit so many Pleasure Grounds as I travel the garden blogs.

Snow and Snowdrops

I admit the bench is in the middle of a snow drift, but still . . .

I admit the bench is in the middle of a snow drift, but still . . .

I left my daughter, her broken ankle and crutches, in the loving care of her sons and friends for the weekend.  I came home to attend the Wesstern Mass Master Gardeners Spring Symposium. I was giving a presentation about my worm farm, but I also was eager to hear landscape designer Julie Moir Messervy speak about her new book Home Outside, and to attend a workshop on garlic growing and cooking.

While I was home my husband and I walked past the snowdrifts to the vegetable garden to get a good measure of its new dimensions after the lasagna addition I put in last fall.  We had to walk through some snow to get to the garden, but that sunny area was clear. We got our measurements, 11′ x 26′. We laid out paths on paper and I calculate that I will have about 180 square feet of planting beds in this area.

As we walked back to the house I saw my first spring blossoms — snowdrops. Now it really feels like spring!

Having seen the snowdrops I had  to check one other spot that was clear of snow.

Daylily shoots are up!  I’m going to have to keep close watch now.

Snow and Snowdrops

I left my daughter and her broken ankle in the loving care of her sons and friends and made it home for the weekend and the wonderful Western Mass Master Gardeners Spring Symposium. I was giving a presentation about my worm farm, but I was eager to hear landscape designer Julie Moir Messervy speak about her new book, Home Outside, and attend a garlic growing and cooking workshop. I’ll post more about the Symposium later this week.

While I was home my husband and I took a walk past the snowdrifts and out to the vegetable garden to get a good measure of its new dimensions after the lasagna addition I put in last fall. We had to walk through snow to get to the garden, but that sunny area was clear. We were able to get measurements, 11′ x 26′. We laid out paths on paper and calculate that I will have about 188 square feet of planting beds in this area.

As we walked back to the house I saw my first blossoms of the year, snowdrops! Now it really feels like spring.

After I saw the snowdrops I had to check one other area that was free of snow.

The daylily shoots are green. I’ll have to start watching closely.

The Worm Turns

My Worm Farm

My Worm Farm

I feared my worms had all died during a great winter cold spell. Temperatures in my basement dipped below 50 degrees which I had read was the absolute limit for red wiggler survival. One day I went down to see if I could at least harvest some worm castings for houseplants I was repotting – and I found a worm. More than one worm!

I don’t know how many there are, but although my photo doesn’t show it, the worms I saw do have a white band known as the clitellum. Worms join themselves at the clitella to exchange sperm, and soon a cocoon will form on each worm. Baby worms are in the making.

My worms and I will be at the Western Mass Master Gardeners Spring Symposium on Saturday, March 21 at Frontier Regional High School in South Deerfield. We’ll be joining keynote speaker, Julie Moir Messervy, landscape architect and author of Home Outside, as well as many other knowledgeable presenters. Hope to see you there.

The Worm Turns

I feared my worms had all died during a great winter cold spell. Temperatures in my basement dipped below 50 degrees which I had read was the absolute limit for red wiggler survival. One day I went down to see if I could at least harvest some worm castings for houseplants I was repotting – and I found a worm. More than one worm!

I don’t know how many there are, but although my photo doesn’t show it, the worms I saw do have a white band known as the clitellum. Worms join themselves at the clitella to exchange sperm, and soon a cocoon will form on each worm. Baby worms are in the making.

My worms and I will be at the Western Mass Master Gardeners Spring Symposium on Saturday, March 21 at Frontier Regional High School in South Deerfield. We’ll be joining keynote speaker, Julie Moir Messervy, landscape architect and author of Home Outside, as well as many other knowledgeable presenters. Hope to see you there.

Rhubarb

One year a friend, just returned from London, gave me a copy of the Financial Times that contained an article about rhubarb. Rhubarb season comes earlier in England, but it is one of the first harvests here in New England and the article had all kinds of fascinating information.
Robin Lane Fox, Financial Times columnist, explained that rhubarb has been cultivated for about 4500 years. There are records of rhubarb being used medicinally in China since 2700 BC. It was actually the roots that were considered valuable as a purgative and cathartic.

It even became important as an export to Russia and England. It was so important that when the Chinese became angry with these countries in 1759 the emperor Qianlong forbid the export of rhubarb. Fortunately, long before that Marco Polo had brought rhubarb back to Venice where it was valuable in the pharmacopias of the day.

That Chinese rhubarb, R. palmatum, is rarely grown in the west today. Its medicinal properties are not needed. It is another variety of rhubarb, R. officinale, that became known as pie plant and that I always thought of as practically being invented in New England.

In fact, there is a record of a Maine gardener getting some roots from England in about 1790. By 1822 it was so popular that it was sold routinely in food markets. I always think of it as a spring tonic. Certainly a trip out to the rhubarb patch on a still cool spring morning can get the blood flowing and rhubarb’s tart flavor wakes up the taste buds.

Any number of catalogs sell rhubarb roots including the local Nourse Farms in South Deerfield. Rhubarb is a long lived and very hardy plant which should be planted in soil well fertilized with rotted manure and compost. The pH should be between 6 and 6.8 for best production.

Many people get their rhubarb plants from a friend who is thinning their patch. If the leaves seem to be getting smaller that is usually an indication that the plants are getting overcrowded.
I actually got my rhubarb plants from a neighbor who had thrown rhubarb root thinnings into their huge pile of autumn leaves. I went over one spring day to harvest some of those leaves for my compost pile and found beautiful healthy roots, already showing new growth and perfectly ready for planting.

Because the roots will increase in size and because the leaves are so large, roots should be planted three feet apart; the top of the root should be just level with the soil. Every spring I spread compost over the rhubarb patch, and I do the same in the fall when the plants have died down.

There is a controversy about whether the flower stalk should be cut down or not. One theory is that it steals energy from the plant. Another theory is that it doesn’t make any difference, and that the flower is just another attraction in addition to the handsome foliage. Take your pick.

The stalks are not really considered medicinal except in the sense of a spring tonic, but it must be remembered that the leaves contain oxalic acid and are poisonous. It is not likely that a toddler or young child would find them delicious after the first bite, or that anyone would stew them up as a mess of greens, but remember – rhubarb leaves are poisonous.

To harvest wait until the leaves are fully developed. Grab the stalk near the root and pull slightly to the side and break it off. Cutting with a knife can lead to rot. Don’t harvest more than half the stalks, and stop the harvest by midsummer.

Then take those red and green stalks into the kitchen for some good eating. First there is just plain rhubarb sauce. A very general recipe is all you really need. Take a potful of 1 inch pieces of rhubarb with lots of sugar and a cup or so of water. Bring to a boil for 5 minutes. If you wish you can also add the juice and grated rind of one orange. Refrigerate over night.

Another popular sauce is rhubarb strawberry sauce. I usually just toss a package of frozen strawberries into the hot rhubarb sauce and cook them together for a minute or two.

Hawley-ite Tinky Weisblat, author of the Pudding Hollow cookbook, suggests rhubarb fritters. She says that if you dip inch long pieces of rhubarb into a fritter batter and deep fry them, the rhubarb softens in about the time it takes for the batter to brown. Then it is just like biting into a hot jelly donut.

Fans of Prairie Home Companion are familiar with their “Be-Bop-A-Re-Bop Rhubarb Pie”, so I will take this occasion to give my favorite pie recipe, adapted from Easy as Pie by Susan G. Purdy.

Quick and Creamy Rhubarb Pie.
Make a thick custard batter. Beat together ½ cup plus 2 tablespoons granulated sugar; ¼ cup packed dark brown sugar;1/3 cup flour; ¼ teaspoon nutmeg; a pinch of salt; ½ cup heavy cream; 1 egg and ¼ teaspoon almond extract. This can be made several hours ahead and refrigerated until needed.

Take 4 cups of rhubarb cut into one inch pieces and toss with 2 tablespoons of sugar. Set aside while making your favorite pastry crust for a 10 inch pie. Shape a high fluted edge to hold in the custard. Moisture proof the shell by brushing on beaten egg yolk.

Put the rhubarb pieces in the pie shell, and pour the custard batter over all. Bake in a preheated 425 degree oven for 30 minutes. Reduce heat to 350 degrees and bake 30 more minutes or until top is browned and crackled. Serve warm. Happy Eating.

March 2008

Home Outside

Julie Moir Messervy, the well-known landscape designer and author of books like The Inward Garden, Outside the Not So Big House, and most recently, Home Outside, is coming to town. Messervy will be the keynote speaker the Western Massachusetts Master Gardeners Spring Symposium, Feeding Soil, Self and Soul, on March 21.
Messervy knows that our homes are probably the most important spaces in our lives. We celebrate at home and refresh ourselves at home. We can enjoy our family and friends in our homes, or enjoy quiet solitude.
But when we say we are going home, we don’t only mean into our house. Our home includes our yards and gardens. In her new book, Home Outside: Creating the Landscape You Love (Taunton Press $30), Messervy takes us through the various steps that help us build our outdoor spaces into pleasure grounds that will function as social spaces or private retreats.
One useful aspect of this densely and beautifully illustrated book is how it encompasses a great variety of living and garden styles, in a variety of climates, and in spaces both expansive and intimate.
Designing your space begins with an assessment of your property, “taking an inventory of the existing conditions” and then envisioning the ideal. “This two-step process of weaving dream and reality is at the heart of creating your home outside,” she writes.
The photographs in the book make her points very clear. Also included are many schematic sketches of landscapes with house and planting arrangements that I found particularly useful.
The final chapter is essentially a case study of a cottage in the woods, a tiny house on a small lot that embodies all Messervy’s principles, achieved over a period of time. Even the paint chosen for the house reflects the plantings. The result is charming and encouraging. I can imagine myself coming up with an equally charming plan for my own landscape.

Julie will be at The Feeding Soil, Self and Soul Symposium on March 21 from 9 to 1:30 pm, at Frontier Regional High School in South Deerfield. The cost for the day is $25 or $15 for the keynote speech by Messervy alone. I’ll be there making a presentation with my worm farm. Refreshments will be on sale, also locally produced items. For more information and to register for the Spring Symposium logon to the Master Gardener website, http://www.wmassmastergardeners.org/ or call Rae Davis at 625-0168.

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