Alt text: I harvested a dozen Hungarian Wax peppers this morning and they are on my table awaiting processing

I harvested a dozen Hungarian Wax peppers this morning and that one (!) plant can now stand under its own weight again. We have a whole slew of tomatoes currently ripening on the vine so hopefully I can make some sauces and salsa this week. We got a food processor recently and I’m dying to try out more modes.

Alt text: an admittedly messy garden bed of various brassicas is being worked by bees, with the goal of having a self seeding salad patch

The bees are going crazy in one of our self seeding salad patches. We have four of these now, though two are newer and were planted later to stagger the harvest schedules and provide fresh greens for longer.

Alt text: a wide shot of a garden near our shared property line. Several coneflowers, late figwort, bee balm, and others are visible to the left of a mowed section of grass

Here’s a view of the permanent raised bed near the northern boundary of our property. Native Echinacea (purple coneflower) is growing next to a native Rudbeckia (the yellow coneflowers), with black elder, bee balm, and others growing in the background. To the right is the only patch of grass I mow with any regularity, as it’s a shared boundary with our neighbor and their kids have been a little too helpful with the mower in the past.

Alt text: a close up view of the seeds forming on a New Jersey Tea plant. The young green seeds contrast against the speckled red tip where flowers used to be

Speaking of seeds, we have a whole bunch of seeds forming on New Jersey Tea (Ceanothus americanus and also my favorite plant) planted all over the place. These plants have a mechanism for seed dispersal that creates pressure behind the seeds as they ripen, which then releases and jettisons the seeds with force. It can be difficult to time seed collection with this kind of adaptation, but luckily a neighbor has some tulle she’s looking to offload so I’ll be making some small pouches to tie around the seed heads. I collected a ton of seeds from our Russian sages yesterday as well, but those are much easier to time - the flowers will brown and dry, at which point you can gently shake the seeds out into a container.

What’s growing on with you all?

  • LallyLuckFarm@beehaw.orgOPM
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    2 months ago

    Interesting! I don’t believe I’ve seen that listed in my books or notes for teas, but I have some growing here. Thanks for some reading material to go through!