Showing posts with label pea. Show all posts
Showing posts with label pea. Show all posts

Sunday, October 13, 2013

Fall Planting 10.13.13

Warm in the sun today, forecast the same.
Green beans doing their last. Planted summer-grown seeds of kale, radish, fava, parsley, cilantro, and pea. Serendipitous gift of elephant garlic, I shoved it into the ground too. Warmth will fool me as well as the seeds into extra action before true winter cold sets in.

Thursday, June 20, 2013

gardens still growing

My small plot at the PSU community garden is a micro-patch of vegetable plants turned jungle these days. Kale, parsley, chard, and carrot hold flowers and seeds on stems much taller than I, pea vines finding their way through the mess, california poppy and st. johns wort flowers lighting up the understory. The dish of water I normally maintain at center has become swamp, but fresh water is still to be found - as in this dock leaf cupping rain water into a tiny lake:




 So overgrown it has become, fairies actually moved in. Can you believe that?




 This is the view from their skylight


And these carrot flowers float about in great balls like spaceships made of snow, releasing drifts of powdery pollen



 Back at the other garden plot, giant-vegetable-dreams are realized in this fabulous lettuce (key included for scale).


 Delicious beet success, short of soccerball-size, not short on sweet


Beets and Kale, a variety of leaf texture


 Lentils! Handful of dry lentils thrown in the dirt... add water, time, warmth and sun - the seeds show some of their programmed secrets. Fine leaves and tiny pods, nice to meet you long-eaten staple.

Saturday, June 1, 2013

Spring Miscellany


What does a pea plant do when threatened? Grab the pistil!


A maple tree without maple leaves? I don't know what to think

One of my most favorite stamp-sized islands of life


 Oppidan forest

Thursday, December 15, 2011

Pea Beetles

I've been saving my pea seeds for several years, and never had a problem with bugs. This year though, I opened my seed packet just to take a look and found each with a round hole.

And a lot of little beetles, curled up inside of a pea or trying to escape from the packet.

Thursday, November 18, 2010

Fava Beans


fava beans
Fava beans, flourishing in the fall, killed with the first hard frost.

Friday, November 12, 2010

Spring in the Garden


It's decidedly autumn in the garden now , but I want to remember spring. I took these pictures on April 25, when everything was new, and the sap was rising (as I found when I trimmed the grape vines and their fresh cuts wouldn't stop dripping).




Fresh fig leaves (Ficus sp.)


Green cherries (genus Prunus)



Blooming hawthorne (Crataegus sp.)


The proud face of my garden pea (Pisum sativum)


New grape leaves (genus Vitis)

Thursday, September 16, 2010

Garden

It's mid-September and I'm still putting seeds in the ground. I planted pea seeds (saved from the spring) two weeks ago, and now I have a line of healthy-looking sprouts.


I noticed a print in one of my new seedbeds. Probably raccoon? 


I've been picking and eating from the garden more days than not this summer. Here I have a small Hubbard squash, a cucumber, and a few ripe tomatoes. I also picked some green tomatoes for frying. The seed heads are a type of daisy, and carrot. 

Thursday, February 18, 2010

Small-scale Farming

This 25lb bag of dry green peas...


...contains the split seeds of a variety of Pisum sativum (in the family Fabaceae).


And to my surprise, these seed halves can germinate! The plant embryo must be attached to just one seed half, or at least can be separated from the other half without damage. The germination rate for these seed halves, though, was very low (in the range of 10%).


The seeds grew into 5-6 inch tall plants -- before they began to fall. Maybe it's the tiny fruit fly chewing at the base of their stem, or maybe not. But for some reason the outer tissue at the very base of their tiny trunks is disappearing, leaving only a few thread-like strands of vascular tissue.
The plants were also unsuccessful at wrapping their tendrils around the provided supports. Even though the tendrils actually touched the supports, they seem to have forgotten that they are meant to wrap around other things, and not just in upon themselves. Was it starting life with just half of the normally provided nutrients that did these seedlings in? Or was it bad genes?