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Avant Gardening with Sturtz & Copeland

Gardening ideas for Boulder, Colorado

Archive for the ‘Herbs’ Category

Earwigs

Monday, August 24th, 2009

Earwigs have been driving people nuts this summer.  They’re brown insects with pincers in the front and a double tail.  They favor green leafy crops in the vegetable garden and new growth in the flower garden.  They work at night and can really carve up your garden in record time.  You can treat the ground around your plants with diatomaceous earth which will kill them.  You can also use rotenone powder, low toxicity pesticide, awhich is effective but also has the potential to harm beneficial insects as well.  Or you can join the “acceptable losses” school of gardening, in which you adjust your parameters to the reality of  gardening: every season it’s two steps forward and one step back.

Watering Stress

Saturday, July 25th, 2009

Watering stress cuts both ways when growing plants. Too much water and they yellow and die. Too little and they shrivel and brown. But letting them get a little stressed can have benefits. Letting the plants go a little limp drives their root systems in search of water, resulting in a stronger plant. If you let your carrots go a little flat they’ll send their taproots deeper, resulting in longer, straighter carrots. One thing to keep in mind is that when you set out your seedlings is that their roots have been literally running around in circles in the inside of the pot. Teasing the roots out a bit will get them going out into the larger garden faster. On the down side, plants like cauliflower and broccoli tend to develop aphids when not given enough water.

Guide to Avant Gardening: Part 11 ~ Herbs

Thursday, May 28th, 2009

Herbs-Basil.60 days. From seed, two per planting, 3 inches apart. Keep soil damp consistently damp during germination. Basil is a paradox: it needs warm soil but begins flowering in June. Once that happens, the flavor falls off the table. So the best strategy is to grow a lot of it in a very short window of opportunity, then dry or freeze it. There are dozens of varieties from all over the world. Genovese is the classic wide-leafed sweet basil great in pesto. Thai basil is truly potent stuff with a hint of cinnamon. And spicy globe has tiny rounded leaves and a sharp flavor. There are also red and purple basils, some ruffled and some not.
Chives: 60 days minimum, from seed planted 1″ apart. Chives are without a doubt one of the easiest herbs to grow. Related to onions, they grow in much the same way. Keeping soil damp through germination is the key. Although an annual, chives will continue year after year if you let some of them go to seed. Their pink flowers are edible.
Dill: 60 days minimum, from seed. Dill plants are lovely, fernlike and up to 4′tall. They germinate well when planted in warm soil and kept watered. By seeding out they can return year after year, and the seeds themselves have some culinary value. The larger varieties tend to be less flavorful. Use fresh or dried.
Oregano: Grown from starts. Classic Greek oregano is probably the best, though there are dozens of varieties. Oregano will grow into a small perennial shrub over the course of a few years. It has more flavor before it flowers, so cut your year’s worth of oregano before then and dry it in the shade. Oregano is one of the few herbs that taste better dried rather than fresh. Mexican oregano comes a completely different plant, a tropical shrub, but from the culinary point of view it has a fabulous flavor.
Parsley: 60 days minimum from seed. Plant 8″ apart in mid-spring. Parsley can tolerate some cool weather so you can sow it out a little earlier than most herbs. It can take up to two weeks to germinate. It is a biennial, meaning that each plant grows for two years, flowering and going to seed in the second. Parsley can survive the winter and can also be dried. Moss or curly parsley is the most common variety, but many people think flat-leaved Italian parsley has better flavor. Keep an eye out for parsley worms or maybe plant a little extra for them. These distinctively pretty caterpillars morph into one of our prettiest butterflies, the black swallowtail.
Rosemary: From starts. Usually grown as an annual and planted in a container. “Arp” rosemary is a perennial here but, just to be on the safe side, plant it in protected spot on the east or south side of the house. The most important factor in growing rosemary is drainage. They don’t like soggy soil. Water only when the tips of the plants start to droop.
Herbs in containers: When planting container herbs keep in mind that there are short-term and long-term herbs. Short-term herbs like basil, chives and parsley typically don’t last more than a year and should be planted together. Long-term herbs can live for years. They include oregano, rosemary and thyme and should be planted together.

To read all of Todd’s Avant Gardening posts, see the Avant Gardening Series category.

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