frugality

Self-Sufficiency: Adapt To Your Climate

Woke up to this this morning:

I suspect I’ll be replacing all the tomato, bell pepper and eggplant seedlings that I planted last week in a fit of optimism. Yesterday afternoon I covered them with upside-down clay pots and spanish tiles and stuff, thinking we might get a frost, but today’s forecast says more snow and I don’t think my little clay pots are going to be enough to save them.

On the other hand, I have very good things to say about the hardiness of honeyberry, serviceberry, goji berry and sea-buckthorn bushes. We lost our apricot crop weeks ago to a hard freeze, but these tough little berry plants from places like Russia and Tibet don’t even seem to notice that they’re covered with snow and ice, even though they leafed out a month ago and are well out of the dormant stage. I think the real trick to growing your own food in any given area is to let go of sentimental attachments to varieties that just aren’t right for your climate and seek out plants that aren’t bothered by whatever your area throws at them. There are plenty of options to choose from, and most of them I’d never even heard of until I got serious about growing my own food and started doing the research. This summer I plan to create a new garden bed filled with slightly acidic soil, to accommodate edible perennials that can’t thrive in our sandy, alkaline soil. It’ll be mulched with pine needles and peat moss instead of straw and manure. Whatever the challenges are in your area, there are probably solutions if you’re adaptable and creative.

I just wish I didn’t love tomatoes and bell peppers so much. My life would be a lot simpler without those delicious, demanding little divas in it. I guess at some point today I’ll have to go peek under my clay pots and check for survivors; maybe the carnage won’t be total.

Can we be done with winter now?

Categories: Edible Perennials, environment, food, frugality, Gardening, Health, Life, Nutrition, Self-Sufficiency, Weather, Winter | 3 Comments

Phone Update

I’m going to be canceling my landline service in the near future. I’ve only kept it this long because I don’t get cell range at home, or thought I didn’t, but I’ve recently discovered that I get four bars on my cell if I’m in the new addition, facing North, standing on one foot and wearing a hat. Score! That’ll save me a chunk of money every month, even though I’ll have to buy an external phone speaker to amplify my crappy little Tracfone’s volume.

As an added bonus I won’t have to talk to women trying to get hold of Steve anymore, or men who think they’re calling Steve’s house and mistake me for one of his women. (And not always the woman he’s currently living with, which somehow still annoys me even though I’m not the one he’s cheating on now.)

ANYWAY, If we’re friends you probably already have my cell number, but if you don’t and you want it drop me an email and, if we’re friends, I’ll give it to you. I’m not sure exactly when my landline service will end, but it’ll be soon.

Transition to wall-drawing cave-dweller: 63% complete.

Categories: frugality, Life | 2 Comments

Wordless Wednesday: Bumper Crop

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Categories: food, frugality, Gardening, Health, Life, Nutrition, Self-Sufficiency, Wordless Wednesday | 3 Comments

Getting the Most From Your Garden: Summer Salads

I’m thinking of adding a series of simple recipes and ideas for using home-garden crops in everyday meals. Nothing fancy, just ways to stretch food budget dollars and add variety to mealtimes by eating more of what you’re already growing.

Probably my favorite summer meal (or at least the one I prepare most often) is a simple tossed salad fresh from the garden. It took me a while to realize that salads don’t have to consist of lettuce and tomatoes doused in ranch dressing; once I started experimenting with different ingredients my salads got a lot more interesting. The last one I ate was made of this stuff…

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…and tossed with a simple vinaigrette dressing of olive oil, balsamic vinegar, unrefined sea salt and black pepper.

From left to right those are Early Girl tomatoes, a pear (technically from the orchard, not the garden, but they’re the perfect complement to leafy greens), Tendersweet carrots, Fordhook chard, a Detroit Red beet (I eat the tops too), Ruby Red chard, a bell pepper, and purslane (which is actually a weed that grows wild in my garden but it’s very tasty and nutritious so I toss it in with the rest).

I grate the beets and carrots, dice the tomatoes, pears and peppers and tear everything else into bite-size pieces, then toss them all together in a big bowl with the vinaigrette dressing. Depending on the time of year, other salads might contain Romaine lettuce, snap peas, broccoli, cabbage, burnet, sorrel, radishes and/or zucchini. There’s no “right” recipe, I just eat what’s available on any given day. The vinaigrette ties all the flavors together.

My dressing recipe is very simple: after I have all the veggies washed, shaken dry and chopped, grated or torn up, I put them all into a big bowl and add just enough organic extra-virgin olive oil to coat everything evenly. Then I shake in some salt, black pepper and a few splashes of balsamic vinegar and toss it again. It’s not an exact science, but as a general rule you should use at least twice as much olive oil as vinegar.

When I happen to have cabbage, beets and carrots all ready to harvest at the same time, I make a simple slaw by cutting the cabbage into bite-size chunks and grating the beets and carrots, then tossing them all together with the balsamic vinaigrette. (It’s also great with ranch dressing if that’s your preference.)

The trick to getting the most from your food garden is to be creative and flexible and to try different combinations until you figure out what you like best. Let go of your preconceptions about what “should” go into a tossed salad, and just have fun!

Categories: food, frugality, Gardening, Health, Life, Self-Sufficiency | 1 Comment

Have Some Irony, It’s Good For The Blood

I’ve posted before about my struggle to grow decent watermelons. The climate here is all wrong for them: too dry, nights are too cool even in summer, temps go up and down, etc. Sometimes the seeds refuse to sprout at all, or they sprout and then fall prey to some pest or malady, or they manage to make it to maturity but can’t manage to produce any fruit worth harvesting.

I keep trying, though. My love of watermelons and my intrinsically optimistic nature win out every spring against the hard, comfortless voice of experience.

This hasn’t been a great year for my garden anyway. A cold spring, followed by a long blistering-hot stretch of summer, stressed out almost everything I planted. Plus I’ve been so busy with other stuff that my garden hasn’t gotten anywhere near the amount of loving care I usually lavish on it. The weeds are tall, the corn is sickly, the tomatoes are cracked from inconsistent watering, zucchini production has all but stopped because I didn’t keep all the young zukes picked…let’s just say it’s not my garden’s best year ever.

But! Do you know what I have LOTS of?

Watermelons.

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I have VOLUNTEER watermelon plants coming up all over the place. I have watermelons in my zucchini bed, watermelons in my asparagus patch, I have watermelons in areas where NOTHING was planted. There are vines everywhere, with baby watermelons adorning them like happy…little…baby watermelons. I am too flummoxed to think of clever analogies.

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So apparently watermelons thrive on COLD SPELLS and ERRATIC TEMPERATURE CHANGES and WEEDS and NEGLECT, and do not care at all for tender nurturing attention or specially prepared beds. They also prefer to spring into existence on their own rather than to grow from lovingly selected and painstakingly planted seeds.

I’m beginning to wonder why I bother to read all those how-to-grow-stuff articles. Mother Nature is clearly too capricious, too whimsical to be swayed by such mundane matters as soil and location and weather.

I’m beginning to love that about her.

Categories: food, frugality, Gardening, Health, Humor, Life | 3 Comments

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