Sunday, March 4, 2012

The Wonderful World of Lettuce--Lactuca sativa


As Spring approaches, the tender perennial leaves are starting to appear in the garden. The longer, warmer days signal that it is time to sow the cool season vegetables. There are so many cool season veggies to love, and lettuce is one of the easiest to grow.

There are four main types of lettuce that I am going to discuss: crisphead, butterhead, romaine and loose leaf.

Crisphead includes the solid iceberg lettuce. Crisphead lettuce has tight, formed heads and generally has a very mild flavor. Most crisphead lettuce lack the nutritional punch found in the darker leafed lettuce.

Butterhead or loosehead lettuces are easier to grow than the crisphead varieties and have a head that isn't has solid. Loosehead lettuces have medium to dark green or red leaves and smooth, thick outer leaves folded around a loosely formed white to yellow head.

Romaine
grows in warmer weather and can stand the summer heat. It grows tall, upright heads and thick green or red leaves with a solid vein (midrib) in the middle of each leaf.

Looseleaf lettuce
is a lettuce you can cut and then harvest repeatedly. Mesclun is one of my favorite looseleaf mixes and includes a wide variety of greens. Seed companies mix up the seed composition to include such possibilities as arugula, endive, dandelion, herbs, kales and mache. The key to a perfect salad is to harvest the greens when they are small and tender.

Growing Tips
Here in Utah, plant your spring crop four weeks before the last frost. Do succession plantings to extend your harvest. If you are planting in the fall, plant four to seven weeks before the first expected frost. To start, sprinkle seeds over a loose bed of garden soil, then cover with about an eighth of an inch of damp, fine soil. Greens do very well in raised beds because raised beds have excellent drainage and are easy to work.

Growing Container Greens

Several varieties of lettuce do well in containers and also look beautiful in an edible landscape. Butterhead 'Tom Thumb' forms a small tennis-sized head and looks great in window boxes and hanging baskets. Swiss chard is always a show stopper with its beautiful colorful leaves.

Saving Seed

It is very easy to save lettuce seed. If you want to harvest seeds, allow several lettuce plants to go unharvested through the spring into the summer. The warm weather of summer will force the plants to bolt and send up seed heads. Once the plant has sent up a seed head put a bag or around the seeds to keep birds away and give the seeds time to dry. When the stalks are completely dry, cut and thrash the bolts to separate the chaff. Store seeds in a dry, cool location.

Sunday, October 16, 2011

Saturday, October 1, 2011

Edible and Ecological Landscaping

I attended a class today at my local library and the terms edible and ecological were mixed throughout the lecture, and I couldn't help but marvel at the importance of the two concepts. I live in an arid climate and I have no intention of having an all native landscape, but perhaps I can combine a little of the art of horticulture to create an ecologically sound and edible landscape. With the cost of fuel rising and the ever-present reminder of the limited resources of our planet, I am striving to make decisions that limit my impact on the Earth.The Day-Riverside Library has an Eco-garden that is tended by the folks from TreeUtah. The garden is pesticide free, striving to achieve the goal of being edible as well as ecological.

The first two pictures are of a hazelnut bush.


Rosehips are full of vitamin C and my three-year-old loves them.

Elderberry

Saturday, June 18, 2011

Release the Ladybugs!

I was actually excited to see the currant bush covered in aphids; these tiny green bugs were the perfect excuse to buy the $9.99 bag of ladybugs.


The kids were ecstatic!












Freedom!


Kind of reminds me of the nursery rhyme:


Ladybug, ladybug fly away home


Your house is on fire and your children are home


All except one, and that's little Ann


For she has crept under the warming pan.




Well, I have no intentions of burning down the garden, so the ladybugs don't need to worry here.




Feast!




Did you know that it is a myth that the number of spots on a ladybug indicates the bugs age? Anyway,if you are interested, I purchased these bug at Millcreek Gardens in Holladay and supposedly one lady bug can eat up to 5,000 aphids in its lifetime!

The June Bloomers

Delicate looking geranium flowers . While these petite flowers may look delicate, geraniums are pretty tough perennials.




Of course, all the annuals, like this ageratum, are happily blooming.




The horse chestnut is beautiful.




Wisteria at Red Butte Gardens



All the columbine is still going strong.




Lambs Ears (Stachys byzantina) with Catmint (Nepeta)




Saturday, June 4, 2011

Crab Apples










These are the real crab apples with the golf ball sized fruit that rot on the walkaway and make a terrible mess. Are these trees worth all the maintenance? Right now have to say yes!

Wednesday, June 1, 2011

Edible Plants-Basil



An annual herb in the mint family, basil is a must grow for any gardener. Basil loves warmth and is frost sensitive. If you want to harvest the leaves around the time the tomatoes ripen, direct sow seeds two weeks after the last frost. If you are going for dry basil leaves, make sure to harvest before the the appearance of flowers. The flowers can be harvested to make basil tea. I can't wait for the mozzarella, tomato, basil sandwiches, how about you?