Wednesday, October 31, 2018

Camden Grange Centennial Celebration

Garden clubbers:

Although the Garden Club meetings are over for 2018, our meeting place (the Camden Grange) is celebrating its birthday this Saturday, Nov. 3, from 7 to 10 p.m.  There are a lot of fun things planned including a dance and it would be GREAT if the Garden Club membership could show their support by attending and/or helping out. In case you did not receive an email from MaryLee, here is a list of "help or items needed:"

Cleaning/decorating work party on Thursday, Nov. 1, at 1 p.m.

Need....Someone to be a greeter and collect admission....1950 prices
             Someone to help with the cake walk
             Someone to sell raffle tickets
             Someone to record stories and memories...you can use my IPad or ?

Here are some items that you can bring or send on Thursday....or Saturday...
  1. *Items for a photo booth, like old hats, glasses, scarves, etc.....funny or old...
  2. *Photos of activities or people in the grange from the “old days”...
  3. *Items to go in a raffle basket that reflect “rural living”....like a jar of jam, pickles, eggs, honey, flower seeds, garden or kitchen tools, knitted dishcloth....you get the idea!
  4. *Antique items for a “do you know what this is?” table....
  5. *Games or cards for those who might like to relive the card party days....
  6. *An old fishing pole with no hook. 
  7. *Antique or vintage clothing for a possible fashion show.

MaryLee can be reached at gmamarylee@gmail.com.

Hope we see you there.

Jim and Pat

Sunday, October 14, 2018

Harvest Dinner rocked!




Our club's annual Harvest Dinner in Camden Grange was a complete success: really good food (and LOTS of it!), good company (30 of us!), and a great roundtable discussion on what went right in our 2018 garden, and what went kinda right in our garden.  We learned from each other, and several folks offered to bring in saved seeds from outstanding plants, at the March 2019 meeting.  I received many requests for Harvest Dinner 2018 food recipes:  I honestly don't remember who asked for what recipe, so club members are asked to e-mail or call me (509-292-0326) with their request, and I'll figure out who brought what:  though my ultra-secret recipe/process for the faux-"ham" will remain just that - a secret.

Jim

Saturday, October 6, 2018

Annual harvest dinner meeting

Hello hardy gardeners,

It is once again that time of year when we close down our gardens in preparation for the upcoming "Hibernation season," AKA winter.  That means it is also time for our Annual Harvest Dinner and Garden Gnome Conclave.  At this meeting we share the bounty of our gardens in dishes we love while sharing the ups and downs of gardening in 2018.  All those who have shared their gardens and received one of the coveted Elk-Camden Garden Club Gnomes please be sure to bring it along for their annual meeting.  

For those that did not make the September meeting but plan on attending the October Harvest Dinner meeting, please get back to me by Monday, October 8, with the menu item you plan to bring.  We are especially in need of salads and veggies as well as biscuits, condiments, and beverages.  You'll notice there is no place for chips but if you are making salsa, well then chips are just part of the dish.  So, once again, please pick and item and let me know what it is so we don't end up with an all-dessert dinner. 

Looking forward to seeing you on Tuesday, Oct. 9, at the Camden Grange at 7 p.m. (unless you are helping with set up then it would be 6:30 p.m.)

Jim

Weeding between the lines

By Jim McGinty

It all happens at once:  killer frosts, the end of the gardening season, and the last gardening column for the year – sigh.

Here at Rancho McGinty, we experienced a pretty good year in the garden, with only minor setbacks.  Our tomatoes were planted too late, but we learned which of the tomatoe varieties WILL produce tomatoes with even a shortened season:  Matt’s Wild Cherry, Ildi, and Valencia (my new favorite high-acid tomatoe – great with bleu cheese dressing!).

Our squash and melon plants worked overtime to produce large, ornamentally colorful veggies:  Boston Marrow, a big orange squash, was especially productive, while the Small Sugar plants pumped out a dozen or so 9-inch-diameter pumpkins perfect for decorating and pie-making.  My gardening partner and full-time wife Pat says the Baby Blue Hubbard-type squash “are perfect for two adults” (one of whom must be secretly poisoning the other with dangerous “food”), and the “Porcelain Doll” pumpkins were huge (averaging 36 pounds).

In the potato patch, the German Butterball spuds are SO good in soups and stews, the Red Lasota potatoes are crisp and perfect for slicing and frying with onions and garlic (a meal in itself!), while the Purple Viking potatoes still make the best-ever mashed potatoes in the whole world (slight hyperbole, there, but not much).

Radish enthusiasts might want to try German Giant radishes – they grow to be huge, and do not turn pithy (thay that again?!) over a long thummer.

Even the Doyle thornless blackberry plants produced gallons of delicious berries, this despite a late June frost that killed the initial flush of flowers. 

If you have excess veggies or fruit, please remember our local food bank (here in Elk, the North County Food Pantry is located at 40015 N. Collins Road – you can call them at 509-292-2530 for hours of operation and other details).

With the removal of the dead plants, vines, and assorted veggie debris, it’s now time to plant the garlic crop for harvest in July 2019.  I like to rototill the garlic patch a week or two before planting, using various manures:  chicken, goat and sheep, horse, and cow manures all contribute differing essential nutrients for optimum garlic bulbs.  I also add layers of straw and barnyard litter, maple leaves, and pine/fir needles (no, despite all those unfounded rumors, the needles are NOT acidic).  Once the rototiller stops, I rake the garlic patch surface smooth with a bow rake, and start hoeing 4-inch-deep, narrow trenches, about a foot and a half apart.  In go the individual cloves, pointy-side up, and about 6 inches apart; then I rake the dirt back over the trenches, tamp the surface flat with the back side of the bow rake (to improve soil compaction, and contact with the garlic cloves), and overhead water, overnight.  As I collect bagged maple leaves from friends and neighbors, I mulch the garlic patch about six inches deep, and let the winter snow do all the work until early April, next year.

This is also a great time to remove all the spent berry canes:  you can prune out the brown canes that produced berries this year, leaving the purple or green canes for next year’s harvest.  Be sure to burn or dispose of the spent canes, as they sometimes harbor cane-boring insects.  

If you have an overcrowded rhubarb plant, now is the perfect time to divide and conquer:  with a sharp spade or shovel, merely chop out one quarter of the main root, then fill in the opening with garden soil, or even better, with compost.  You can replant the rhubarb “plug”, or pass it along to your favorite pie-making gardener (if you think strawberry-rhubarb pie sounds pretty good now – just wait until spring!).
In the open garden, now is the time to pick up all the spent plant wastes, and compost them (if the plant mass is free of disease or pests), along with some fresh manure, and the last lawn clippings – add water, and leave it alone until March.  Once the garden surface is free of debris, you can layer on the animal poo, the hardwood tree leaves and pine/fir needles, add available compost, scattered straw (NOT hay, which has several bazillion baby hay seeds just waiting to turn your hard won garden into a hay field), and turn it all under – overhead water if you desire, or you can just let the winter snows do the work for you.

Almost free of garden chores for 2018 - “almost” as you really need to take care of those expensive garden tools:  clean, oil, and safely store those rakes, shovels, hoes, trowels, and more, and also remember to drain and store your garden hoses, and fittings.  

 If you have small-engine driven machinery such as rototillers, garden tractors, lawnmowers, etc., now is the time to consult your owner’s manual (if you have lost your manual, they are freely available on the internet – ask your favorite 12-year-old kid for help with this task) to see what the factory recommends for winterizing your wheeled money pits.

GARDEN CALENDAR

Our local garden club will hold its last 2018 meeting, and its annual Harvest Dinner at 7 p.m. in Camden Grange on Oct. 9.  This evening offers a chance for club members to cook and bring to the meeting a dinner item featuring produce from their own gardens and orchards.  Our club will provide the protein main dish (historically ham, chicken, and reasonably fresh automotively processed wildlife), while club members are asked to bring a side dish, condiments, salads, bread-like items, and desserts.  Fortunate gardeners (club members and the local public) who have a much-sought-after club Garden Gnome, are asked to bring the little guys along, as they hold their annual Conclave while we overeat.
You can find more details on the Harvest Dinner here, or on our facebook page.


That’s it for this month, and for 2018 – see you out in the garden, next year!