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I started the day by planting my fall and winter garden, filling up all those seemingly empty squares in the photo above. In late July, I started planting seeds of plants that I will be able to harvest in the fall and throughout the winter. I ordered a bunch of hardy, over-wintering seeds from
Territorial Seed Company's Winter Garden catalog. According to
Seattle Tilth, July is the second spring in our climate, so it's a good time to plant cool weather crops again, like lettuce and peas. The following crops will hopefully be growing in my garden this fall:
- lacinato kale (dinosaur kale) and red kale
- collards
- boy choy
- swiss chard
- 3 types of bibb lettuce
- romaine lettuce
- red merlot lettuce
- onions
- rutabagas
- 2 types of spinach
- 6 buckets of carrots
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Then, I got out the ladder and precariously gathered all of the apples I could reach off my tree. I have no idea what kind of apples they are, except that they look like little crab apples. They're small and tart, but they bake beautifully. Last night, I made a rustic apple tart with another Mark Bittman recipe. I'm telling you, that
cookbook of his is worth checking out.
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Finally, I harvested the seeds out of one of my ripe heirloom tomatoes this afternoon. I'm going to take the seeds through a fermenting process that will allow me to store them until I am ready to plant them in February. Thank you Gayla Trail (the author of the book that got me started,
You Grow Girl) for showing me the way.
wait, there's an apple tree on your property? where's that?
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