Saturday, July 27, 2013

It's almost Lammas Day

Nasturtium seeds, snap pea pods, and beautiful zucchini
Have you ever heard of Lammas? It marks the first of three harvest festivals, and it's celebrated in many religious traditions. From Wikipedia:
In some English-speaking countries in the Northern Hemisphere, August 1 is Lammas Day (Anglo-Saxon hlaf-mas, "loaf-mass"), the festival of the wheat harvest, and is the first harvest festival of the year. On this day it was customary to bring to church a loaf made from the new crop, which began to be harvested at Lammastide.
I just spent some time out in my garden, pulling up bolted butter lettuce, as well as harvesting those three things in the picture above. I was pleased to see the nasturtium seeds, which I will use for next year, and the snap peas as well. And you know what I'm going to do with the zucchini, don't you? Eat it for dinner tonight!
The biggest of my six cabbages
I'm not sure when I should harvest this cabbage, since every time I go out there it looks more enticing. I also have been adding nasturtium flowers to my salads, but I just learned that the leaves are edible as well, so I tasted them. They are spicy, too. I found that the seeds can be dried and ground as a substitute for pepper. I think I'll try all those things. I love these plants!
Carol's scrumptious strawberries
After that, I spent some time wandering around looking at the things growing in my neighbors' gardens. Carol is out of town, apparently, and her strawberries are incredibly ripe and ready to be eaten. I snuck one and it was really good. Don't tell!
Colorful sweet peas
Joan's colorful sweet pea flowers grace the fence in her garden section. They are even more brilliant than they appear in this picture. It's definitely time for the first harvest of the season; I've been eating summer squash every day and my beets are ready for harvesting, but I'm not quite ready to eat them, so I hope they won't suffer from being left in the ground. I'm such a neophyte about gardening. Maybe Linda Letters will give me a tip or two.

So far this year (knock wood) I've had much less of a pest problem, although the slugs continue to snack on our goodies. The fence has kept the deer out, and this year I stayed away from the plants the bugs devoured the most (kale, collards, and brussels sprouts). I'm happy to pay for them in the organic section of the grocery store and let the experts do the work. Or get them at the Farmers' Market. The last two weeks we haven't bought anything there, since we are working hard to keep up with the food from our very own garden: summer squash raw, sliced, steamed... it's a hard job but someone's got to do it!
:-)

29 comments:

  1. yay for harvesting! my mother would always watch the cabbage for signs of a beginning split on the head - then she'd know it had reached its full potential. i, personally, couldn't wait that long. :) love raw cabbage.

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  2. Beautiful pictures of a great garden. Sounds scrumptious, although I must admit eating squash everyday is a bit much. How about freezing some?!

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  3. glad you havent had many pests...we had lots of japanese beetles this year....everything in the garden looks wonderful....i would def be tempted to swipe a starberry...smiles....

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  4. Glad to see you still do ordinary things like the rest of us, along with your sky-diving adventures!

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  5. Good for you, your garden is doing wonderfully. Isn't it fun to eat from your "own" garden!

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  6. I love zucchini on the grill. Alas, we've given up vegetable gardening due to skunks, deer and other intruders who are stronger and more persistent than we are.

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  7. I love zucchini but don't plant it because it takes up so much space and then produces far more than I can eat.
    I think I gave you this solution before for slugs. Put on your head lamp and go out after dark/ Manually take the slugs off the plants and murder them. I did this last year and so fr this year I don't have very many slugs.

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  8. I had to look back to see what it was I was supposed to give advice on. Beets! Yes, they can be left in the ground until you are ready to eat them. They will probably continue to grow. Watch the tops and harvest before the greens get ratty. It would be a shame to lose the beet greens.
    Our few snap peas got wormy. We seem to attract every pest here. We lost most of our raspberries, and now the peas. Zucchini is going gang busters, though, and cucumbers. We gave some away to the neighbors this evening, after feeding us and Jill and kids. Hopefully they will keep things picked while we are away.
    Ask if you can pick a few sweet peas. they have to be picked regularly or they shut down. Such heavenly fragrance! It only takes a few to scent your kitchen for a few days.

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  9. I missed the spelling initially, and though at first you might see a parade of llamas. But then I checked, and remembered Lammas as a harvest festival in the Celtic year.

    What wonderful things you have in your garden! Happy eating!

    Blessings and Bear hugs!
    Bears Noting
    Life in the Urban Forest (poetry)

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  10. I've never heard of Lammas Day but your produce looks just wonderful. I LOVE zucchini.

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  11. I too, have never heard of Lammas Day. I always learn something new from you, Jan. Love that.
    Your garden is so beautiful...and bountiful, too!!
    Regarding those cabbage(es)...eat 'em when you feel like you want a good cabbage dinner. Ummm. I love cooked cabbage. Enjoy.
    Hugs,
    J.

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  12. This has got to be the Virgo element in your chart, striving to create a perfect garden (earth: Virgo) that is also practical!

    Love it. You're such a dichotomy and balance all these areas so well.

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  13. I like your colorful pictures, DJan. I have never grown veggies in my yard, so I do admire your success.

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  14. You may be a novice, but your garden sure doesn't show it!

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  15. Your garden sounds great! So far I only have some baby tomatoes and herbs ready, but I do have some squash and tomatoes that are coming along nicely that I'm excited to harvest.

    Have you tried putting beer in old tuna fish cans to kill slugs? You bury the cans so the tops are level with the soil and fill them with beer. The slugs are attracted to the yeast and barley in it. You can also put cornmeal in a jar and lay it on its side. Slugs will die after they eat it. Slugs are the worst! They used to be all over in my yard.

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  16. I love how you move through life. Such an easy and satisfying rhythm of life.

    I could use more of that.

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  17. Awesome!! Fresh produce, home grown in a small patch of good dirt, is just one of the happiest, most beautiful things. (I think.) :)

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  18. I love seeing what you are harvesting. It must give you quite a thrill visiting your veggie plot and seeing which veg is ready to eat.

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  19. Your garden is really growing. I hate those darn slugs. They eat the heck out of my hostas. I read that placing coffee grounds and broken egg shells around the base of your plants will deter them. I am going to give it a try.

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  20. The very best part of gardening. Nothing tastes as good as home grown.
    Interesting about kale and bugs. Mine are bug free here but I have yet to have a cabbage make it due to the many legged things.
    You were just saving her strawberries from rot and birds. Quite thoughtful and you probably ought to get more if she is still gone:))

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  21. They look scrumptious!! I don't know how you can resist that cabbage! :)

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  22. In Romeo & Juliet, Lammastide is Juliet's birthday when she will be 14. Sadly, she dies before it.
    I didn't realize it had anything to do with harvest. Your garden is flourishing! Bon appetit!

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  23. I haven't heard of Lammas Day which is surprising since I live in the middle of massive wheat fields.

    Your garden goodies look so good. I would have already been eating those cabbages since I love it raw and steamed.

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  24. Oh yum! That looks so wonderful. I love just picked strawberries. I like my zucchini best broiled or grilled with olive oil and Italian spices. You're so lucky to have such a bountiful harvest.

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  25. I always prefer young beets. I remember my Mom never wanted to harvest them young either. But now I can do what I want. Which of course means I "buy" young ones from the farmer's market.

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  26. Your garden's abundance amazes me. These were all crops we harvested months ago. Except the squash, it's now in full throttle here. Had a friend at church ask me about a zucchini bread recipe. I have one, somewhere, but it's not something I make. I'm not a zucchini fan, in any form, but we do get them in our CSA box. I either give them to our neighbors or the last batch I matchsticked and put in a pasta dish.

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  27. Your garden's abundance amazes me. These were all crops we harvested months ago. Except the squash, it's now in full throttle here. Had a friend at church ask me about a zucchini bread recipe. I have one, somewhere, but it's not something I make. I'm not a zucchini fan, in any form, but we do get them in our CSA box. I either give them to our neighbors or the last batch I matchsticked and put in a pasta dish.

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  28. I think I like everything I see here.

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  29. I never knew sweet peas were surrounded by such color!!

    beautiful gardens

    Hope sends a big hug

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