It's hard to believe that a year has come and gone. I started this blog last year on September 12th with the planting of garlic and today, almost exactly a year later, I'm planting garlic again!
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Russian, Porcelain (I think!) and my own bulbs. |
I had saved two bulbs of my own growing but wanted to get some new ones as well. Long Lake Nursery in Nanaimo had garlic for sale grown on Gabriola Island - Porcelain and Russian. Unfortunately they were all in one basket and not easy to identify! I know that Russian has some red to the skin of the clove and Porcelain doesn't, so I tried to get 2 bulbs showing red and 2 not. When the wrapper came off, however, 3 of them look like Russian and the other looks like Porcelain.
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Half planted |
The bed was prepared several weeks ago by adding a couple of wheelbarrow loads of SeaSoil. It had previously grown snow peas and they would likely have put some nitrogen back into the soil. Today I marked out my rows with a good trowel full of homemade fertilizer. I allowed a row for each bulb and placed the rows of what I hoped were the same variety together. At least if each bulb has its own row I might have a better idea of which variety that bulb is. But then, maybe not! Each row has 6 or 7 cloves in it, gently pushed into the soil root end first.
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Garlic all planted and waiting for the soil to settle. |
Once the soil has settled with the coming of the fall rains, I'll add a mulch of chopped leaves on the top. Garlic doesn't like competition and chopped leaves are very good at keeping weeds at bay.
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Oregon Sugar Pod II |
The snow and snap peas are planted in the bed beside this one and are doing very well. I'm hopeful that this year I got them into the ground with plenty of time for some production.
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Sugar Lace II |
I planted 2 varieties, Oregon Sugar Pod II - which I had grown in the spring - and Sugar Lace II which is actually a snap pea. Now that they are growing, it's very easy to tell which is which. Sugar Lace has an abundance of very curly tendrils and apparently doesn't even need a fence to grow on. I'm thinking they won't be as tall as the Oregon Sugar Pod.
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Bright Lights Swiss Chard volunteers |
And in between the zags of peas are the volunteer Bright Lights Chard, looking extremely happy and healthy.
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