Tim's Square Foot Gardening Journal: May 2007

Tim's Square Foot Gardening Journal

Welcome to Tim's Square Foot Gardening Journal or Blog, if you like. This is where you can keep up to date on what is happening in my square foot garden, so check back often for updates!! This is a supplement to my main Square Foot Gardeing Web Page which can be viewed by clicking on the following link:

Tim's Square Foot Gardening Page

Name:
Location: Indianapolis, Indiana, United States


Saturday, May 26, 2007

History of Broccoli, Very Dry May

I heard this on the radio a few days ago and thought it was interesting. I guess I never thought about the history of broccoli before.

Sources:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Broccoli
http://plantanswers.tamu.edu/publications/vegetabletravelers/broccoli.html


Broccoli is a cultivar of wild cabbage. Wild cabbage originated along the northern and western coasts of the Mediterranean, where it was apparently domesticated thousands of years ago. This domesticated cabbage was bred into different cultivars, including broccoli, cauliflower, cabbage, kale, kohlrabi, and brussels sprouts.

"Broccoli" is an Italian word taken from the Latin brachium, meaning an arm or branch. "Cauliflower" comes from the Latin terms caulis (cabbage) and floris (flower). These "cabbages" are grown for their thickened, profuse, undeveloped flowers and flower stalks instead of for their leaves.

Broccoli has two distinct forms. One makes a dense, white "curd" like that of cauliflower and is called "heading broccoli" or "cauliflower broccoli." The other makes a somewhat branching cluster of green flower buds atop a thick, green flower stalk two to two and a half feet tall, and smaller clusters that arise like "sprouts" from the stems at the attachments of the leaves. This form is called "sprouting broccoli."

Broccoli was an Italian vegetable. It was first mentioned in writings in France 1560. In the then American Colony, Thomas Jefferson grew broccoli at his home in Monticello, VA and recorded it growing with radishes, lettuce, and cauliflower on May 27, 1767.

In 1860, at the Cirencester Agricultural College in southern England, the wild cabbage from the seacoast was subjected to simple breeding and selection procedures. From these wild plants, which resembled crude kales, forms of broccoli and other related cabbagelike varieties were developed, demonstrating their common ancestry.

Commercial cultivation of broccoli in the United States can be traced to the D'Arrigo brothers, Stephano and Andrea, immigrants from Messina, Italy, whose company made some tentative plantings in San Jose, California in 1922. A few crates were initially shipped to Boston, where there was a thriving Italian immigrant culture in the North End. The broccoli business boomed, with the D'Arrigo's brand name "Andy Boy" named after Stephano's two-year-old son, Andrew, and backed with advertisements on the radio.

End

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Just a quick entry about how dry it has been here over the last month or so. I think here in Indianapolis we are about 2 inches below normal on rainfall for the month of May. It has also been relatively warm for this time of year. It did rain about 0.4 inches last night, but it is still pretty dry. I have been watering my garden, and will probably continue to do so unless we get more significant rain.

I have just started to see small heads developing on my broccoli plants, so it will not be long until I start harvesting broccoli. My lettuce continues to grow well despite the dry and hot weather. The tomato and pepper plants are starting to get some size to them. The cucumber plants are growing nicely as well.



Saturday, May 19, 2007

Late Spring Garden Pics














I thought I would post pictures of all of my garden plots. Shown from top to bottom above: Corn Plot, Potato Plot, Onions/Lettuce/Celery Plot, Bean/Pepper/Cucumber/Tomato Plot, Green Onion/Peas/Bean Plot, Cabbage/Broccoli/Brussel Sprout Plot, and a close-up of some of the celery seedlings. Overall, the garden is growing really well right now, but it is a little dry. Happy Gardening!!



Thursday, May 17, 2007

Garden Is Fully Planted

My garden is now fully planted. I planted my green beans and pole lima beans about 2 weeks ago and most have sprouted. My peas do not seem to be growing that well. I will blame that on the goofy weather we have been having. For the most part, it has been warm/hot and dry. Today the high temps did not get above 60 degrees and it was mostly cloudy and breezy. It has been dry for this time of year and I will have to begin watering soon. My spring lettuce crop is really growing well this year and it seems to be just a tad bit earlier this year. Needles to say I have been harvesting lettuce like crazy. The broccoli and cabbage plants are really growing well and now got some size to them. No sign of a cabbage moth anywhere right now. I think the cold snap of early April put a dent in the population. I saw many moths earlier this spring. I will post another blog entry soon.



Saturday, May 05, 2007

Lettuce Harvest Begins, New Electric Fence



The weather here has finally turned warm. The lettuce is finally starting to grow now. I harvested the first bit of lettuce about one week ago. I harvested quite a bit of young tender greens 2 days ago. I forgot how good fresh garden lettuce tasted!! I started more lettuce seeds of Buttercrunch, Craquerelle du Midi, and Green Towers about one week ago. These are more heat tolerant varieties. I took down my hoop house over my lettuce as the weather has finally warmed up enough. Harvest continues on my top settting onions for green onions. I fertilized my bulb onions with Gardens Alive Root Crop Fertilizer a few days ago. I also watered them as the soil was getting a little dry. I planted 5 fennel plants a few days ago. Today I am going to plant my tomato, pepper, cucumber, and celery seedlings out into the garden. I think the weather has warmed up enough to do that. If time permits, I will also be planting pole lima beans and my first crop of green beans. The broccoli, cabbage, and brussel sprout plants are growing nicely and I will be side dressing them soon with Gardens Alive Vegetable Fertilizer. Today, I will also be taking down my cold frame for the year. My peas have finally started to emerge from the ground. My brother planted Yukon Gold potatoes about one week ago and planted his corn about 5 days ago. He decided to try Silver Queen this year. He also installed an electric fence around the corn plot in an attempt to keep the rabbits and squirrels away (see pic above). I purchased the "Mr. McGregor's Fence" which came with much more than I think we needed. He installed just the battery operated controller with the two wires around the plot. The wires are situated about one inch apart just above the top of the raised bed. So far so good. If any of my readers have used this electric fence or any other kind, please send me an e-mail or comment below on your results. I would be very interested to hear from you.