Posted by songbird on August 16, 2011, 8:10 pm
they've sprouted, maybe we'll have some
pods before the frosts. i'm hoping we
have late frosts and they will do well.
if anything they will be a cover crop.
we've really enjoyed the peas this year
and only regret we didn't plant more and
years ago.
this garden is about 1.5m x 1.5m, raised
bed and almost all clay (a little sand was
added to it many years ago when it was
set up as a perennial garden). it was used
to grow green peppers the last two years
(both years produced well). this year it
had peas and mixed leaf lettuces. it did
ok. the lettuces eventually bolted and i
had to get them turned under.
which was a good chance to examine the
soil to see how it was changing from the
plant roots, the few holes where i'd put
worms a few months ago and the light mulch
of shredded paper i'd put on top to keep
the lettuces from getting dirt splashed
on them.
there was more evidence of fungal hyphae
along the fractures of the clay as it
crumbled. most of this was likely fed from
the decaying shredded paper. the places
where i'd put worms or where there were
decayed roots from the peas or lettuces
were more easily noticeable. no worms
were found. probably too hot and not
enough organic materials in there and
they didn't have an easy way to get down
deeper either.
i dug out four trenches down about 30cm
and put down the bolted lettuces and
whatever else on top that was organic and
then on top of that put several kilos of
worms, chopped up organic materials and
worm poo. then buried them. i'm hoping
they'll do ok this time. one trench i
made deeper in the middle to give them
a way to work down if it gets hot again.
good luck little buddies. :) gotta make
sure to get some green manure on there
in a week and a half. then i planted
plenty of peas on top.
this garden is right next to another
garden of the same shape, height and
soil and that has been treated a little
differently to start with and will be
examined later this fall after the volunteer
squash plants are done.
other peas are in progress, but they
are not pod peas, instead they are the
round smooth kind you find in split
pea soup. a small patch to increase
the seed stock for next year. i like
how they grow, they are quite cute with
their many tendrils. i'm not sure they
would be good fresh or not, i'll try
a few when they plump up a little more.
the fun continues... :)
songbird
Posted by songbird on September 6, 2011, 9:27 pm
songbird wrote:
> they've sprouted, maybe we'll have some
> pods before the frosts. i'm hoping we
> have late frosts and they will do well.
> if anything they will be a cover crop.
> we've really enjoyed the peas this year
> and only regret we didn't plant more and
> years ago.
ok, i can't find the exact date planted
but i think these sprouted after 4 days.
that makes the planting date around Aug
12.
today i see flowers, so i may get pods
before the frosts come.
just good to know it takes about 25 days
from planting in the summer in heavy soil
with full sun. watered often enough to
keep the soil moist.
from flower to pod not sure how many
days, but it seems to be only a few.
songbird
Posted by Nad on September 7, 2011, 3:27 pm
> songbird wrote:
>
>> they've sprouted, maybe we'll have some
>> pods before the frosts. i'm hoping we
>> have late frosts and they will do well.
>> if anything they will be a cover crop.
>> we've really enjoyed the peas this year
>> and only regret we didn't plant more and
>> years ago.
>
> ok, i can't find the exact date planted
> but i think these sprouted after 4 days.
> that makes the planting date around Aug
> 12.
>
> today i see flowers, so i may get pods
> before the frosts come.
>
> just good to know it takes about 25 days
> from planting in the summer in heavy soil
> with full sun. watered often enough to
> keep the soil moist.
>
> from flower to pod not sure how many
> days, but it seems to be only a few.
>
>
> songbird
I had "Peas with cream sauce" with the fresh green peas from my garden
today.
http://alturl.com/9nt82
--
Nad
Posted by songbird on September 8, 2011, 1:08 am
Derald wrote:
>Nad wrote:
>>I had "Peas with cream sauce" with the fresh green peas from my garden
>>today.
> Yum. One of my favorite breakfasts is peas in the garden straight from the
> vine and a fresh Samuel Adams beer; yummy. I'm still some weeks away from that,
> though, because my first fall peas just began sprouting today.
most of the harvest here too does not
get far from the patch. we barely had
enough this summer for two or three meals
because we were both snacking as we'd
walk by.
still speaking of peas i was not at
all disappointed by the sample of the
smooth round green peas i had the other
day fresh off the plant. true the pods
were not as tender and tasty, but the
peas were good. from my reading i was
lead to believe that they would not
taste as good. i'm building up my
seed source for next year so i'm trying
not to raid these quite so much.
songbird
Posted by songbird on September 8, 2011, 10:58 am
Derald wrote:
>songbird wrote:
>>true the pods
>>were not as tender and tasty, but the
>>peas were good. from my reading i was
>>lead to believe that they would not
>>taste as good.
> Do they have a varietal name that you know of? I've tried other peas that
> are promoted as being more heat tolerant than my "regular" Little Marvel, which
> would be a boon, but none of them has the combination of sweetness and flavor
> that suits DW&me. Unfortunately, the LMs neither dry nor freeze well.
i'm not sure what you mean by saying that
LMs don't dry well? i pulled about a pound of
dry LMs out of the two patches i grew. they
seemed fine and sprouted well. i have not
cooked with them and perhaps that is what you
mean? that they aren't good soup or porridge
peas?
the peas above were smooth round peas in a
mixed bag of soup beans you would get at the
store. so no variety name given for these.
they didn't croak in the hot weather we
had (90s for weeks on end) and they didn't
get nearly enough water. i liked their
upright habit and the many tendrils they
put out so they've supported each other.
i'm sure this is something they've been
bred for as a field crop. i planted them
in a small clump with about a 6 inch spacing.
a cheap experiment at around $1/lb. about
14 kinds of beans to try. they've been a good
cover crop, planted late, the full evaluation
comes after the hard frost and dry bean harvest.
i'll get the scale out. :)
songbird
> pods before the frosts. i'm hoping we
> have late frosts and they will do well.
> if anything they will be a cover crop.
> we've really enjoyed the peas this year
> and only regret we didn't plant more and
> years ago.