Tuesday, August 26, 2008

Dream acreage here I come! You might have to squint

I just calculated that I now have approximately 1.48 hundredths of an acre!

1 acre = 43,560 sq ft
1/3 plot: 15.75ft x 10.3 ft = 162.225 sq ft = 0.00372, 0.372% or 3.7 thousandths of an acre
new plot: 15.75ft x 30.9ft = 486.675 sq ft = 0.0111, 1.11% or 1.11 hundredths of an acre
Grand Total: 1.48% of an acre

I've always believed in rampant baseless extrapolation so here we go:

I started out with a plot last year in another garden (on the other side of the city), that was about 100 sq ft (I gave up that first plot for my current 1/3: 100->160sqft). This gives me 3 data points, or garden acquisitions, total. Plotting my total square footage at each of these changes (y axis), by how many months had elapsed since I began community gardening, gives the line to the right.

Extrapolating linearly, at this rate it will only take me 76 years to acquire an entire acre. Wow. I have some good longevity genes on my side, but that's still pushing it. Not to mention that the community gardens only allow you 2 plots total (which is why this is baseless extrapolation - merely an excuse to graph something).

Clearly I need another plan.....

weed to girl ratio 1000000:1


I am just as excited as I was a few days ago about getting another, entire plot - quadrupling my gardening space - but I am now experiencing just how hard it is to undue someone else's neglect. I am also experiencing the irony of getting so much land but having to dig up stubborn taprooted weeds from every inch of it.

Here's the plot. You might be thinking "hey, at least there's no weeds under that black landscaping fabric" but you'd be wrong.

However, for my troubles, I've inherited some new plants that managed to grow amongst the voracious weeds. I'm not sure if it's ironic, but it's definitely more squash.
I now have: butternut squash, yellow squash(no!) and zucchini, lemon cucumber, cabbage, some fancy broccoli that may never flower, and a swarming mass of unsupported cherry tomato vines. Rumor has it there's a couple of pepper plants in there, but I haven't gotten to those beds yet.

I weeded 4 hours Saturday and 5 hours Sunday, and I'm not even done with 1/3 of the plot. I thought I'd rototill it, but realized that would just cut up the weed roots and multiply the weeds. So I have to go dig up as much of the roots as I can by hand, with a shovel. My hamstrings are so sore from bending and pulling!

However, I'm starting to acquire a taste for my new fresh insta-cherry tomatoes off the vine! Tonight I made a fabulous roasted tomato salad dressing with them.

Thursday, August 21, 2008

Grafting Round 1: The epiphytic tomato

Who knew tomatoes could be epiphytic (m-w.com: epiphyte: a plant that derives its moisture and nutrients from the air and rain and grows usually on another plant)? Only under overzealously-controlled, extremely unnatural conditions, i.e., my inadvertent tomato sauna/terrarium. This was my first attempt at grafting, and I learned a lot during and since. I was possibly marginally close to success. Here's the story:

I'll try to explain the techniques and reasons for grafting in another post. Briefly, grafting is growing the top of one plant on the roots of another. The plant used for its vigorous and disease-resistant root system is called the rootstock, and the plant you want to actually grow - in the case of tomatoes, the variety you want to harvest and eat - is called the scion. A successful graft means that the rootstock stem fuses with the scion stem, xylem and phloem channels connect and water/nutrients pass up/down, and the plants become one. The most important thing is for the two stems to be the same width, so the xylem and phloem line up; they are only around the outer part of a stem and need to have contact in order to heal together.

While there's several techniques for joining scion to rootstock, for my initial trial, I was entranced by the idea of growing two varieties of tomatoes off of one plant. That meant inserting the main stem of the scion into the rootstock main leader (but not cutting off the rootstock leader), with the goal of the scion eventually becoming another leader. It's a more complicated graft for a beginner to do successfully than something like tube grafting (I think), so of course I pick this as my first attempt in which I have one try to get it right. However, the technique, called "approach grafting", has some built-in insurance: when slicing the two stems together, all roots are left intact until the graft "takes" and new growth forms. Here's a diagram (from ASGAP). In order to keep 2 leaders - one rootstock, one scion - I would eliminate "Cut 1".

I planted two varieties close to each other in the same pot: Stupice, a nice paste heirloom, and better boy, a hybrid. The plan was to insert the main stem of the Stupice into the main stem of the Better Boy, since Better Boy has the VFN resistance.

Here's where it got fun:
1) While I was away at a conference, the Stupice significantly outgrew the Better Boy. The plants were already planted next to each other, but the stem diameters no longer matched. Brilliant.

Plan change:
refer to the figure to the right (from Britannica Online, cleft grafting): can't do approach graft (method 2, although I didn't know about method 1 at the time); I have lop off the Better Boy stem, slice it into a wedge shape, and stick it into the Stupice stem (method 5). I didn't know it at the time, but this is what Britannica Online calls "side cleft" graft and what a TAMU workshop calls "side" graft.

2) Everything I read emphasized the absolute need for same stem diameter. Not only does this affect the height at which you insert the scion, but quite a large slice into the rootstock stem is required to accommodate the scion stem if they are the same diameter. So I ended up slicing through most of the rootstock stem. Actually, I had to cut a wedge out of the rootstock with the same angles as the scion wedge. I found out it's really hard to control a razor blade in soft plant tissue. I cut really deep.
If only I knew: according to TAMU, side grafts are recommended when the stems aren't the same diameter. Makes sense now.... if only the TAMU site showed up in regular google search results, not just image results...

But, I managed to get good contact between scion and rootstock. I secured the graft with a clothespin - it was the right size and tension (not too tight) and, most importantly, I had it on hand - and used kabob sticks as support stakes taped around the plant pot (you can see them in the last couple of pictures) to keep any cover off the plant itself. The next step was to let the plant heal by providing an atmosphere where it has to do as little work (transpiration) as possible: somewhere dark, warm, and humid.

Thus, my first healing chamber: the plant on a flooded seed tray with a black plastic garbage bag around it and a seedling heat mat under it. I put the plant pot inside another pot so it sat above the standing water in the seed tray. The support stakes kept the garbage bag away the plant, at least mostly. The heat mat heated the chamber enough to create a very humid, warm atmosphere. I opened the bag to vent the chamber a couple of times a day. It was closed pretty tightly by cinching the bag and clipping it with a binder clip.


Upon flashlight examination over the subsequent week, the graft never wilted too much and was looking good. However, the clothespin covered the graft union so I could never see if it remained in good contact,etc. The chamber remained at a steady 80F and very wet - it was pretty much my very own bedroom rainforest. I really didn't know how long to keep the plant in the chamber, so after 7 days - the time recommended for smaller grafts in online guides - I began leaving the bag slightly open for an hour or so at a time. But each time, the scion wilted a bit, so I thought maybe the graft wasn't ready for the real world yet. I started to notice some edema (swelling of cells) on the rootstock leaves after about a week, which was probably a sign of too high humidity and temperature (but which the online guides said would be temporary). Since the scion was still wilting when I reduced the temperature and humidity, I felt I couldn't move the plant out of the healing chamber quite yet. Maybe the molding wooden support stakes should have been another hint I created a little tropical rainforest for my tomato, and what I saw next was bound to happen:

Adventitious roots! No! Here, you can see that the scion put out its own roots (right above the clothespin). And why not? There's almost 100% relative humidity, quite confusing. (A few times, the garbage bag would get so weighed down with clinging moisture inside that the support stakes would poke through, and the heavy bag would be resting on the plant. Also bad.)

So after 14 days, I decided some tough love was in order; the plant would die if I didn't give it some light. Here's my 2nd phase healing chamber:


This is in a relatively low-light window. I poked a few small holes in the ziploc bag, and spritzed the inside with a spray bottle of water twice a day. As long as it stayed wet, the scion looked perky!

Finally a week later - it had now been 3 weeks - I loosened the ziploc and set it in a window with more light, and the scion promptly wilted past the point of no return. Yep, after all that - done in a day or two. But, at least I could now remove the clothespin and look at the graft union. What I found was that there was no union. The scion just had adventitious roots, and the rootstock cut had callused over so it could never heal back together. I think the first healing chamber was a little too hot, causing enough sap production in the wounds to force apart the scion from the rootstock at the graft union. The Stupice was still alive, barely (what a trooper), so I called this experiment over and made it a stem splint with part of a straw.

The Stupice is hanging on, but with the vigor of a guy long overdue for a triple bypass. No surprise since I cut almost all the way through the stem - it's running on probably 1/4 of it's xylem/phloem channels. It's pretty pathetic. It keeps growing straight up, with a few little leaves, but has a fruit forming now! The mature tomato will totally break the stem, but I'm going to let it go because hey, who am I to alter nature ;)


Lessons Learned:

1)if trying an approach graft again, plant the two together in the same pot at grafting time, not before, to assure same stem diameter.

2) chill out on the healing chamber conditions. Less than 80F, definitely less than 100% relative humidity. Wondering if maybe it doesn't have to be completely dark; not every guide I've read now recommends total darkness (incl. TAMU, which recommends something extremely similar to my 2nd phase chamber).

3)I need a sturdier structure for the chamber, so it won't touch the plant. While I think it was the sap production that pulled the graft apart, any plant movement might disturb the graft union; an evaporation-laden plastic bag wants to fall on the plant no matter how much I don't want it to.

4)I should try a simpler grafting technique (tube grafting?):
a) so I can claim a success
b) the clothespin was heavy (did it tug on the graft?) and blocked view of the graft union. Tube grafting uses a clear tube which holds the stems together firmly.


Round 2 recap coming soon...


Wednesday, August 20, 2008

My first black tomato: color wheel now complete!

Black from Tula, from one of my upside-down tomato plants. This first fruit was pretty beat up:

but I must say it tasted WONDERFUL! It lacked that tomato "bite" but still had a lot of flavor.

Did I mention I don't actually like raw tomatoes? But I liked this one. Now I can't wait for the Black Krim to ripen!

I've had one Moonglow(orange),one Yellow Boy, and one Better Boy (red) thus far. This Tula not only completes my tomato color wheel (of what I've planted (no whites)) but also is my favorite. The Yellow Boy was pretty citrusy and acidic, the Moonglow was a little fruitier, and the Better Boy tasted like a regular tomato. Hard to describe, but they definitely all taste quite different! I had no idea about heirlooms until this season - it's turning out to be really interesting!

Sunday, August 17, 2008

I got another plot!! Can the world get better? I'm not sure

Growing Gardens is the organization that manages the Boulder community gardens. There's quite a demand for plots, so if you get one and don't take care of it - prepare, weed, actually try to grow something - they take the plot back and give it to someone who will. And on August 14 for plot #308, that someone was me!!!!!!

I have only a 1/3 plot right now (18' x 9'?). I've maxed it out - I can barely walk around. With the addition of a full plot (18' x 27'?), my gardening space quadrupled in 1 day! There are not words to describe how happy this makes me. I'm beyond exclamation points now. It's just too good.

I have big winter gardening plans this year, mainly focusing on cold frames. My plans were of course bigger than my gardening space (till now!). With no experience and no space, I thought, this was the perfect project ;) But things are coming together...

Last weekend, I attended a workshop on 4-season gardening given by the Boulder Sustainability Education Center. The workshop covered cold-season crop seeding times, temperature requirements, and physical protections: row covers and cold frames. Although I already knew a lot of what they taught, I learned more about times to start seeds and ways to build cold frames that definitely will be vital to my wintertime success.

Fall season crops need to be started now, so they are established and can just "maintain" when the weather gets really cold. However, summer season crops aren't done yet and won't be for at least another month. I was wondering just where in the world I was going to plant these fall-season seeds in the meantime. Voila! A whole new plot!

Plan:
1) prepare soil in new plot, after other guy "moves out". Hopefully he'll leave his good plants...
2) plant lettuce, chard, spinach ,kale, brussel sprouts, broccoli, mache, cabbage, possibly a cold-hardy tomato like Sub-Arctic Maxi or Siberian, just to experiment. Some will be planted in raised beds, others flush to ground, others below ground (~3 beds?)
3)when it gets cold, place cold frames around beds. I want to test which setup stays warmer; seems like raised beds would heat up faster, but I'm wondering if setting a bed a foot into the ground would keep the temperature more stable.
Anyone out there have experience with this?

Sunflower glamour shots

My sunflowers are blooming! I planted three kinds: Taiyo (giant yellow), Velvet Queen (burgundy) and strawberry blonde (pink to yellow). I found out only two kinds made it: Taiyo and strawberry blonde. Oh well! They are beautiful! Here's some pics:

















Sunday, August 3, 2008

Aww, shucks!

The nice and knowledgeable folks over at Bifurcated Carrots wrote a post about my blog!

In the spirit of beer appreciation, Patrick, here's a pic of my hops vine! I really wanted to take a new picture of it with a Sierra Nevada next to it, but my camera broke the other day... anyway, hopefully sometime soon there will be some hops on it!