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© 1997
Henrik Nordström
Nothing is more satisfying than eating your own organically
grown produce for most of the year. When the fresh corn, beans
and tomatoes have all been eaten, it is nice to keep harvesting
and eating your stored produce through the winter and spring.
I get about 80 % of all the produce I
eat year-round from my garden, without using greenhouses or
even cloches and minimizing the need for indoor storage of
produce. My total garden space is about 800 square feet, half
of which is a seasonal plot at my P-Patch and the other half
a year-round garden in my back yard. In combination with a
few fruit trees, strawberry and raspberry plants, I am pretty
much self-sufficient for about 10 months of the year.
Potatoes are my most important staple,
providing the basis for about 5 meals a week. My 100 square
foot potato patch produces up to 200 pounds of potatoes, which
will last me for about 9 months. I start harvesting potatoes
in early August, about one plant a week, and during the last
week of the P-Patch short season I dig the remaining potatoes
and put them in winter storage. I wait until the very last
moment so that the temperature will only be in the 50s to
low 60s at harvest time. Then I can put the potatoes in winter
storage in my unheated garage right away where they will keep
for up to 6 months. I cover the potato crates with a blanket
to prevent frost damage during cold winter nights. Huddled
together under the blanket, the potatoes give off some heat
and keep each other from freezing, even if the outside temperature
temporarily drops into the teens.
Parsnips and rutabagas are wonderful
root crops for the winter. I harvest my rutabagas along with
the potatoes and put them in storage, but leave the parsnips
in the ground through the winter. Rutabagas are wonderful
in stews and casseroles, and keep in good shape in storage
for about 4 months. I usually dig parsnips until the end of
April, sometimes longer if the spring is cool and keeps them
from going to bloom.
I keep harvesting my fall carrots as
long as they last into the winter, and begin harvesting my
fall-sown overwintering carrots in the late spring. I grow
all my carrots in a cage covered with mosquito wire to keep
out the carrot rust fly whose maggots can be especially troublesome
in winter.
Leeks also overwinter in the ground without
problems. I mulch them along with the parsnips before the
first hard freeze to keep the ground from freezing so that
I can keep digging them. Leeks almost completely replace onions
in my winter diet, since they are so much easier to deal with
as compared to onions which must be dried and stored.
Cabbage is an important crop to me. My
fall cabbage stays in the ground well into November. I pick
any remaining full-grown cabbages at this time and store them
for another couple of months in the fridge. My overwintering
cabbage sown in August starts producing in March or April.
I sow spinach in the middle of September
and start harvesting it in early April. If the spring stays
cool, the same spinach planting can keep producing into June
before bolting.
I even eat my own fresh tomatoes for
about 7 months of the year. My super-early tomatoes (Early
Swedish) start producing at the end of June, being planted
in a warm protected spot against the south-facing wall of
my house in early April. I pick the unripe tomatoes from my
storage varieties at the end of October, and ripen them indoors
in a dark place. They will keep for over 2 months.
A great inspiration to anyone wishing
to achieve self-sufficiency with only moderate labor is the
book "The Good Life" written by Helen and Scott
Nearing. They moved out to the country from New York City
back in the 30s, built their own house and tended their garden.
A guiding principle for them was to work only 4 hours a day
for food and shelter, and devote the rest of their time to
cultural activities. They were both vegetarian, and lived
to the age of about 100.
Tomato Growers Wanted:
To provide a large selection of tomato
varieties for the 1997 Great Tomato Taste-Off to be held in
early September, I am looking for about 10 growers from different
P-Patches who would each grow a few different varieties. If
you are interested, give me a call at 783-1273 in late January,
or call the P-Patch office before that at 684-0264. We will
have a planning meeting early February to decide who will
grow what.
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