Winter Roots, Tubers and Bulbs
Succession
planting is one of the most consequential concepts in increasing the output of
a small garden and in achieving some degree of food self-sufficiency. Equally
important is “succession eating” which would include both eating what is in
season and planning for storage crops to eat when the weather is cold and the
garden is less productive. My first attempt at practicing this year-round succession
eating was growing white potatoes, (any fool can grow a spud) to provide a
healthy carbohydrate from July through Thanksgiving and then growing sweet
potatoes (one of the few vegetables easier to grow than a spud) to provide a
healthy carbohydrate from Thanksgiving until early potatoes came in again. I
planted my white potatoes really early…around St. Patty’s Day in mid March.
That is mainly because my soil is sandy and I knew the mid-summer drought would
play havoc with my garden in July and August. Mostly I tried to have two
succession gardens, a pre-drought crop and a post-drought crop. That idea
served me really well with last summer’s extreme drought. Sweet potatoes are drought
hardy; they grew all summer long and still produced a very respectable crop
just before frost. In the end, we had both enough white and sweet potatoes for
ourselves and still some extra to give quite a bit away; that always makes an
old retiree feel good.
In
addition to these basic two year-round eating crops, I considered growing other
storage “roots, tubers and bulbs.” Not being a botanist, I think of all three
of these as being roots. First my wife informed me that she wanted some onions
to go with those Yukon Gold potatoes. So we planted several pounds of onion
sets very early in the spring...in early March when I planted the lettuce and
spinach. Through spring and early summer as I weeded and thinned the onions to
four inches apart, we used the thinnings as scallions to eat until the onion
tops finally dried and fell over just as the summer drought hit and then we had
cured onions the rest of the summer. I did a poor job of curing the onions, so
none kept into the fall. I planted a row of beets; and they also matured and
did very well before the drought. Some Borsht soup went into the freezer.
Borsht is basically a stew where potatoes are replaced with beets.
Towards
the end of August (and toward the end of the normal drought season), I planted
turnips and carrots and began experimenting with fall gardening. I should have
put in some beets for winter storage, but I just didn’t get around to it.
Besides, I think my cook does not appreciate the “bloodiness” of red beets so
in the future I will need to switch to golden beets. I have often read how
productive and easy to care for fall gardens are, so I wanted to move up to this
next level of gardening and give it a try.
What I found was that once cool and wetter weather came about mid-September,
there was a drop off of weed growth and insect attacks. But when I first planted
the seed and the new plants sprouted in August, there was a necessity to
frequently water and cultivate and hand pick pests. That first month was tough
going. The turnips were very fast maturing and ready to pull in October. Raw turnips
have that strong “cabbage” or Cole taste which people either hate or love.
Fortunately, most of that flavor cooks or fries out of it so that in a soup or
hash browns you barely taste it. In a stew it is difficult to tell a cooked
turnip from a potato. Rutabagas are even more indistinguishable. Because of the
white cabbage butterflies which outnumber all other moths and butterflies by a
billion to one, I have to date had no luck growing cabbages. These pests also
sometimes lay their cabbage looper eggs on turnips leaves, but they don’t bother
the root. By peeling and grating turnips and then adding mayo and sweet
vinegar, I can have Cole slaw all winter long. Actually it doesn’t have to be mayonnaise;
any salad dressing will give its own distinctive slaw. I usually also grate a
carrot into the slaw.
I find
it amazing that a thousand-dollar refrigerator doesn’t keep root crops nearly
as well as a five gallon bucket of damp sand in an unheated garage or a cool back
room. Carrots (and parsnips which I have not yet grown but will next year)
don’t even need a bucket of sand. This
year I allowed my fall carrots to grow undisturbed until nighttime temps fell
into the teens in mid December and then I took black bags full of leaves and
set them on top the carrot rows. Today is January 23rd and we are suffering
through the tail end of an arctic blast, but I can still go out to the garden,
move a leaf bag and pick carrots from unfrozen sandy soil.
The
carrots are very sweet and along with the Yukon Gold potatoes are my wife’s
favorites. I have had some spectacular failures to this point trying to grow
carrots in the springtime. Carrots are slow to germinate while weeds are quick,
so a carrot row ends up being a weed patch. I planted just a few radishes in
the carrot row to show me where the rows were so that I could hoe-cultivate the
weed sprouts between rows. That still leaves weeds in the row and I am not a
down-on-my-knees weeder-gardener. I have a bad back and bad knees so weeding
and thinning are my least favorite part of gardening. My solutions to these problems
are a lawn chair and a scissors. As I sit in the lawn chair, a row of carrots
runs right between my legs and between the four chair legs. My body weight
forces the chair into the sand so that the seat is right at carrot top. I can
lean forward in the chair to use the scissors to snip out weeds and unwanted
carrots. After doing about 3 feet of row, I stand up and move the chair back
down the row. This works for me for weeding and thinning carrots, turnips,
beets, lettuce, spinach, chard etc.
Most people
do not like doing easy crossword puzzles; most people prefer the “challenging”
crossword puzzles. Similarly I enjoy
“pushing the envelope” in my small garden because doing so is both a challenge
and a learning opportunity. So I will probably fool with a “soup and salad”
fall garden next year too. I think a winter garden may even be possible here in
zone 6 in a wind-protected, sandy garden. I hope to plant leeks this year so I can
harvest them in winter. (And not have to mess with curing onions). Rutabagas,
carrots, and parsnips all stand a chance of making it through the winter if
mulched in the garden. Numerous salad greens are winter hardy although my
preference would be spinach and Swiss chard. I think it would be really cool to
harvest garden produce in the dead of winter. Cool?...Downright FRIGID!
No comments:
Post a Comment