garlic! (and more fall planting)

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I love garlic.  Love it, love it, LOVE it.  I’ve been talking about planting it here at the farm pretty much since day one of my arrival so I was pretty stoked to get down and dirty yesterday and get a lot of our bulbs cracked and planted.  We planted five different kinds of garlic and I wish I’d written down all of their names when we bought the bulbs because I can’t remember them now.  I know there was a ‘classic’ garlic, a red spanish one, a russian one, a ‘Legacy’… and I can’t remember the last one… oh well, maybe we’ll be able to identify them when harvest time comes around.

Garlic was my most successful crop when I grew it for the first time in my community garden plot in Ottawa.  Discovering how easy it was to grow it, dry it, and enjoy eating it for months afterwards made me wonder why everyone doesn’t use part of their yard/ garden to grow it.  If you don’t, you should!

If you’re interested in growing garlic, now’s the time to do it!  Plant in the fall and harvest the following summer.  This website has some great step-by-step recommendations on how to do it.  The short basics:  prep your soil, crack your garlic bulbs (break them apart and separate all the cloves), and plant each clove individually (pointy end up) about 2-3″ under the soil and about 6-8″ apart.  Keep your garden as weed free as possible and cover your beds with mulch for the winter if you want to.  Garlic has a long growing cycle – it begins taking root under the soil throughout the winter and starts showing it’s green shoots in the spring.  Harvest time isn’t until mid/ late summer when the green leaves are a few feet high and the scapes (thick green stem that grows up the centre) starts to curl.  (Mind you, I don’t know if that’s with every variety or only the ones I planted in Ottawa – we learn as we go! :).  The scapes can be cut off and minced up into delicious pesto and the bulbs can be pulled up out of the soil, ready to eat and dry.  Yummy!

We planted about 2/3rds of our garlic in the plot we rototilled and prepped that lives between the barn and the chicken coop.  We wanted to leave some room in there for other winter crops, so we’ll be finding somewhere else to plant the rest of the garlic.

I did mention ‘more fall planting’ in the title of this post and indeed we did do more than just plant garlic yesterday.  We also got our kiwi vines planted (yay!), our broad beans and some cabbage.  We’re hoping to get some onions, kale and beets in the ground before it’s too late as well.

Oh – and we attempted to prune our old, crabby apple tree.  We weren’t really sure exactly what we were doing, and it turns out we maybe should have waited a few more months to do it (recommended late winter or early spring), but hopefully our efforts will help the tree rather than harm it.

It was a great way to spend a beautiful fall, sunday morning.  Happy thanksgiving everyone!

 

 

1 thought on “garlic! (and more fall planting)

  1. Shirlea Durston

    For your pruning, you need a good long-handled, wide-mouthed (don’t know if that is the professional description) pruner. Perhaps your Christmas wish list should include new tools and a book on how to take care of them.

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