We pulled the first radishes from our Roshara Garden
yesterday. Cherry red, crisp and
sweet—an early taste of spring. I don’t
remember ever having radishes ready to eat in May—by mid-June usually, but not in
May. A pleasant surprise. We also have lettuce ready to eat as well as
collards.
The other
thing I don’t remember is harvesting early crops from the garden before half of
the garden is planted. At the same time
that Natasha was pulling radishes, Steve and I planted cucumbers, winter squash,
zucchini, rutabaga, pumpkins, beets, gourds and a second round of sweet corn—I
planted a couple rows last Saturday.
Last week,
we had three and one-half inches of rain at Roshara—always welcome on our sandy
soil, but a little too much in a short period of time. Water stood on one side of the garden, very
unusual.
And to add
to the weather challenges, I talked to my brother, Donald yesterday (his farm is next to mine) and I asked him what
he was doing. “I’m covering my
tomatoes and potatoes because frost is predicted tonight.”
So what to
do. We have about 75 tomato plants, way
too many to cover. We have a dozen or more long rows of potatoes—also
impossible to protect. At ten last night
it was 47 degrees, at 5:30 this morning it was 37—and no frost in the garden
that I noticed. Whew.
Book of the Week
One of my blog readers suggested
folks might be interested in books I’ve been reading, or have
enjoyed and learned from in the past. So
here goes with the first one. The book
is THE LAND OF MILK AND UNCLE HONEY by Alan Guebert and Mary Grace Foxwell
(University of Illinois Press) and just published (May 15).
Guebert is
a nationally syndicated agriculturist columnist (see his column in THE COUNTRY
TODAY). Foxwell is his daughter. In a
section that is titled “December Past," Guebert writes, “The gray gloom of
December has arrived again and so, too, have the memories of boyhood on a
southern Illinois dairy farm. Most of
the warm recollections, however, are of cold cows, cold hands, cold feet and
old machinery.”
For those
interested in reading about Midwestern farm life during an earlier time, this
is a most interesting, and valuable book.
Those of us who have had these experiences are fewer each year.
The Old Timer Says: When working the land, one must always
consider the weather, even though there is little we can do about it.
Special Announcement:
My one-day writing course on “Writing from
Your Life,” is scheduled for Saturday, October 17 at the Clearing in Door
County. Go to http://theclearing.org/current/classes_workshop_description.php?id=26 for detailed information:
Upcoming Events:
June 11, 5:30 p.m. Fund Raising Event, Stoughton Area
Resource Team (START), Stoughton Hospital, Limping Through Life.
June 16, 6:30 p.m. Dinner and Lecture, Wisconsin Historical
Society Museum, Whispers and Shadows. Call 608-264-6555 for reservations.
June 18, 6:30, Riveredge Nature Center, Saukville, Whispers
and Shadows.
June 23, Midwest Secretaries of Agriculture, Dinner Meeting.
Madison, Concourse Hotel, Madison. Keynote.
July 16, 6:30. Heritage Village at Big Creek, Sturgeon Bay,
Remembering Farm Life from an Earlier Day
September 3, Noon. Old
World Wisconsin, Wisconsin Agriculture: A History (New book)
September 3, 7 p.m. Books and Company bookstore, Oconomowoc,
Wisconsin Agriculture: A History.
September 12, West Madison Agriculture Research Station,
Wisconsin Agriculture: A History. Time
to be announced.
September 17, 11:-a.m.
St. Luke's Church, Middleton, WI
Stories From the Land
September 19 , Stonefield Village, Cassville. Whispers and Shadows.
September 23, Patterson Memorial Library, Wild Rose.
Wisconsin Agriculture: A History.
September 26, 10:30 -2:00, Dregni’s, Westby, Book signing.
October 7, 6:30 p.m. Reedsburg Library, Whispers and Shadows
October 9-10, Heartland Forum, Chicago.
October 15, Prairie du Sac Library, Whispers and Shadows
October 17, 9-4 Teaching writing workshop at The Clearing,
Ellison Bay, WI
October 17, 4:30-6:00 p.m. The Clearing. Book signing, Whispers and Shadows, Wisconsin
Agriculture: A History.
October 29, Brown County Library. Premier of TV Documentary,” The Land With
Jerry Apps. “ Book signing, Whispers and Shadows.
November 5, 7:00 p.m. Baraboo Library, Whispers and Shadows.
November 7, Edgerton Book Festival, The Land (TV
documentary) and Whispers and Shadows
November 15, 9:15 Midvale Lutheran Church, The Land (TV
documentary) plus discussion of Whispers
and Shadows.
November 14, 9:30 -11:30 a.m. Sheboygan County Historical
Research Center. Wisconsin Agriculture:
A History.
November 18, Preview of TV Documentary, “The Land With Jerry
Apps” Wild Rose High School Auditorium.
Whispers and Shadows book signing. (Time to be announced)