(Pictured: my first round of lacto-fermented pickles from 2021)
What are you doing differently this year? What do you want to learn?
Last year I got some inspiration from a HB post about pickling cucumbers and it was a really enriching and fascinating journey to learn about pickling and fermenting.
This year I want to stay on that train but learn to ferment habañeros, but my other goals are a gourd arch (for the pickling cucumbers), going to try drying beans for the first time in 10 years (I found a place to harvest bamboo that I'm going to use to make some huge trellises), and I want to try celery and also do garlic, potatoes, sweet peppers and eggplant.
I also want to learn about saving seeds, but I say that every year.
So what about you comrade? Share your inspirations!.
Working to establish some more perennials this year, going to grow some perennial kale varieties, in addition to sorrel and expanding my existing asparagus patch. I established some blueberries and strawberries last year, in addition to some apple trees. I also found a kiwi fruit variety that’s self-polinating that I’d like to add, maybe a peach.
Yeah I recently realized green onions are perennial, as my green onions remained hanging around all winter.
I've always been interested in asparagus, but hesitant to put in the investment as I rent. Am I right that it takes a few years before they produce?
So because you’re essentially harvesting the immature stalks of the plant, picking it in the first two years will kill the plant. You can buy established cones which can be picked sooner, but it’s significantly more expensive than starting from seed.