Digging Potatoes

Digging Potatoes

I’m sure I’ve mentioned before that potatoes may not be the best value for work input for a home grower.  High-quality organic potatoes from the market are quite inexpensive, and certainly a better pure cost value than our homegrown spuds. However, I have no doubt that planting two beds of potatoes every year is a good fit for my garden. Potatoes are usually a very reliable crop.  I’ve got my planting scheme down, and I see the rotation of potato beds through the...
Tomato Harvest

Tomato Harvest

The picture represents a very small fraction of the total tomato yield.  I have forty plants growing in two beds.  The 20 different types I grow our mostly heirloom varieties and a lot are started from saved seed. One hybrid I have grown for a lot of years is Sungold.  This small yellow/orange cherry tomato is always the first tomato to produce and it remains very productive right up until frost. We grow several varieties of cherry tomatoes, different paste...
Bindweed – CobraHead’s Weed of the Year

Bindweed – CobraHead’s Weed of the Year

For our first, and probably last, annual award for the worst weed in the garden, this year goes to bindweed, hands down. Weed of the year requirements are simple.  What weed is causing me the most grief or the most work to control in the garden?  This year bindweed is way ahead.  It’s hard to kill, it has deep tap roots that easily snap off. After breaking off the plant from the root, the root quickly puts out new growth. The stems wind around other plants and can...
Sweet Corn

Sweet Corn

We had an excellent corn harvest.  Unfortunately, raccoons ate about two dozen ears due to my negligence in leaving the garden gate open one night  Nevertheless, we still had a lot of corn to eat and freeze.  We froze 16 bags of corn, each 1.5 cups for a total of just over 12 pounds.  We are stuffed with sweet corn, right now, and we’ll have delicious frozen corn to carry us through the winter.    

Twenty Year Anniversary!

In the summer of 1997 I was working in the garden with an old five-tined cultivating hoe, which I primarily use to shape and work up my open raised beds. One of the tool’s tines came loose and before I put in back in its place, I played with it in the soil.  I was intrigued by how well it plowed my hard, clayey soil, but I also noticed that it did a good job of grabbing weeds. From that experience, the idea of the CobraHead Weeder and Cultivator was born. After...

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