My Edible Garden

I've been gardening for most of my life and have been a devoted fan of organic gardening the whole time. It just makes so much more sense to work in harmony with Mother Nature than to fight her. Besides which it is better for the planet and better for our bodies. Here you can see what I'm planting and harvesting, with gardening hints and resources thrown in for good measure.

Monday, September 16, 2024

Harvest Monday

Japanese Eggplant & a lone tomato
Welcome to Harvest Monday, kindly hosted by Dave over at Happy Acres I was just checking out his lovely pepper harvests and hot sauce making! Around here vegetable harvests have been a bit thin. We've had a lot of days with high UV radiation this summer and once the sun comes over the hill in the morning I just can't stay outside and work. So a lot of things that should have been done didn't happen. So looking forward to cooler weather, although I'm not looking forward to actual winter.


Some peppers but I forgot to weigh them
There are a few peppers here, some cayenne, shishito and the yellow jalapeno Lemon Spice. I did forget to weigh them before stuffing them in a jar.
Fermenting peppers

I am experimenting with a lot of things this year. These fermented peppers I'm doing with Himalayan pink salt, that's why it's pinkish.
About 8 ounces of small tomatoes


Some became lunch

I had a bigger tomato ripening on the counter so it and others became lunch; sour dough toast from a local baker, tomatoes with basil and basalmic vinegar, both with a dry crumbly homemade goat cheese.



Cucuzzi
The cucuzzi were again the biggest harvest this week, 18 pounds and 4 ounces. Eggs continue to be down, with mostly just 6 new pullets laying. This weeks count was 37, not nearly enough to pay their feed bill.

Milk production is way up because Esmarelda's kids are weaning. Esmarelda gave me 8.6 gallons and Bambi gave 5.4 gallons. I've made several batches of cheese, with most of it going into the freezer for the time when I dry Bambi up. I'm planning to breed her this fall and will dry her up about 2 months into her pregnancy. I'm planning to milk Esmarelda until next fall when I'll breed her again. A lot of goat owners don't do extended lactations. I'm not sure if they don't realize it's possible, if they have a good market for selling kids or what. I don't really need to have a bunch of kids, most people near me want cheap or free or do not care about the fact that these girls are purebred, registered Nubians from good, productive bloodlines. So breeding every other year or even two suits me fine.

Thanks again to Dave over at Happy Acres for hosting the Harvest Monday blog hop. I encourage you to stop by and go see all the other harvests from different places in the world.




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