Showing posts with label gardening. Show all posts
Showing posts with label gardening. Show all posts

June 3, 2014

WEED ROCKET

Posted by Lori~

I have been spending LOTS of time in the yard recently and I have to say it is looking pretty!  However, there is an infestation of dandelions in my little city, ND town, and my yard is seeing a few pop up.

I could get down on my hands and knees and pull them by hand!  BOO--THAT DOES NOT SOUND FUN!

But, I have discovered the most AMAZING YARD TOOL!  I first read about it here.

I NEEDED THE WEED ROCKET and sent Steve an email!  He ordered it as a surprise to me.  How romantic!

And...I LOVE IT!



You simply poke the rocket into the center of the weed  and step down on the lever.





Check it out...it even pulls out the root!
 
 

Now you can push down on the handle lever to release the weed!  AMAZING!



September 2, 2013

LABOR DAY WEEKEND VEGGIES!

Posted by Lori~

It's back to work tomorrow.  Steve and I are back in town after a long weekend at the lake, and we came back with a TON OF VEGGIES!  




Thank you Patsy and Listi (Steve's Dad and Step-Mom) for the delicious veggies right from the garden.

I spent tonight cleaning and cutting them.  And decided to freeze most of them, so that they would keep for the long-haul.


Actually, as I type this post, my hands are ON-FIRE!  The peppers burned my hands and burned my throat.  However, it was worth it because we will have lots of peppers to last through the winter.

I also froze lots of herbs (basil, rosemary, thyme, parsely, and so much more!).




According to Patsy, this is the way to freeze herbs.  You simply break-off the amount needed.

I hope you all had a GREAT long weekend!

July 22, 2013

Garden Bean Disaster.

Posted by Ethne~

Friends, I don't know what has happened to my garden this year, but it's awful. (My neighbors said they took their crappy garden leaves to our local nursery and they said lots of people are having a bad growing season and so IT'S NOT JUST ME.)

First, my grape tomato (the Tami G) shriveled and died.  It got all nobbly and yellow.  I'm sure it was diseased.  Thrifty Nana got me a replacement cherry tomato so WE'LL SEE.

Second, my string beans started out fine and then turned brown and shrivelly and stunted.  They stopped growing altogether and even looked like they were going to die completely.  Shaun gave them up for dead, but I kept tending them since I want pickled green beans, SHAUN.

Then I sprayed them with some anti-fungal that's supposed to help with 70 diseases (got it for the Tami G but it didn't help at all), fed them with Miracle Gro, and they are coming back a little bit.

Brown leaves down below.  New leaves still shrivelly.  Fingers crossed.

I'm still not very encouraged since they should be 5-7 feet tall by now, but I'm glad they're not dead.

June 17, 2013

LORI’S OUTDOOR IMPROVEMENT LIST



Posted by Lori~

It’s gorgeous out! It’s already mid (to late) June!  I need to get some outdoor projects complete.

Last night, Steve and I put together a repair/improvement list for our home exterior.   Better yet, I believe I have Steve convinced to start working on the list this weekend.

Time for a new door-bell.  It works, but it is cracked and doesn't exactly say "welcome"!

We need to build-up the flower bed.  One more layer of bricks need to be added and cemented together.
LOVE my bleeding hearts!
This table needs touch-up paint and new cushions!  I CANNOT WAIT!
We knew the fire-pit wouldn't last but it was FREE.  Now it's time to make something more permanent.
This is the final tree area that needs rocks and edging!  It's go time!
We LOVE our red door, but it's time for a screen door. 
This area needs some color...I am thinking Hosta Plants.
There you have it….I suppose if I put it in writing, it will equal even more motivation.  Let me know what you think!

June 13, 2013

UPDATE: Easy Mac's Fairy Garden Finished!

Posted by Ethne~

Hey everyone, remember a few weeks back when I revealed this year's fairy gardens? Click here.  Well, Easy Mac's wasn't quite finished, but it is now, with the pink tile patio (scrapbooking tiles from the clearance section at JoAnn, glued onto screen from a sliding door), a new bench (couldn't find hers) and a pot with silk flowers hot-glued into the bottom and then filled with dirt (it's got a hole in the bottom of the wee pot to drain like any regular pot).  You can see the little Squinkie gnome I made in there too.  So darling.

The two plants on the left are real, as is the rosemary 'tree' on the top right.  The 'river plants' down the center and the 'shrub' on the bottom right are silk.  Shaun made the shepherd's hook to hold the lantern over the patio out of a wire hanger.

June 4, 2013

A LOOK AROUND MY FRONT YARD

Posted by Lori~

I had planned to post about curbside clean-up tonight and my awesome finds (on the side of the road).  You can read about my curbside finds here, here, and here.  Unfortunately, Shelley and I found NOTHING.  And, Steve was happy!

Instead, I thought I would show you a quick run-down of my front yard flowers, which are doing very good.  I think the rain is keeping them healthy.

I actually do very little planting and most of my flowers come back each and every year.  However, I fill my window boxes, pots, and rain barrel flower pots with plants.  This year I went with mostly wave petunias and spikes throughout (there are a few others thrown in there as well).

I actually took a tip from Young House Love and used hanging plants for my window boxes, because it created a more mature window box.  It basically skipped a lot of waiting and was worth the minimal added cost.
 





 

May 22, 2013

Garden Plans in Motion - green beans!


Posted by Ethne~

Holy cow, we’re at the end of May almost – somehow I crammed what feels like 6 month’s worth of work into the past few weeks.  I have hardly gotten onto the internet to check out our favorite blogs, do creative cooking or activities, or even check CNN to keep up with the Jodi Arias trial – I know, right? (Luckily Lori is my bff and keeps me in the know.)

We leave tomorrow for Omaha to visit Dad and Mom Connie.  She’s retiring next week from her career with the National Park Service and so we’re celebrating.  The girls consider this our “summer vacation”.  Whit’s coming too, so it’s going to be a Griswold-style road trip up in here (pray for me – Emma gets motion sickness).

Credit

I had brilliant plans to show you pictures of the girls’ first soccer practice, since that was supposed to be today.  But – OF COURSE – it was cancelled due to inclement weather.  I am thankful, of course, that the weather is just annoying and not a safety hazard, unlike down in Oklahoma.  Our thoughts and prayers go out to those folks.  I am thankful that our family friends from Norman, OK, are okay.

Lastly, guess what we’re growing in the garden this year?!  Green beans!  Specifically, pole beans, from seed.  Thrifty Nana (my mom) suggested the pole beans (since we have limited space) versus bush beans and said no point in buying plants when we can grow them super easily from seed (cheaper too).  So that was last Sunday’s task, between rain showers.  We’re also growing a whole bunch of dill (in pots).  What does this add up to?  You guessed it – we’re going to pickle our green beans a la Barb Slagle’s dill pickles. 

I got the idea from Shaun’s cousin, Tom, who gardens and pickles everything – he’s awesome – when last Christmas I ate so many of his dill pickled green beans that he gave me a jar.  I told Shaun this year that I wanted to grow cucumbers for pickling and he suggested that I do Barb’s pickles with green beans instead because my garden is small and we can, basically, get more bang for our buck with green bean plants.

Credit

I also planted one grape tomato plant (Tami G hybrid) since the girls love to pick and eat those right off the vine.  How could I refuse?

I will keep you posted.  I am so excited!  When the bean sprouts pop up, I’ll share some pictures.

Reporting in tomorrow from Omaha.

May 21, 2013

OUTDOOR DECOR: FLEA MARKET FLOWER!

Posted by Lori~

Thank you to the blog Our Fifth House for hosting yet another link-up party!  This link-up party is all about the outdoors and decorating.

Unfortunately, I (along with Ethne) haven't been able to get into the yard too much yet, because IT WON'T STOP RAINING!  

My husband is currently in China and so Mom/Dad visited and Dad had to show me how to start the lawnmower (yes, I didn't know how).  But, I haven't been able to use it yet, because it has been raining NON-STOP!

So, when Our Fifth House announced this link-up, I knew immediately what I would feature for my outdoor decor.




My in-laws recently gave me for my birthday gift an awesome plate flower for my yard.  These are home-made, put together with random dishes, and were purchased at the area flea market.  

They actually use a copper pipe and a spoon to attach the flower to the stem.

I LOVE IT!  It will look even better when the "real" flowers are in full-bloom mode.

 

May 16, 2013

2013 Fairy Garden Reveal!


Posted by Ethne~

Friends, I can finally reveal the girls’ fairy gardens!! (Since it’s finally been nice enough to do them.) 

I found the darling miniature plants for $2.99 at Bachman’s, our local higher-end greenhouse (I tried Home Depot first since I’m kinda loyal, but no dice).  The pine-tree-esque rosemary plants will be perfect – those were $3.49.

I got each girl a new fairy accessory – KD got a teeny watering can to go with her vegetable garden.  Easy Mac got a pennant banner to make her fairy’s flower garden a party.  Those were about $5 apiece.

The clay for the veggies, white picket fence, wee pink tiles for Emma’s patio (not finished yet and missing its bench) and fake flowering shrubs were from Michael’s, all for around $20 (most stuff was on clearance and less than $2 individually).

When I chose the itty-bitty plants, I had to take a few guesses.  Besides the rosemary to be pine trees, I picked a small, low, tiny-leaved plant to be grass-like and something fern-like for each girl’s garden.  The plants weren’t marked as to what they were, or whether they were sun- or shade-loving, so it’s all a guess.  I’ll hope for the best, but at least I’ll know they’re guaranteed miniature this year!!!

I chose the overall plant arrangement, but then let the girls do the decorating.  KD got to pick where she wanted her veggies to go in her garden.  Easy Mac got to help decide where her river would be, then put the river gems down with me.  They had on their kid-size gardening gloves and couldn’t wait to water everything.

Easy Mac's: see the wee shepherd's hook Daddy made with the lantern on it?  And the squinkie gnome?  Beneath the lantern will be Emma's pink tile patio, bench and mini flower pot.
Tomato plants, lettuce and carrots hidden back there.  Isn't that watering can cute?!

So much fun!

May 6, 2013

SPRINGTIME PINTEREST CHALLENGE: Wee Fairy Garden Gnome!

Posted by Ethne~


It’s springtime Pinterest Challenge* on one of our very favorite blogs, Young House Love – and amazingly of all, it’s actually feeling like spring up here in big city, MN.  I was looking at my Facebook pictures yesterday (I don’t get on there much, sorry creepers) and we had snow on the ground on April 23rd.  Insanity.  I just about lost my mind, no lie. *The Challenge is actually posting on May 8th, but Lori's doing one of these too, so we're doing my day first.  Link up to YHL on the 8th if you wanna see what everyone else tried out for spring.

I took this picture of my flowers on my table with snow outside on 4-23

Springtime means that Ethne goes ape-crazy over gardening.  I daydream over what I’m going to put into my pots and my teeny little garden.  I’ve been on Home Depot’s online garden center asking their expert for help pairing the perfect plants – they said put perennials in with annuals in my pots (say what?!) for more selection (I asked for options besides petunias and geraniums).  FYI, if you join their online garden club, you get a $5 off (a $50 purchase) coupon just cuz.

The crowning glory are the girls’ fairy gardens.  Anything in miniature is awesome, from the wee fairy furniture to the itty-bitty plants – I’m in heaven.  The girls are WAAAAY into the fantasy of our yard’s fairies.  This year we decided to be more detailed - I tried to go to a fairy gardening seminar with them but it was a sit-down class, not hands-on, so we had to leave before I learned anything (the girls weren’t interested in a slide show from the arboretum, despite my pleas) - this left me with the internet. 

There’s a lot of kitsch out there, and some of it is pretty junky.  I think I’ve figured out what plants to use – we’re not going crazy with some of the true miniature plants I’ve found at places like this here since the MN weather isn’t temperate enough to keep them alive.  But I think I can achieve the whimsy with plants that will live in MN fine and that won’t break the bank.  I’ve got some serious plans y’all!

For the Pinterest Challenge, ya gotta check out what I pinned.

3/4" tall - I.COULD.DIE.  Find him here.

Ya, that’s pretty much what I thought too.  Cutest ever.  Except he’s $17 and I have two kids.

So I said to Whit, surely we can make this little shaver ourselves?

You bet.  I stole two of the girls’ Squinkie toys, painted their clothes red and blue and crafted pointy gnome hats out of the clay you mold and then harden in your oven – it comes in a zillion colors from JoAnn for a couple bucks.  It worked great because I whipped the hats up at the same time we were making wee clay veggies for KD’s fairy garden since she wants her fairy to have a vegetable garden.  You read that right.  And just to keep you coming back, wait till you see the teensy shepherd’s hooks Daddy made out of a coat hanger.  Gah!

I just used the $1 acrylic paint pot from JoAnn - then sprayed them with clear spray paint when they dried to seal the color - we'll see if that works!!  Here, the girl's legs are still Squinkie green, not gnome blue.  The boy was originally all Squinkie green.

Glue gun affixed the clay caps to the gnome heads.

Aren’t my girls’ Squinkie gnomes just the cutest?  Not your traditional Travelocity gnome, it’s true – they’re more the Gnomeo & Juliet type.  But they are totally perfect for the fairy gardens of two little rascal twins named KD and Easy Mac.

I raided Shaun's tool cabinet and found two screws - glue gunned to the gnome feet and they will stay put in the garden now!
Sneak peek.

August 5, 2012

LOG CHAIRS


Posted by Lori~

As you know, Steve and I built our own fire-pit with leftover bricks from around our house.  We found these bricks when we moved in and put them to good use.

So far so good, but it is starting to crack and fall apart.  Steve and I pretty much new from the get-go that we would really needed fire bricks and glue, however this fix was FREE and has lasted us over two years.  FREE FOR TWO YEARS—PERFECTION!

We are lucky to get our firewood from Steve’s dad who chops his wood and heats his house on the lake with firewood.  Recently, I asked him if he ever had large stumps and he did!

Steve and I hauled two home and they are now sitting by our fire-pit.  Looking awesome and perfect for sitting and enjoying the fire.

I am in LOVE AND THEY WERE FREE! Now we need a few more!

July 27, 2012

Freezer Jam! Easiest Ever!


Posted by Ethne~

I’m all about preserving the great fresh fruits and veggies we have here in MN right now – trust me, we don’t get this come January!


When I was at Super Target the other day, they had huge flats of strawberries on sale, and I had a coupon for $1 off produce if I spent $10.  Well, since I was there to buy items for my pickles (garlic and dill), it worked out perfectly.

When I went to Menards to buy more quart glass canning jars for my pickles, I noticed that Ball brand has plastic canning jars for making freezer jam.  Have you ever had it?  It’s AMAZING!  My Grandma W always makes it – strawberry and raspberry versions.  It’s bright red and fresh and sweet and delicious.
 
So here’s all you do.  You don’t need to have the Ball plastic canning jars, but they do have a special seal to help prevent against freezer burn – this way you can keep the jam in the freezer for up to a year until you use it.

Mash up 2½ cups strawberries.  Add in 1 cup of sugar or artificial sweetener like Truvia or Splenda.  Add in 2 tablespoons of Ball RealFruit instant pectin.  If you can’t find Ball brand pectin, you need to look for instant pectin to use for freezer jams.

This is the only photo of the strawberries I took - now just put in jars and freeze!

Stir these three ingredients together and leave to sit on the countertop for 30 minutes.

Pour into three ½-pint freezer jars, seal up and freeze.  Up to one year in the freezer – then just put in the fridge when you’re ready to use it!  It’s like eating fresh strawberries all year long.

Have a great Friday!

July 23, 2012

Barb's Pickles - O.M.G.!


Posted by Ethne~

Remember the DELICIOUS slushburger recipe we made a few months back, which originated with my bff Teresa’s mom, Barb?  You can click here to check that out.  Trust me, it’s awesome.  I’m happy to announce I’m back with another Barb masterpiece.

My 2nd childhood mom and cooking genius - Barb S

This time, it’s her famous pickles.  And it’s so valuable a recipe that I was wise enough to write it down when I was in junior high.  I knew I had it written down, but when I pulled it out to make the pickles last week, I recognized that it was my writing from that era.  Isn’t that cool?  I was clever even back then; and I knew one day, I’d thank me.

Funny how my writing has changed since then.
Barb added extra information later

I’ve always been so-so on cucumbers.  My sis Whit can eat them off the vine with a vengeance.  Not me.  I don’t like the seeds in the middle.  I like the English cucumbers, and as an adult, I’ll eat any cucumbers pretty well.  But nothing’s better than a pickle.

Thrifty Nana (my mom) and her mom, and her mom before her, can some killer sweet pickles.  Two versions.  One is the sliced sweet 'bread and butter' pickle you probably would be familiar with.  One is called ‘company best’ and they are dyed deep green.  I give them total props because their recipe is great, but I really have never been a lover of sweet pickles.  I’m a dill kinda gal.

Barb knows how much I love her pickles.  We only lived 3 houses apart my whole life in Williston, so I would run over there at any hour of the day or night and let myself in.  I knew the code to their garage door if the door wasn’t unlocked.  Of course that meant I helped myself to their fridge, including plenty of pickles.  Since we’ve moved away after high school, Barb and Teresa always seem to keep me supplied.  Barb brought me pickles for Teresa’s wedding last summer – and Teresa gave us each a jar at Girls Trip last weekend!!!

This is all that's left of the Steph's jar from Girl's Trip - and it was immediately eaten thereafter

Steph couldn’t take hers back on the plane with her, so we finished her jar off, lock stock and barrel, including the cabbage and garlic clove, which are one of the magic elements of the pickle recipe.

So without further ado, and straight from my own junior high genius (plus an addition from Barb later on), here it is.  It’s amazingly easy and quick.

To prepare, purchase some wide-mouth quart-size glass canning jars.  Both Thrifty Nana and Barb use Kerr brand, but if you can’t find that, Ball or other brands will be just fine.  You will also need wide-mouth canning ‘flats’, which are the lids with the plastic seal around the edge and the wide-mouth 'rings' to screw the flat onto the jar nice and tight.

As it turns out, Thrifty Nana and I had some small-mouth quart-size jars, so we used some of those rather than buying more jars.  When you can on a regular basis, you amass plenty of canning supplies and jars can be re-used.  Flats cannot be re-used, however.  The wide-mouth jars are much easier to pack with cucumbers, though, so I recommend those if you have them or are purchasing them.

See how the jar on the bottom left is wide and the bottom middle has a narrow neck?

Also essential, of course, are the cucumbers and dill fronds.  Really the best way to acquire these in quantity is to grow them yourselves, but if you cannot do so, you can probably buy the cucumbers and dill at a grocery store or farmer’s stand/market.  Perhaps not the baby pickles, but you could buy larger cucumbers and slice them.

The bottom cucumbers are from Whit's yard, the rest from TN's neighbor

Beautiful, huh?

Too big for a jar!  What to do?
Dried dill from Thrifty Nana's garden last year - we ran out of fresh!

Whit and I planned to can pickles (she’s a fanatic of Barb’s pickles, and she hasn’t had the benefit of eating them all these years because she lived far away and, trust me, I guard them with my life anyway) when we planted her garden this year, so she has cucumbers growing.  Thrifty Nana has dill growing in her garden, so we’re set there (though she must’ve weeded some out because we don’t have as much there as we thought) – a bit of a crisis.

These cucumbers, though, are from TN’s sweet little neighbor lady.  She planted veggie plants all over her yard and has quite a few cucumbers.  She proudly brought a few over to TN.  They are small, and have little seeds, but they are not small enough to be the traditional size of Barb’s pickles.  No worries, I just cut them into slices.  We picked a couple of babies from Whit’s plants too. {Note: since I wrote this post up, TN's neighbor lady gave Whit and me another 10 gallon pail full of cucumbers.  We canned nearly 20 quarts of pickles tonight - hence the dried dill!}

We ended up with a TON of pickles tonight!

The recipe:

13 cups water
4 cups white vinegar
1 cup salt

This makes what I call the pickling ‘brine’.

IMPORTANT STEP:  The night before canning, wash the cucumbers and put them in a bowl of water, then in the fridge.  Take them out ½ hour to 1 hour before canning the next day to bring them back to room temperature.  This will prevent them from getting mushy as pickles.

Right before canning, wash your jars so they are absolutely clean before use.  TN and I just run them through the dishwasher and take them out as we fill them.  Have your flats and rings right at hand too.

In the bottom of each jar, place finely-chopped (1/2”-1” size pieces) pieces of cabbage about an inch high in the bottom, and one good-sized clove of garlic.  Place in one whole frond of dill, seed-tops and all.

Garlic & Cabbage

Pack the cucumbers into the jar as tightly as you can without smashing them.  I found after-the-fact that my veggies floated around in the jar.  It could be that they are sliced, not whole, or it could be that they were not packed as tightly as I thought they were (though I thought they were!)



While filling the jars, Whit cut a slice of cucumber and allowed the dewdrops (see them at the top?) to form and then we put them around our eyes for beauty treatment.  So smart, that girl.

Place the flats in a small pot of water and put on the stove, bringing it to a low boil.  Simmer the flats until you actually use them.

Flats

Now boil the water, vinegar and salt in a large pot.  When it comes to a rolling boil, fill the jars to within ½” of the brim of the jar.  No joke.  Wipe the rim of the jar down with a clean cloth and immediately fish out a flat and place it, centered, on the rim of the jar.  Screw the ring as tightly as you can and set the jar down on the countertop.

Thrifty Nana laying out the rings


 


Within a few minutes, you should hear a little pop as the flat seals down.  If this doesn’t happen, it means the jar did not seal and that the pickles cannot be shelved indefinitely.  All is not lost though; place the un-sealed jar in the fridge and eat it in a month or so.  If you are not certain you heard a pop, you can tap on the lid; if the lid makes a hollow, tinny sound, it means it sealed; also, when it seals, it sucks the lid in, so the lid will either be flat or the center will be very slightly indented (depending on the type you bought).

With the sealed jars, they may be placed on your cupboard shelf (we put them in the basement shelves so they don’t take kitchen shelf space) to pickle.  Barb says they have to wait for a year to be eaten.  While this seems like forever, trust me, it’s worth the wait.  And the longer you wait, the better they get. 

So, Junior High Ethne, I salute you.

And Thanks, Barb, for answering questions I had on Wednesday as I canned!