February at the Community Garden

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We popped over to the community garden yesterday afternoon with a frozen pail of compost. I thought I would take some pictures so you can see what it looks like in the middle of winter.

As you can see, not much is happening. Drab and dull. We stop using our plots between October/November and March/April depending on the season.

Photo by Gayla Trail  All Rights Reserved

If I wanted to really maximize the space, I could construct some cold frames within my plot and grow cold hardy greens like kale, mache, and spinach. And I would, but unfortunately the lane-way that leads to the garden is typically treacherous terrain through the winter months. We haven’t had much in the way of snow and ice this winter — it’s the first year since joining the garden around seven years ago that I’ve been able to get to the garden gate with relative ease.

Instead, I grow edible perennials as a strategy for extending the season. Cold hardy, perennial herbs such as garden sage, oregano, marjoram, chives, garlic chives, mint, and ‘Egyptian Walking’ onion function as the bones of the garden, holding in the soil and offering up a harvest that starts in the early spring and lasts straight through to the late fall.

Here’s what it looks like in April.

There are also a few self-seeders including calendula, chervil, bloody dock, lovage, shiso, lemon balm, and chamomile that pretty much grow themselves. They can be a curse or a blessing of plenty depending on how you look at it.

Over the years I’ve also added a few small fruit bushes including gooseberries and American black currant, and several strawberries (wild and alpine types) as a way to get garner yearly crops that don’t require seasonal planting.

Photo by Gayla Trail  All Rights Reserved

This is a wild geranium that showed up one day. I always let a few survive since they’re not too invasive and I like their pretty little pink flowers. As you can see, it is also proof that plants don’t necessarily “die” during the winter, but stay alive in a dormant stage underneath the snow.

And it looks like we’ve had a visitor in our absence. I noticed new graffiti in a couple of spots along The Beer Store wall.

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Upcoming Grow Great Grub Events in Toronto

I’ve got a very busy week ahead. The best gardening event of the season, Seedy Saturday, is taking place this coming Sunday, February 21st followed by the Grow Great Grub Book Launch Party on February 24th.

Let’s start with Seedy Saturday, which is held on a Sunday this year but it is still called Seedy Saturday. Whatever you do, despite the name, do not show up on Saturday. No one will be there.

Now take a moment to absorb that confusing piece of information.

As usual I will be there with a table selling our fun and irreverent garden-related wares. In addition, I’ll have lots of new products on hand including my new book, Grow Great Grub: Organic Food from Small Spaces, a yet to be revealed t-shirt design that is AWESOME (our best t-shirt yet and quite possibly my new uniform), and a bunch of new button designs.

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Then, just a few days later I will be hosting the Grow Great Grub Toronto Book Launch Party. The event is free and you’re all invited!

    Lula Lounge
    1585 Dundas Street West
    Toronto, Canada
    6:30-10:30pm
    FREE Admission!

I have been feverishly preparing for this party. In fact, we started talking about it more than six months ago, only days after the final files were delivered to the publisher to print!

There will be music by DJ General Eclectic, delicious, locally produced nibbles prepared by The Local Cafe, a seed-starting station where you will be able to plant some seeds to take home, and I have secured a bunch of awesome door prizes (canning supplies, gardening tools, seeds, etc) that will be given away hourly. I will also be selling copies of the book, signing (of course), and answering questions.

More about the party can be found on The Facebook or Upcoming.

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Winter Jasmine Bonsai

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As seen in the Garden of Weedlessness greenhouse at the Montreal Botanical Gardens yesterday afternoon.

The Latin is Jasminum nudiflorum. It reminds me of forsythia.

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Charming Little Hearts

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Here’s another adorable succulent from my tour of Erika’s apartment, Conophytum blandum. Don’t they look like lots of little hearts?

On first glance the Latin blandum (blandus) seems wrong — these plants aren’t bland! To be sure I looked the word up in Gardener’s Latin and it turns out that blandus translates to pleasing or charming. This I think we can agree on.

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Field Trip to Richters Herbs

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Last Friday, a friend with a car (THANK YOU JOHN, I hearby bequeath my first born to you. The cat is also an option.) drove Davin, myself, and another friend on a field trip to Richters Herbs about an hour outside Toronto, in Goodwood, Ontario. The goal was to enjoy some greenery, buy some herbs to use as table decor for my forthcoming book launch party (more on that soon), and of course, get a few plants for myself while we were at it.

The goal was not to get loud and obnoxious on caffeine, plant oxygen, and a half glass of wine… but I did that too. You can’t take me anywhere.

Photo by Gayla Trail  All Rights Reserved
Here’s the outside. Look they got the fancy log reindeer out just for us! No, not really. We are not special.

Photo by Gayla Trail  All Rights Reserved

The entire operation is made of of several greenhouses but only one was set up for retail. It consists of three aisles with four long tables of plants. Since it’s winter, the place wasn’t as stocked as I imagine it will be come spring, which is just as well since it was difficult enough to make a selection and avoid overspending. Here I am pondering what to buy for the launch party. I think you’ll like my choices. And if you hang around long enough, you’ll get to take one home. It pays to be a party hanger-on.

Photo by Gayla Trail  All Rights Reserved

There was much agonizing over plants and purchases. We look absolutely tortured, but I’d imagine that what Davin has actually captured here is a blissful moment of total plant geekery. This is what my face looks like when I am having fun and in my element. For the record, I did buy the plant Barry and I are so painfully considering: curly chives (Allium spirale).

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