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This went in the ground in the last week:

Cor Viriditas:

100 cells of the good-tasting promiscuous tomatoes harvested mid-Aug
140 sweet pepper seeds including sweet paprika and doe hill
100 hot pepper seeds including matchbox and black hungarian
25ish hot pepper mix from Metchosin seeds
A tray of holy basil from Metchosin seeds
Tomatillos from Metchosin seeds & E's saved seeds

up to 50 cells per type: KARMA miracle/zesty small green tomato
amaryllia tomatillo
exserted orange tomato
orange/red promiscuous bicolor late seed tomato
tomato mikado black
tomato lucinda

10 cells each of:
Silvery Fir
Tomato Minsk Early
Tomato Brad
Tomato Sweet Cherriette
KARMA purple/purple MF tomato (no number)

5 cells each:
Tomato Grocery Store Green Cherry
Tomato Galina
Tomato Maya and Sion
Tomato Golden Currant from Julia
Tomato Rozovaya Bella
Adaptive Seeds Tomato Uralskiy Ranniy
Early Annie
Metchosin Red Plum

Threshold:
48 cells northern mix -- everything that set seed last year up here
36 cells of the good-tasting promiscuous tomatoes harvested mid-Aug
12 cells of orange/red promiscuous bicolour
12 cells of Julia's solanum peruvianum

I cut back the dahlia coccinea and am rooting the trimmings

Plus I've been potting up the peppers.

I should start a tray of mixed greens, lettuces and kales and chards, to go out shortly. As it is we've had that snow, now it's heavy wind and some -10C on the horizon.

Sayward

Apr. 4th, 2022 12:59 pm
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When I thought I might live down south originally I always envisioned a fairy ring of redwoods (sequoiadendron in my mind's eye, though sequoia may be more suitable to Sayward and metasequoia might be more suitable to this particular landscape arrangement) with phyllostacys edula, the giant moso bamboo, in a ring within that. In the very center there is perhaps an opening, a pond or a meadow wet enough to keep back the bamboo rhizomes, or maybe just the location from which shoots are harvested in spring.

I'd shelved that when I came up here. Now I'm wondering-- what would a realistic spacing on that be? It would be huge, of course. Vancouver is crawling with sequoiadendron planted in weird places and thriving anyhow. Snow would take down the bamboo but it wouldn't mind.

Hm.
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Alright, so I'm going to have 6000-7000 square feet of garden at Cor Viriditas this summer. The bed is roughly triangular. It's going to take an extended three-sisters planting (corn, squash, beans) with plants I've known to grow well under widely-spaced corn (tomatoes, tomatillos) shade-tolerating greens (lettuce, chard, mache, magenta spreen, shungiku, brassicas, chicories) and some pollinator attractors (calendula, borage, fennel, cilantro). I'm saving back seed from most of this, so if it's a complete failure I can try again next year.

Let's sort out how much seed I need. Generally I'll plant 1-2 seeds per plan desired; because it's a chaos garden I expect germination gaps to be filled in by whatever is close by,

I've collected some short season corns and some PNW corns for this mix: gaspe is my favourite, saskatoon white, saskatchewan rainbow, oaxacan green dent, early riser, new york red, carol deppe's magic manna and cascade ruby gold, lavender parching, painted mountain from six or eight different places, a couple bits from seed trades. My plan is to make three groups: dent, flint, and flour and plant them at each corner of the triangular bed, with sunflowers in-between. There will absolutely be cross-pollination between types but perhaps a little minimized. Within each group the corn plants will be spaced fairly widely to allow undergrowth.

What this means is roughly 1500 square feet each of flour, dent, and flint corn for a total of 4500 square feet of corn. Call it 3 square feet per plant and I'm looking at 500-1000 seeds of each type. The rest of my corn will go in the freezer.

Squash will be almost all maxima, with a corner of pepo out of curiosity (I'm playing with hull-less pumpkins for the animals and trying out a few bush delicatas). Again they're short season, including the buttercup and red kuri that actually ripened last year (hopefully with some cross-pollination), potimarron, north georgia candy roaster (this makes fabulous pickles from the unripe fruits), sundream (super cool resistance/short season), nanticoke, lofthouse mix, lower salmon river, blue hubbard (I love large squashes I can keep in the cool room and chop chunks off as I need them, I'd like to steer in the direction of large), gold nugget (I think the shortest season squash? grows well among corn), a few more kabocha types. They'll be primarily planted into the corn patches, seeds mixed as evenly as possible. Give each squash plant 50 square feet over the 4500 square feet of corn garden and that's 90-180 squash seeds for the garden; the rest go in the freezer.

My landmate is going to start some tomatillos, promiscuous tomatoes, and pepper grexes I've sent her. We should be able to pop those starts in when we seed the bed. I'll have 6 shelves x 3 flats each x 50 cells = 900 plant capacity for starts. 200 will go to peppers, 50 to tomatillos (I have a sweet ground-cherry-tasting one I saved seed for last year), and much of the rest to tomatoes (I sent on my "promiscuous A" good-tasting mix, my orange/red bicolour promiscuous, I think another promiscuous one, and then a bunch of largely self-supporting favourites and open-flower-architecture named cultivars: Brad, Silvery Fir Tree, KARMA purple and KARMA MF, Minsk Early, Uralskiy Ranniy, Mikado Black, Maya & Sion, Grocery store green, I think KARMA miracle and a couple others?). So call it 400 tomato plants? They'll be in amongst the corn, and at the edges of the corn. They'll be smallish when they go in but since everything else is being direct seeded that's likely ok, they'll grow enough that some will not be overtaken and it's those vigorous ones I want to save seed from.

Beans are primarily dry bush, they'll be mixed in the center with the sunflowers, peppers will be to the south side of the sunflowers. There's roughly 6000 - 4500 = 1500 square feet of this moat. Call it 800 square feet of sunflowers at 4 square feet each, that's 400 sunflower seeds if planted 2 in each hole (I don't fully trust some of my older seed, though I suppose I could start these indoors too and just put out 200 plants). Beans are 1/square foot, 200 square feet. I'll put a dozen or two melon plants on the south side of the sunflowers in a patch with the peppers. I'll have 200 pepper plants in total, roughly (100 hot grex, 100 sweet grex) that don't really get their own space but instead go in amongst the center.

Aforementioned leafy greens and some roots (beet and turnip grexes, fall radishes, salsify) will be scattered throughout for imediate weed suppression, creating a seed bed, and immediate harvest throughout the spring/early summer.

This is the most hands-off gardening I've ever done and I think it'll be educational as to the new property. It's been awhile since I worked with light as a limiting factor. I expect plenty of things to be shaded out; the seed from what remains will be good for this kind of mixed underplanting. In year 2 I'll move this mix to rotational pig fields, using the saved seed, to help supplement my hog feed through fall and winter.
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I've realized something important about gender tonight.

It's never really made sense to me; I love people and they have a gender and it's sometimes a useful shorthand for getting into a relationship with them, there are roles about which one can make assumptions and it simplifies the whole thing. But I never understood how the internal feeling of attraction was supposed to relate to gender. There's a sort of polarity there, a spark that comes *because* of folks' gender.

Well, I'm a land spirit. I love the land, a particular piece of land, though I can love many I tend to primary-relationship with one. But that's not what I mean; that's logistics. What I mean is there's a polarity there, a completion, a yin and yang of intrinsic selfhood that drives an intimate pull and relationship. The land being land is a driver of my love for it, in a way that a person being a gender does not. It does, perhaps, lead me to understand how folks with that kind of attraction might feel.

Anyhow, driving through Fort in the twilight with my grief, this will be a separation that will bring me so much pain. So much.

Jenn Habel and Margaret Atwood speak for me tonight )

You don't understand. Threshold has loved me better than any human has, or can, or will.

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