Previous Posts Summary

It’s funny how with gardening blogs we always seem to be working with seasons. There are seasons in our garden, but also seasons with our blogs. With a new year ahead of us in our gardens, many new blog readers are popping up looking for gardening information. In addition many new gardening blogs are popping up as fellow gardeners want to share this year’s garden with others on the Internet. It’s also the time of year we all have too much time on our hands anyway.

It occurred to me that this blog is a bit clogged with a large number of posts, and this could make it difficult for a new reader to go through it all. If you are interested in particular topics, for example if you want to see pictures of some of the plants I grew last year or want some of my recipes, following the categories links on the front page of this blog is a good way to do this. I’m not going to list posts that are easy to find in this way here.

This blog started with some posts defining exactly what heirloom plants are, on a very basic level discussed some plant genetics and what exactly an F1 hybrid is, as well as introductions to some basic seed saving and storing techniques. Saving tomato seeds is a very good place for a beginning seed saver to start, and I made a post about this. I followed up on seed saving a bit later with a post about biennial plants, and again with suggestions for easy plants to save seeds from. An important thing anyone should consider when saving seeds is inbreeding depression. Growing garlic is very easy, one of my favorite garden plants, and here is a post about that. I also posted about cover crops.

While many people prefer to use fluorescent bulbs for growing seedlings, grow lights are also a good option. Many people are discouraged from using grow lights because they feel it’s too associated with growing drugs, but in fact they are the same lights used in public lighting and are frequently cheap and easily available almost everywhere in the world if you look for them. With a little planning and shopping around, they can be cheaper to purchase and operate than fluorescent lights.

When you start seedlings indoors, don’t forget to harden them before moving them outside!

If you grow peas, beans, garbanzo beans, lentils or any other leguminous nitrogen-fixing plants, you need to know about nitrogen fixing bacteria!

I am a big fan of my weed burner, and I made two posts about this here and here. I am also a fan of my Earthway seeder.

I am a member of the Seed Savers Exchange. I wrote first about it here, followed up here, and posted about them again here.

I think composting has to be a favorite activity of almost any gardener. I wrote two articles on composting, first an introduction to composting and mulching then a post specific to container composting.

Last year I made a post about coffee as a crop, and how the world market for coffee was turned upside down with the introduction of an F1 hybrid coffee bean variety. What happened with coffee has been repeated over and over with other crops with the introduction of hybrid varieties, and is a very import thing for everyone who cares about what they eat and grow to understand.

Long term storage of your harvest is an issue for all of us. One of the ways I do this is by dehydrating my harvest.

All Europeans and everyone living everywhere, should be aware of the so called Agricultural Apartheid as it exists in Europe. In practice what this means is all fruits and vegetables sold anywhere in Europe are commercial varieties and the seeds that produce them come from large seed companies. These rules make it virtually impossible for farmers to save their own seeds and regrow their own crops in Europe. This has also become an issue recently in Turkey, which may become a member of the European Union.

What has to be one of the most important books to be published in 2006 was Michael Pollan’s Omnivore’s Dilemma. A must read for anyone who cares about what they eat. We also reached the 100th anniversary of Upton Sinclare’s The Jungle, and it’s really amazing how many things still haven’t changed since then.

Open Source software is a growing worldwide phenomenon, as people get tired of commercial software like that produced by Microsoft and all of the politics surrounding it. Linux is growing in popularity, and has even been recognized by governments around the world. There is a huge and well organized group of people behind the free software movement. Few people understand that the issues are almost the same as heirloom gardening, but we lack the large numbers of organized people. What can we do about this?

What comes after GM foods? I made a post about Marker Assisted Selection or MAS.

The US government has addressed the issue of hunger by redefining it. Now we have food insecurity!

Everyone needs to think about buying food locally, from people you know.

Of all the eating advice we get from everywhere, all the trendy diets and the promotions from cooking shows on TV, they all have one message in common. Eat more food! It’s time for us all to realize we need to ‘Eat food. Not too much. Mostly plants.‘. Here is also some advice on how to avoid eating and growing GM foods.

Us food gardeners and seed savers are a dying breed. Here is a post on gardening trends.

Bird flu is an import issue for everyone everywhere in the world. Here is the other side of the story.

Biofuels are about to become an important part of our lives. Since they are crops that are grown on the same land as our food is, they are about to make a big impact on our food supply.

Here is what everyone should know before buying seeds from a seed catalog.

Help!

Writing a blog like this takes a lot of time. Not just time spent writing posts, but all the research behind it.

We live in a world that’s changing quickly, and it’s clear this blog is addressing topics people find interesting. The number of people reading this blog has sharply increased in the last few months. The need to expand the scope of this blog is increasingly obvious, and it’s getting overwhelming.

Please help me by emailing me!

I can’t possibly keep on top of all the blogs, newspapers or news sites, and I am frequently away from my computer for several days at a time anyway. If you see something somewhere that relates to topics addressed by this blog, please let me know. I almost certainly won’t notice anything that’s not published in English, so please point me to interesting things in other languages.

I am always on the lookout for other blogs that address the same topics this blog does. From time to time I go searching for other blogs, but you can help me by pointing out interesting ones. If you are starting a new blog that you think has an affinity with this one, let me know! By the way, one of the best ways of letting me know is to link to me. I will notice this link within a few days, and if appropriate will reciprocate. By linking to each other we help people notice one another. Even if I decide your blog is not suitable for immediate inclusion in my blogroll, I will probably include you in my RSS feeds and if you post something I think is interesting will link to your post.

Roughly speaking the topics of this blog include heirloom gardening and farming (which implies organic or mostly organic, and can include vegetables, fruit, flowers and other plants), heritage and natural foods, traditional methods of food processing, politics of modern food production and associated environmental impacts, sustainable agriculture and in the soon to be famous words of Michael Pollan, people who want to “Eat Food. Not too much. Mostly Plants.” These topics are rapidly evolving, so don’t be afraid to let me know about anything else that might be relevant.

If you are involved in any public seed swaps or related events, or even if you just know of any, please let me know so I can mention it.

Do you have food recipes you would like to share? Please send them to me.

Would you like to write a post on this blog? Get in touch and let me know.

Are you an organization who would like to put me on a mailing list to receive press releases or other news information? Don’t just grab my contact address off this blog and sign me up without my permission! Let me know, and if I am interested I will give you a special email address for this purpose.

Storms

I read in the paper the other day the first 10 days of January this year were the warmest ever on record. The weather is still absurdly warm for this time of year.

The other thing that’s been happening here are wind storms. Of course everyone knows about Holland and it’s windmills, and let’s face it, it’s always windy here. This year we have had wind storms both in number and intensity that I don’t ever remember seeing before.

They measure wind here according to Wind Force, or the Beaufort scale. For me F5 means too much wind to work in the garden, and even F4 is a bit on the windy side. The scale is not linear, so as you get into higher numbers the wind gets stronger faster. F11 is starting to be hurricane strength. Already in the last 2 months we have had 2 storms that reached F9-10, and as I type this now a storm is brewing where the forecast is F10. They are expecting wind speeds of 130 kph. Germany and France are also expecting the same storm.

In Amsterdam I get less wind, because it’s a bit inland and the buildings block a lot of the wind.

In Fryslân, where the garden is, it’s on the north coast of the country and it gets much more wind. The past few storms have blown tiles off the roofs of nearby buildings. One night it blew the chimney cap off the house I was sleeping in and the same storm blew out all the windows in my friend’s caravan.

I gave up trying to stake my brussel sprout plants up a long time ago, and they are simply growing on their side. Amazingly there are still things growing in the garden, but at this rate I’m really wondering what will survive the winter.

Blog Updates

With the new year comes some blog housekeeping.

I have updated my contact information with a new email address, so if any of you have kept my old one in an address book or other list, please make sure to get the new one.

In the coming days or weeks I plan to overhaul my blogroll. For sure I will be deleting links to blogs that no longer appear to be active, or where the owners have publicly stated intentions to pursue other projects. I will also probably delete some others whose posts aren’t very gardening related, or don’t really seem to have much affinity with this blog. If I delete your link and you want to know why or want me to reconsider, please send me an email and I will probably put it back.

Of course I will also be looking for interesting new blogs or other sites to link to.

I really have a hard time knowing what to put in my blogroll. The most important thing of course is I strive to keep the crap out, and list interesting blogs that are relevant to this one. There are so many blogs to choose from, and picking the best ones is really hard. Of course I try to list any that have an heirloom plant element or theme. I often link to blogs that link to me, sometimes only to reciprocate, but more often because it seems like we really do have something in common. I usually link to blogs whose owners post frequent and on topic comments here. I sometimes add a link just because someone sends me an email and asks me to.

If anyone has any suggestions on sites to add or remove, or in any other way improve the quality or organization of the blogroll, please let me know.