OregonLuvr wrote:WAVING at SHIRL, glad to see you. I got my danged raised beds finished yesterday, beans planted, onion sets good to go.......SPRING IS HERE finally
[Waving at Shirl also] Welcome back, Shirl! You were missed.
I had been looking for onion sets around the holidays (onions can tolerate some cold weather/freezes, and it doesn't really get that cold for extended periods here where I live - although sometimes it feels like it!
Just couldn't find any. Was in the grocery store right before Christmas, I noticed in the Produce Department that they had a pile of red "pearl onions" that are used for cooking (LOL - they just looked like very fat and healthy onion sets to me!) so I bought a bag of about 60 of the pearls (they are about the size of a marble).
Anyway, what with one thing and another, they sat in the bag on my kitchen counter for a month or so, finally got a spot prepared for them out in my back yard, so put them in the ground at about the beginning of February - not really knowing whether they would grow or not.
Well, I have been harvesting onions! They are about three feet tall, haven't made much of a bulb (maybe they are the kind that don't make much of a bulb, I don't know) and are already sending up buds getting ready to bloom.
Not sure what to do with them (advice appreciated) I would like to leave them in the ground to see if they bulb up, but on the other hand I can pull them up now, slice-and-dice them, and put them in the freezer.
And strawberries. . . OMG, strawberries. This is the 3rd year my strawberry plants have been in the ground (I started with about 40 "bare root" plants that came in the mail - I didn't realize that strawberry plants are almost like weeds, they send out "runners" everywhere. They have spread to places that I hadn't intended.
If I could count the plants I have now - and I can't, I'm too lazy and there are just too many of them - I'm guessing that I probably have at least 400 or 500 strawberry plants now. I have probably harvested at least 20 pounds of strawberries in the last week (I wash, stem, and freeze them in ziplock bags), with a lot more coming on.
My garden is 100% organic - I don't use chemical fertilizers, no herbicides or insecticides for me - so I do have some loss (about 10% - 20%) on the berries, mostly from birds and snails/slugs.
The wild bird population is very much reduced from what it was when I first move here about 12 years ago; I am actually happy to share strawberries with the birds.
The snails and slugs not so much! I have garden fabric out there that reduces the weeds by about 95%. At night - when the snails and slugs leave their trails on the garden fabric - I go out and sprinkle epsom salt (magnesium sulfate) around here and there. This doesn't get rid of all of them, but it does reduce the population quite a bit.
Anne