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The Great Tomato Seed Project

1/19/2013

69 Comments

 
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Okay - I am going to lay this on you - right in mid-stream.  I am finally on the other side of the great tomato seed project - although it's not really over yet. I am preparing to sell some, donate some and of course - sow some.  I still have a few varieties rolling around the house.  Principe Borghese is hanging in the coat rack, ripened and covered in coats.  The cats bat them around the house - ripened or not.  Its been an amazing experience.  
So - I thought I'd show you some steps.
Right now I am in the process of sorting, combining and crumbling the hundreds of seed cakes waiting in their coffee filters.
Since I took many batches of tomatoes off the plants throughout the season, this makes for many small batches of seeds that need to be combined.  I also took the over-ripe, rotten tomatoes from beneath neglected plants and saved their seed too.  This stains the seed a little - leaving it slightly darker than seed saved from a perfectly ripened tomato. In nature, the seed goes through the rotting and fermenting of the decomposing tomato and is stained much darker than what you usually see in a seed packet.  I kept it separate until I spoke to one of my seed mentor's - thank you Wes McDorman, and realized all was well - variation in color is just that - color and does not affect the seed itself. 

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Principe Borghese hanging in the coat rack and raining down on the couch below.
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I love to pose them, meet Wendy, Ida Gold, Peacevine and Fox Cherry.
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Meet The Golden King of Siberia, Nebraska Wedding, Rio Grande, Crimson Sprinter.
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It all starts here - piles and piles and bucket and buckets. It's a daunting sight in the living room, and there was more - before...
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Fermenting in jars.
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Fill the jars with water and let settle very briefly before pouring off.
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Seeds on the bottom, debris in the water.
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Pour off the gooey water, leaving the seeds behind.
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Refill and let settle - I used less water this time.
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Rinse repeatedly until the water is clear and all the seeds are clean.
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Pour it all quickly into a sieve.
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Use a coffee filter or paper towel to dry the seeds in.
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SMACK!
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Ahhh. Glory.
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Label and fold.
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Making a dent, out of coffee filters, switched to paper towels.
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Many, many seed cakes - ready to be packaged. The ones in front are all Seeds Trust varieties.
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I began with Seeds Trust's seeds, grouping all the Sasha's to start crumbling.
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Each batch is slightly different, like the tomato(es) it came from. Notice the size and color variation.
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I grouped Ida Gold's together and lined up some more.
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Sasha's - with notes on the year, where or how it was grown, even characteristics.
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Different but the same.
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Combine their strengths.
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Pack them up!
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Left two rows are the result of all the Seeds Trust seed - ready to be germ tested.

Germination Test

What?  It's true - if I want to know how strong my seed is, and if I want to sell it, I need to know it's germination percentages.  A germination test is simple stuff, you are simply germinating 10, 50, 100, 150 seeds to get an accurate percentage.     
It is perfectly accurate to germ test 10 seeds and get an easy result.  If only 8 germinate, you have 80%, 2, you only have 20% - not acceptable.  To be acceptable, it needs to be 70% or above.  Most tomato seed is much higher than that - and some of mine has been, a few have not.  Even low germ seed can still give you thriving plants - the seeds are just not sellable, but you will learn what ever you did during the process that resulted in a low germ. 
 
Here are some ideas of why low germination happens.  
1.)  Sometimes, in the bottom of a bucket, there would be a squished green tomato or two that spewed their seed all over the others.  I took care to remove them as they might not be ripe.  How do I know?  If the seed is not viable, it floats.  So during its water bath, the good seed, with a viable embryo inside, sinks quickly to the bottom while the other light, non-viable seed, is still swirling around in the water.  Out it goes with all the other debris in the water.  Repeating this many times assures the seed you save is viable.
2.)  If the tomato (the fruit) was frozen or slightly frozen before the seed was saved, it may not be viable.  
3.)  If your seeds dried out during the fermenting process you can have non-viable seed, because they can try to sprout before they dry up and then it wastes the embryo.  Re-hydrating them can work if you catch it in time.
4.)  If the tomatoes are not fully ripened, they could produce non-viable seed.
5.) Dried seeds get overheated over a long period of time or fluctuating temperatures adversely affected them.

How To Perform A Germ Test:
Traditional Paper Method:
Use horticultural germination paper OR paper towels or other similar papers to germinate 10 - 100 seeds.  Spread them out evenly - no touching so you can easily count them.  Make a block of 10 X 10 of seeds to keep a group of 100 organized.  Fold the ends and roll up the paper like a big cigar - it will be big for peas but smaller for tomatoes, wet it, and store it in an open plastic bag. (You can wet the paper first.) 
Check it after a few days and then again regularly until germination occurs.  Wait until you think they are all germinated.  Unroll the paper and count how many seeds germinated.  Do your math and you have your percentage. 
Traditional Soil* Method:
Sow seed in a soil-less seed-starting medium, counting out 10-100 seeds and arranging them to not touch so it's easier to count.  Write down how many seeds you sow for each variety - I do this right on the seed packet.  Mark each group of seed carefully in the flat.  Lightly cover with medium and press with the flat of your hand.  Seed to soil contact is essential for good germination.  Water and cover the flat with plastic - I use produce bags because they float but Wes recently instructed me to use newspaper and pull it off the minute they germinate - he's cured any damping off with this method.  Covering the flat is important in our dry climate to keep the growing medium steadily moist.  
When your seeds germinate, give them 3 - 10 days - and then count them and match them up to your notes - do your math and you will have your percentage.  Many great minds agree that the soil method is the best and most accurate.  It is my preferred method because I do not want to waste precious, high-altitude seed.  With the soil method, you can continue to grow out the test seed and use the plants. 


Wes also soaks the tomato and pepper seeds in warm water from a few hours to a day or two so they sprout faster when he plants them.  I germinate on the propane stove, oven or heater - with the pilot light.  Tomatoes like warmth to germinate.  75-80 degrees is just right. 


 *Note: - I use a soil-less medium to prevent damping off disease and other soil-borne diseases.  Using an earth soil potting mix is appropriate for 'teenagers' - young transplants - they are stronger then and can handle it.  Infants need to be in something clean.


My Soil-less Seed Starting Medium:
Coir
Perlite
Diluted Liquid Kelp
Soak the coir with Liquid Kelp solution - follow directions for amounts on the package.  Cut it with perlite - more or less - I use 1/3.  
That's it.
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Ready to Germ Test! Many great minds agree soil is a more accurate way to test.
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Germination! Warming on the propane heater.
I germinate my flats on anything that has a pilot  light.  In this case, it is on the heater in the living room - next to the couch.  As you can see, they all come up a little differently and in their own time.  Soon I will have my results.  
I did use Wes's method of covering the flat with moist newspaper until germination, then removing it.  I hope it helps with damping off - thanks to Wes of course.


There it is, my giant tomato seed story, I hope you enjoyed it.

69 Comments

Stranded in Steamboat

1/3/2013

0 Comments

 
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The path to the hot tub!
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The first morning - it snowed for 5 more days!
Being stranded in Steamboat is not such a bad thing, especially when you are staying with my friend Annie - such a wonderful hostess with the kind of house you love to hang out in.  Although I worked, a puzzle loomed, chocolate was in abundance and there was the promise of bacon in the morning.  It was decadent.  I left the day of the storm - to come in that night and headed north on an adventure.  Somewhere around Fairplay it started to snow and on Hoosier, started to stick.  After a frightening slip, I carried on in 4WD, basically crawling down the hairpins.  The road was changing fast so I slugged along.  I arrived to my smiling friend and her funny big dogs and I disappeared into her lovely house for longer than I thought.  
It snowed, and snowed, and snowed.  My friend is only 5'2" - the snow finally let up at 58" - she only had 4" on it!    My car steadily disappeared into the snow, for 6 days.  The pictures above are only the first morning.   

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In the evenings, Annie went out to check the animals one more time, with her dogs in tow, bounding through the snow to the barn.  This is how she dressed to brave the snow and wind. 
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Going home in the cold.
After 6 days it stopped snowing and I headed home - normally a 5 hour drive took all day.  I put-putted all the way home.  I rarely drove over 40 mph.  At one point there was a frightened sports car with a train of 25 behind it traveling 20 mph.  It was slow and steady like the turtle.  When I passed through Kremmling, it was -4 degrees - cold and slick as could be.  
But I had some John Denver on and enjoyed the view, which in Colorado is well, you know - outrageous.  Thank you Annie, for having me on a fine adventure.
I made it home to more snow -  a very good sign for the winter to come.  Snow begets snow and no snow begets no snow.   We are well on our way to wildflowers.  
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A Wonderful Mountain Summer

12/16/2012

1 Comment

 
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A Kinko as big as your arm!





It was a difficult summer for me.  All along I've been reporting on how great it was for us - and it was - we rocked out more food than ever and had incredible abundance in the gardens.  But I just didn't feel good this summer.  Perhaps it was from the heat, my right leg hurt, my arms were heavy and it felt like I could get nothing accomplished.  Other people told me they actually felt nauseated from the heat.  

Hey - I'm a mountain woman - I can't do heat.  Basically I lurked in the shade - moving from tree to tree and under any kind of cover.  Then I'd try to beat the dark and do all my chores from 6-9pm. 
It seems like summer just ended with these first snows - we've been enjoying the warmth all this time.   
I'm awake now though and the other day I went through some pictures and realized what a wonderful mountain summer it was.  Here is an eclectic group of experiences and moments.  


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This storm kicked ever-lovin' ass up north - it was just rolling by.
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Glorious Penstemon growing out of a severe cut in the Wets.
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Getting ready for dinner.
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The Blue Moon
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Watching it come up with my friend on Skyline Drive.
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Beautiful CC students waking up in the Grandfather Tree after working.
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Beautiful volunteers in Cord's greenhouse.
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My chamomile bed - coming along.
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Bertha May with her seed grown apple trees.
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Wulfgar's first omelette.
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What a beautiful intruder!
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Late summer birthdays on the secret water.
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I chased these rainbows all the way home - the picture is out my sun roof while driving!
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Some of the last tomatoes - right before squeezing and saving.
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"I Made Meat Ma!"

11/27/2012

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Beau and Cord provided the beautiful 6X6 bull elk on Beau's back - congratulations men!  Penn was squeakin' and they went creepin' and encountered a beautiful bull - breaking a 3 year elk drought for us!  They worked as a team but it just so happened Beau had the kill-shot - 300 yards - through the heart.  Well done Beau. 

The freezer is happy again - balanced with the remains of last year's 5 deer and a fresh bull.  Life is good.  This was our 12th year and Beau's best to be sure. 


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Coming out of the woods with the horns.
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Loading the meat.
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Our new OUTSTANDING Iron Cloth Panniers.
I had the extreme pleasure of tending horses in a mountain meadow surrounded by aspens while the men butchered the elk.  I've never had it so good.  That's not true - one other time - when Max was 14, I got to tend the horses for an hour or so and then I butchered with them.  I don't mind - it's part of the deal but I felt like a queen with my only job to graze the horses - wahoo!  I dried tack in the sun and rotated horses around the meadow until they were stuffed.  
I had time to take the above picture - which is as zoomed as I could go - to see the bit of orange which is them - up on the sidehill - doin' the hard stuff.
"I made meat Ma" is an old mountain-man term and we say it when we are blessed with clean, excellent food like Colorado-grown elk.
This trip was special - we might rest next year - we completed a dozen years in the high-high and we feel we are due a break from the big trip.  I spend months getting myself and the horses ready for 11,000 ft.  This is a good thing - don't get me wrong - but Cord and I have always dreamed of going up there in the summer - when we are not battling the extremes while carrying extra-heavy gear and guns - what would that be like? In all these years we never made a summer trip.  So there - a new goal - what if I was hunting flowers - seeds, wild food?  It sounds heavenly.  And it is.
Friends, I will write this year's hunting story soon and shall send it around the holidays - until then, keep your feet dry.
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Beau and Cord parting out the bull.
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Gorgeous boy in the wilderness.
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Grazing girls in camp. That mountain is over 11,000 ft.
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Attack of the Heirloom Tomatoes!

11/26/2012

2 Comments

 
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I am overwhelmed in tomatoes.  Buckets and buckets and bags and bags everywhere.  It's frightening.  It's a huge challenge for me.  The picture to the left is me posing samples of tomatoes - the load I got off each plant is truly amazing.  it makes for a lot of jars - gallons too.  The house smells so bad sometimes it makes me feel woozy.
No one has seen me or heard from me - only tales of tomatoes...

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Good grief it's a lot of seed!  
My family has been amazingly tolerant of this process - and with so many jars at once - it reeks!  I'd recommend a seed room.  That's what I want - a seed room.
After you squeeze the seeds and gel into a jar, give it three days and wait for the white mold to appear.  After that - it is time to add water, mix it all up, let it settle and pour the goo and non-viable seeds off the top - leaving the perfect seeds at the bottom.  Repeat until there is nothing but water and clean seed in the bottom, then dump through a sieve and dry them on paper.
When I am rinsing the seed I collect the waste water in a bucket and dump it on the compost pile.

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Of course not everyone would be doing this on such a large scale unless they were a seed company so a few jars on the counter won't stink you out of your house.  I allowed myself to grow as many varieties of tomatoes as I wanted last season so challenging myself to save seed from every variety seemed the thing to do.  I know for sure I won't make 130 - but I might make 125!  We'll see.

This mold is nature releasing and purifying the seed - it's a beautiful thing.




Tomato Aficionados - prepare yourselves...

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Black From Tula
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Persimmon
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Persimmon
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Black From Tula
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Reisetomate
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Indigo Rose
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White Queen
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Indigo Rose
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Black From Tula
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Bellstar
I shall post more tomato porn so have at it - it's too much sometimes.  I am still squeezing, fermenting and rinsing - but am determined to conquer the challenge.  
The form and beauty of the plants, flowers, fruit and seed are a great joy in my life. 
Photographing them is a bonus - so much fun - they are photogenic to be sure.
I am taking a break from processing to post this - but then it's back in I go.
Enjoy.


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Isis Candy
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Azoychka
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Brandywine
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Crimson Sprinter
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Opalka

DON'T FORGET - SAVE TOMATO SEEDS!!!!!!!  How-To-Instructions

2 Comments

In Tomato Heaven

9/12/2012

445 Comments

 
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Oh What fun!  I am collecting tomatoes every day - trying to beat the ever-lovin' squirrels for the first ripe tomato on each plant.  Besides saving for flavor, I am saving for earliness. I taste them as I am squeezing the seeds into a jar, then run to the computer to write a critique on my list.  I'm still chewing while I write.  It's so fun how different they are - and how different they can grow and even taste year to year.  
This year Kotlas is producing outstandingly, before - I rarely noticed it - kinda small and funny I wrote, but now I am raving. Of course Sasha's Altai is the best tomato in the world, no matter what is happening.  Nothing can beat it for earliness, and nothing can beat it for flavor either.  It makes you make noises when you eat it.
I am cataloging every one - as they come in and into the seed jar.  Here's a few awesome shots of tomato porn. 

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Sasha's Altai, best tomato in the world.
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Wendy
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Olga's Yellow Chicken
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Kotlas
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Silvery Fir Tree
I love these tomatoes - Big and Little.  Above is the mighty Silvery Fir Tree, beloved by all who grows it.  This plant grows only 2'X2' and has delightfully lacy foliage - like a silvery carrot.  But the load, oh the load of big, fat, slicers.  It's a good thing it's so short or it would fall over.  It is Russian and a determinate so you get a lot at once.  Like most of the determinates, it puts on another flush - as does Moscow - another favorite.  So drool while thinking about the next sandwich that needs this tomato  and grow it - a BLT?, a grilled veggie sandwich?  No matter - you will love this tomato.
Below is Coyote.  A currant tomato of course and born in tiny clusters.  Diversity is the name of the game.   I'm holding him in the rain, which is making them grow right now.  Each tomato is completely unique.  I love tasting them, discovering their idiosyncrasy's, how they grow, who is first.   Olga's Yellow Chicken really does look like bright yellow eggs on the vine - too cool.   And Wendy - from New Zealand - "Sweet as a plum" - and so early and plentiful - I've gotten to know each one.
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Coyote - currant tomato
I buy my seeds from Seeds Trust first, then go from there.  I am now saving seeds so I buy less and less all the time.  You can save seeds too - it's easy and fun.  Go to our website for The Westcliffe Seed Lending Library and learn how on the education page. 
Remember, it's not only economical, it will help you grow better than you ever have before.  Seeds adapt to their environment and carry the information over into the next generation.  In the mountain garden - this is exactly what we need.  
So I'm having a ball - can't get enough.  I hope to save 130 varieties.  I am well on my way.  It's hard to eat them though - especially Sasha's Altai - the fastest mountain tomato you ever saw, as now I see the seed as precious bounty for me and the masses, instead of perfect deliciousness for my belly.  I'll take more pictures tomorrow - like Black Plum, a 'brown' tomato, Indigo Rose, the deepest purple ever, and White Queen, chosen for fine Russian flavor.
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ThinderfooT's desert-adapted Golden Grape
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Aurora
445 Comments

The Latest Greenhouse

9/3/2012

3 Comments

 
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Beau, Cord and Max on the last day.
Check it out - what a beaut!  18' X 64'  This greenhouse is in the Gardner area - a lovely warm micro-climate for growing indoors and out.  It is aerodynamic, and has snow shields on the front winter vents, and over the upper vents.  They all have automatic openers on them.  Natural convection provides the ventilation.  There are two layers of barrels instead of 3 as this is in a warmer clime.  
There is a combination of double-paned glass and clear twin-wall polycarbonate on the south wall to provide a Rocky Mountain view and to diffuse light and cut cost.
The boys double dug the beds and I sent tomato plants along - to get them started - it was so fun.  It will be interesting to see what else they grow this winter.
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Double dug (Bio-intensive) beds ready to plant.
What a floor plan!  They left room only for a table made of two blue barrels with a board on top.  The rest is for growing.  This is such a cool pic - I want to plant it - don't you?  Think of all the possibilities and potential.
Okay - enough drooling.  Hopefully - I will finally post the rest of the pictures of the building of this thing on the greenhouse pages.  I gave it up - I don't know why but am fully aware I must continue and finish.  
Cord, once again, learned so much building this thing and is currently designing the next one in Salida which involves an attached shed and porch.   He is a great designer and is working away on it.   There are talks for a greenhouse in Howard, Alma, La Veta and Walsenburg - we have to just keep on building - go Cord!  
Many thanks to our good friend Rick, who built this along with Cord and the boys.
One more...
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The other direction.
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End of day.
3 Comments

Looky What I Got

7/24/2012

1 Comment

 
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Abby - (Abigail)
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Izzy - (Isabel)
Aren't they beauties!??  I love them both.  They are so funny and smart - both have caught mice already - what a relief.  Ever since the loss of our awesome cat Samuelson the Garden Cat we have been over-run with critters.  I had no idea how hard Sam had been working.  Chipmunks, mice, ground animals like pocket gophers and voles, those big ol' ground squirrels and plenty of rabbits and birds.  
These two are venturing outside further and further e very day - they were barn cats and so they needed some time to get to know us.  Now we can't get them off of us - they climb all over us and lick us.   They have even come up to the garden a couple of times - can't wait until it's their place too.  
Tortoise-shell kitties are a great option for a dark-colored cat for the mountains, white on a cat can be deadly as the owls can see that from the sky.  I will worry about Izzy more with her white throat and toes bit mostly they are dark.  
Abby is bigger than Izzy and Izzy was the most scared when they first came home.  Now Izzy won't get a grip - she is all over us with love.  Abby is very self-assured - already.  
We find females to be the best hunters and savvy about predators.  Our cats have lasted many years in the mountains - all dark - all female.
So - there is new love at the Parmenter's - enjoy the pics.  
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Izzy
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Abby
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Izzy
1 Comment

Mountain Grown Tomatoes

6/13/2012

5 Comments

 
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High-altitude tomatoes in the holding pen.
I grow tomatoes - I can't help it - I love them - I love them.  This year I grew 135 varieties.  Life is good.  So now I have tomatoes for sale.  What? Yes, we mountain folks don't put our tomatoes in until now.  It froze here three nights ago - just nipped the Australians though and I really can't blame them - they haven't had time to adapt.  Of course the Siberians and Russians were fine. I have a list of every one.  You can email me for it - I've meant to post it forever, but happily, I am too busy planting.  I will plant more tomatoes in more ways than ever before.  I have quite a nursery full of them.  Thes pics do not include the ones left in my greenhouse.  I emptied Cord's greenhouse the other day and they are happily adjusting to life under a tree.
Tomorrow, June 14th, I will be at the Farmer's Market in Westcliffe with as many tomatoes as I can stuff into a car.
The other great news is that I will be delivering a few specialty flats to Native Woods in Westcliffe - our awesome, local garden center.  LaNell Brady is a wonderful person and I am so lucky to get to take my tomatoes there.  I hope you will stop by there while in Westcliffe.  
Many of my varieties are from seed saved for 1 or 2 years.  This means those tomatoes will have a better time of it in the fierce mountain conditions since they carry with them the memory from the past.  Siberian tomatoes - and I grow many, many kinds, have a built in resilience - many conditions like ours in the Rockies - only harsher.  If they can do it - we can do it.  Growing tomatoes from some Siberian gardener is a relief - they know how we feel - the Altai - their "Rockies", look amazingly like our mountains but go to 60 below zero.  Talk about a short season.  They love their tomatoes and select for flavor, as well as earliness and cold-hardiness. 
My all time favorite Siberian is Sasha's Altai - absolutely delicious.  As for a cherry, Galina, golden cherries in huge profusion - fast and delicious.  I know some folks over in Howard who have grown Galina pushing 20 years and they serve up a wonderful salsa made with it.
I love Silvery Fir Tree for it's beauty and surprisingly big tomatoes on such a small plant.  Moscow - determinate, wow oh wow does it load.  It loads up then falls over - bush or no bush.  Happy accident - it falls over from all the huge red tomatoes on it.  Love it!
I tried some super fun ones too - including "Reisetomate" - the weird, cluster tomato - fusing cherries together and tasting like raw lemons!  What fun - an alien tomato to be sure.  I gave in to Stump of the World - couldn't help it - the name - the ever-lovin' name!  Good grief I'm easy.  It is a relative of Brandywine but supposedly a heavier producer.  
I am growing Blush - from Seeds of Change, and the beautiful Indigo Rose.  Can't wait to see them on the vine.  I have Arizona-adapted seed - good for the hot down-below, from famous desert seedsman ThunderfooT - Arkansas Traveler, Golden Grape and Ninety Wonder.
It's all good, clean American fun - growing tomatoes is a kick - they don't call them "The Gateway Drug To Gardening" for nothing.
You can see pics of our tomato houses and covers on the home page - mountain nights are too cold for tomatoes - they need to be covered to bear and to ripen.  So many people grow green tomatoes - cold nights make that happen.  
This is a quickie to let you know I am swimming in tomatoes.  Email for the list - and order up some tomatoes from around the world.
I'll see you at the market...
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They want to grow in your mountain garden!
5 Comments

Wanna Grow Fish and Vegetables Together?

5/21/2012

9 Comments

 
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Murray Hallam, Tonya Penick, Penn Parmenter, Gina Cavaliero, Sylvia Bernstein, Cord Parmenter

Green Acre Aquaponics - Commercial

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Look!  The soil in this part of Florida is SAND!  We were teaching for 2, 4-day Aquaponics courses in Florida.  We taught Sustainable Greenhouse Design and Seed Saving in one day in between the two sessions.
The students visited and studied at this farm to learn commercial aquaponics.  Gina and Tonya are the owners of this amazing set-up and gave us a wonderful tour.  Part of the reason was the first session and our class was over when I took these pictures - it was after hours so that beer we had tasted so good - and I don't drink.  Truly - it was the best tasting beer I've had in - well - ever.  
Florida greeted us with perfect weather for mountain folks.  We were prepared for the 90's and humidity.  Instead we got the 70's and a cool breeze.  WOW.  

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Combining rafts and media.
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Tomatoes grow in gravel, greens in rafts.

Backyard Aquaponics 

Sylvia's backyard is a wonderful place - and I was amazed at how much was happening in such a small space when it came to the Aquaponics.  It's very efficient.  The plants were healthy and happy - fed via fish and worms.  It was fun to see it all - thanks again to Alan for the tour.
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Sylvia Bernstein's greenhouse.
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Alan Bernstein and Cord.
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The summer unit - shut down for winter.
Sylvia wrote the book Aquaponic Gardening - you can get it from her at TheAquaponicSource.com.  
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    Author

    Penn Parmenter is a high altitude gardener, seedswoman and student of the earth.  She is married to Cord Parmenter - an awesome gardener, gorgeous man and a master blacksmith. Together they own and run a sustainable greenhouse design company, Smart Greenhouses LLC and Penn grows seed for her seed business, Miss Penn's Mountain Seeds.  She is a mother of three sons and an outdoorswoman.  Penn forages wild food, hunts big game, fishes, preserves, maintains a huge organic forest garden and occasionally makes dinner.  At home you can find her in her greenhouses as well as in the wilderness - nose to the ground, butt in the air, trying to identify Colorado natives.    

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