Sometimes the news in the paper isn’t all bad. Last week I read an article about Cole Canyon Farm in Aromas. They were having an open house where the public (that would be me) could come and buy directly from their greenhouses. Their seedlings are all organic and are “available for transplant during the appropriate season.” Rebecca was visiting so Steve, Rebecca and I headed over to Aromas to see what goodies we could find. And find we did! First of all, they were selling their seedlings for $1 and some for 50¢. This was the right time to try out veggies I had never planted before and even take a chance on one I had never heard of before. Here’s what I got: lovage, basil (snails keep decimating my current plant), broccoli, spinach, romaine, cilantro (my last plant just up and died), rainbow chard, a winter tomato (if my current Stupice ever stops producing!), arugula, purple mizuna, and epazote. Yep, that’s the one I had never heard of before. Rebecca waxed poetic on the deliciousness of the herb. She said in a quesadilla it is amazing. (Actually her comment was a little more colorful than mine.) This is another herb that is poisonous in large quantities. But on the good side, adding it to beans will reduce gas!
My garden acquisitions are happy in their new home. So far nothing has wilted or been eaten. I did put out some beer for the snails this evening since they’ve been attacking my bok choy. I hope those pesky gastropods stay the hell away from my new seedlings…it would break my heart if they gotten eaten up even before my first harvest. I’m the one who’s supposed to be doing the eating here! The sun is lower in the zenith so it may take awhile for the seedlings to get big enough to start picking. I'll try to be patient. In the meantime, I'll read the best part of the local paper: the funnies.