Thanksgiving
Day was warm, about 70º. Then, in the evening, a north wind began to blow and is
still blowing almost 24 hours later.
Today’s high temperature is 39º and tonight the thermometer is expected
to plunge to 18º, by far the coldest night this fall.
Realizing
that row covers can’t protect the plants from freezing indefinitely, we decided
to cash in our chips by harvesting most of the fall garden.
Most of
the plants still look pretty healthy, but the radicchio and escarole are
frost-bitten on some of their leaf tips. We cut the escarole, which is more advanced and salvagable, but left the radicchio to decay because the heads still haven’t formed.
We’re
leaving the kale for now, with a triple row cover. Kale is the most frost-hardy
of all the greens we planted this fall. We cut all the arugula, enough to make
four nice salads. More arugula is coming on in the cold frame, along with
lettuce and spinach, so we should have continuous home-grown salads for another
month or more.
Dennis
pulled all the turnips. I'm sorry I forgot to harvest the rest of the volunteer cilantro,
seen in the lower right of this photo. We've been enjoying it in salads for weeks.
The turnip
tops were a bit weary so Dennis cut them off as a treat for the chickens. They had been hiding in their house most of the day, but the fresh greens brought them out into the sunshine.
Excepting
the kale, that about does it for this year’s fall garden, but, as we all
know, there is no ending without a beginning, for that is the nature of cycles.
Here, indeed, is the beginning of next summer’s harvest: garlic and shallots
have sprouted and will grow a bit whenever the winter weather warms. They will
take off running in the spring and be ready to harvest by early July.
I’m
thankful for the multitudinous cycles of life, none more so than the succession of
generations of people. As one crop ages, another is maturing. As one crop dies
a new crop is born.
This
phenomenon manifests in many ways, one of which is who hosts Thanksgiving. For
many years family and friends came here. But this year Oz and Marianne invited
us to join them and their family and friends. All I had to do was make two pies. I
reveled in seeing the generational cycle move forward one more notch. In future years I will be gone but babies will be crawling on the floor, bearing my genes.
Here’s to
the cooks!
And here’s
to the eager young and middle-aged hands reaching for that delicious, traditional food!
Copyright
2012 by Shirley Domer
1 comment:
Great post ~ I had a wonderful time hosting Thanksgiving this year and your pies were delicious! I especially love your savory pumpkin pie. xxoo M
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