Sugar Free Raspberry Jam
The Raspberry harvest season in Wasilla Alaska was great and I needed to make room in my freezer so I made jam from some of the frozen Raspberries I have stored…
Read moreFolklore Garden Remedies - What Really Works?
Many garden practices are based in folklore and some remedies simply don't work…
Read moreGreenhouse String Trellis
I use commercial hanging string trellis reels with tomato clips to support my plants. These tomatoes were started indoors in February and are now blooming in June with a few tiny green tomatoes…
Read moreMoose Cage For My Currants
I finished a garden project that I have been planning for a long time and built a moose cage to protect my Black currant bushes…
Read morePaper Sacks For The Garden
I am glad that Wasilla banned plastic grocery bags... but what do you do with all of the paper sacks that you saved?
Read moreSweet Pepper Pickles
I spent my Friday making sweet pepper pickles... I picked a peck of peppers! I grew King of the North and North Star Bell Peppers in 2020. They are short season peppers and make large fruit. Prefect for our short garden season in Wasilla, Alaska…
Read moreHarvest Season in Wasilla
August is the beginning of harvest season at my home in Wasilla, Alaska. Soon in September it will be freezing at night. I will need to add my space heater to the greenhouse to extend the tomato season a little longer and to keep the greenhouse temperature above 40 F at night. I still have bell peppers and eggplant inside a garden hoop tunnel. I have been busy picking everything and busy in the kitchen making my oven roasted tomato sauce.
I have Raspberries along with Gooseberries, and Black Currants. I destem berries and freeze on sheet pans then weigh and vacuum seal in 1 lb bags for storage in my freezer. I will make jams and country wine during the winter.
I will pick the last of my beans - rinse, trim, blanch and freeze them on sheet pans then weigh out and seal in 8 oz vacuum bags to store in my deep freezer
King of the North and North Star bell peppers are good varieties up here. Short season and large fruit they do well in Wasilla with our short garden season.
I am now growing only Bush Early Girl F1 hybrid tomatoes. They are short season and on smaller sturdy plants and are perfect for my Alaska Grow Buckets in my small greenhouse. They produce large slicing tomatoes that are also great for making sauce and they are VFFNT resistant.
I finally found a used copy of my favorite pickle recipe book, that I lost many years ago. It has lots of good ideas for preserving your garden produce.
I will spend my weekends making sweet pepper pickles and tomato sauce. It will soon be time to clean up the garden for winter. In a few short months I will be checking out the seed catalogs and placing my orders for next year's garden!
What Do You Do With Kale ?
I will admit kale is not my favorite veggie, yet I know it is good for me. It is very easy to grow, very frost tolerant, and therefor a great staple crop for my garden here in Wasilla, Alaska…
Read moreBefore the Internet?
Probably the biggest influences for me and others from my generation were The Mother Earth News magazine and the Whole Earth Catalog I read them both. I also read Organic Gardening magazine by Robert Rodale published by Rodale Press…
Read moreAn Alaska Winter Garden
Have you thought about a winter garden in Alaska? No kidding winter comes much sooner than we all would like, but that doesn't mean you have to give up growing food at home…
Read moreHow Much Food Do You Grow ?
We can all grow some of our own food at home - or buy local grown seasonal produce. The sad fact is that it is still cheaper to grow tomatoes in Mexico in January and ship them 4,000 miles to Anchorage, Alaska - instead of the cost for heating and lighting the space necessary to grow them in Anchorage commercially…
Read moreSpring Planting Begins...
Every year as the weather warms up again after a long winter all of the gardeners here in the Matsu Valley and all around Alaska rush to get everything planted out in their garden just as early as absolutely possible.
With the return of warm sunny days it is so tempting to set out plants and yet the idea of another killer frost overnight is always in the back of your mind. I took the extra step to purchase a home weather station and tracking overnight low temperatures has saved my bacon several times. I found out that my property can be colder than locations just a few miles away. On May 19th, I recorded an overnight low of 32 degrees. Luckily I took the time, before going to bed, to turn on my small electric space heater in my greenhouse that kept the temperature inside above 40 degrees and protected my sensitive seedlings.
This graph shows a 3 day temperature record from my home weather station. The Green line is the temperature inside my greenhouse and the red line is the temperature outdoors. As you can see, my greenhouse warms up quickly when the sun is shining on my greenhouse and cools down at night. My property is lower than my neighbors and slopes slightly to the northwest. I am also on the edge of a valley. So all of the cold air flows down to the valley overnight and right through my yard. Some years we might have a mild winter with an early Spring warm-up but you need to stick with your usual planting dates. The climate here in Alaska is definitely warming faster than anywhere else, but our average last spring frost date here is still around May 20. When I first moved to this property in 2004, the well known Iditirod Sled Dog Race had their Official Start here in Wasilla, yet around 2010 they had to move 30 miles further north because of our lack of snow. In the past 10 years, they had to move the whole race to Fairbanks twice and change the route completely due to the lack of snow on the traditional trail. So by following my home weather station I might plant some cold tolerant crops, such as kale, lettuce, and onions, out in my garden by mid May, but sensitive seedlings are not planted outdoors until the last Weekend in May.
I use hoop tunnels and IRT plastic mulch to warm up my raised beds for plants that are not cold tolerant. I even tried using water filled jugs to try and store some of the daytime warmth and protect my plants through our springtime cold nights.
I also constructed these wire covered hoop cages to keep the neighborhood moose from destroying my garden, as they regularly did in the past. Installing a permeant moose-proof fence around my garden was just not in my budget. My tomatoes will be planted in my self watering 5 Gal. Alaska Grow Buckets inside my small greenhouse.
May Gardening Update
I believe the Number 1 cause for spindly weak seedlings is not enough light. I was using 4 florescent - T8 or T5 bulbs in shop fixtures over each shelf and have now switched to all LED Grow Lights to save on power and they are on for 16 hours each day…
Read moreNever Enough Time...
By July the Summer Solstice has past and the days are actually getting shorter again. Even though the long Alaska summer days will still be with us for another month or so. The thought is always on your mind for those of us that depend on our limited growing season. The accelerated plant growth we experience, with our long days, can be easily seen in our yards and how soon the freshly cut grass grows back and requires another day behind the lawn mower…
…Keeping up with weeding, lawn mowing, brush clearing and any new outdoor projects, let alone planting and maintaining a vegetable and/or flower garden does not allow a lot of time to do much else. If you add in gathering and cutting firewood and maybe a few fishing trips - then you can get the idea.
My greenhouse Alaska Grow Buckets are doing great this year and my tomatoes are loaded with fruit.
I have lots of green tomatoes and as usual it seems to be taking forever to see any red ones.
I also transplanted some spruce saplings from around my property to try and establish a border along one edge of my property.
The best time to plant a tree is always 10 years ago, but the next best time is today. I will never get all of the things done that I would like to complete, in our short Alaska summer. Some years can be cool and rainy and some years the weather can been as near perfect as possible, I can't complain. I will complete some projects and actually look forward to another winter when life slows down and I can just sit inside by the wood stove and enjoy watching it snow outside. Those people that think gardening begins in the spring are wrong …gardening begins in January with a dream.
Moose Cages For My Garden
Moose can be a real bad garden pest in Alaska and you can find moose anywhere. It doesn’t matter if you live in the city or rural countryside. So I am building hoop cages over my raised beds…
Read moreMay Planting Update
Thank goodness for our long Alaska summer daylight as I am able to comfortably work in my garden past 10 PM with 17 hours of sun in late May and over 20 hours by late June…
Read moreToo Early To Plant Outside
You can't let the warm sunny days in early May fool you into planting outside too early. Even though it is 70 degrees F outside as I am writing this. The 24 hour Temperature Graph below tells the real story...
Read moreTomato Seed Choices
My 2014 tomato seedlings are up and looking good. I can almost taste the first fresh tomato of the season…
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