The strawberries and garlic (and weeds) are growing with a vengeance.
Our kind neighbor, with a tractor, tilled up about an acre for us without us even asking. So we had to kick butt and get something planted. Having not planned what best to grow, since we're basically farming from afar, we decided to do soil enriching beans and peas. We got varieties suitable for picking dry and growing in bush form since that's likely what will happen and we're not putting in trellis'. Hopefully we'll get at least a couple of fresh batches.
Next year we're DEFINATELY getting an earthway seeder.
We planted the following from Massey Mercantile:
- Pink-Eye Purple-Hull Cow Peas: 49 days. Heavy yields. Good disease resistance.
- Zipper Cream Cow Peas: 75 days. Good yields of light colored peas. String acts like a zipper to make for easy shelling. AKA southern peas.
- Ford Hook Bush Limas: 70 days. AAS Winner. Finest + largest butter / lima bean. Best yielder.
- Speckled Red Bush Limas: 76 days. Pretty seed. Grows well in hot weather. Very productive.
- Contender Green Bush Beans: 55 days. Extremely early + prolific. Long round oval pods. Resistant to mosaic + powdery mildew.
- Roma II Green Bush Beans: 58 days. Broad flat pods. Very tasty fresh. Disease resistant.
Might I saw it's shocking what a difference seed cost is when you buy in bulk. In my lack of planning I originally bought all these seeds in 1/4 lb quantities thinking it would be enough. I changed that out for a pound each and it ended up being less than twice as much. 4x the seed for about 1.5x the cost. Weird.