Tag Archives: tomatoes

Wall of Tomatoes

Because of how incredibly busy and emotionally drained we’ve been these last few weeks, we simply did not have time to tend the garden or greenhouse. So we finally went out and assessed the damage. Upon opening the greenhouse door, we were hit with a wall of tomato plants that were so thick we could hardly walk through it. Still everything seems to have been thriving even without our attention, if somewhat out of control and weedy. We also have a few peppers, lots of basil, sage, and thyme.


Wall of Tomatoes


Welcome to the jungle


Handful of tomatoes


The bounty

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More Around the House and Yard

Fall has descended. The tomatoes have suffered their first frost, so we had to go and pick them. The deciduous trees are all turning yellow, red and brown and it looks gorgeous outside. We are back up to about 60 degree weather, so we have been spending time outdoors again. We have also started making “cold weather food” like warm breads, soup, chili, spaghetti and so on. Autumn can be comforting if you don’t have to go outside when it is really cold.


Lots of Tomatoes Picked


Chickens pecking around the Garden (w/ withered tomatoes)


Homemade Bread Loaf and Buns


What a Bucolic Scene w/ horse behind our House


Mountains, Lake and Changing Trees Out Back

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Locavore Meal

By Cassie

Gathered up the materials: Eggs straight from our hard working and feisty leghorn backyard chicken, basil (the chickens have helped our grasshopper infestation as well so we have more basil another benefit!), garlic clove, cherry tomatoes, jalapeno, potatoes (all from our garden) and tortillas from a Greeley tortilleria


Purple potatoes are awesome! Unlike red potatoes, the potatoes are purple through and through. Britton didn’t even have to dig much at all to get these out of our garden


We had to use up some of the older store-bought eggs as well. Can you tell which is which? **Hint the local egg is bigger and oranger!** FYI-Free range eggs like these are much higher in omega 3 and have a closer omega 3/omega 6 ratio than industry eggs. This is mainly due to the fact that they can eat grass, bugs and other plants in addition to just feed


VOILA!


YUM!

If you have never heard of the locavore movement, aka real food movement, aka local food security, aka 100 mile diet, aka food sustainablity and related to the organic food movement, this meal is a representative of this. It is not all that hard especially in the summer. Basically, the assumption is that we can use less fossil fuels, bring ourselves closer to nature, feed ourselves nutritious foods and avoid the atrocities that are committed every day in the conventional food industry such as genetically modified (GMO) foods, pesticide residue, chemical dependence and a disconnect from nature.

An example of this: Most egg and meat chickens in the conventional industry have their beaks burnt down when they are chicks so that they don’t peck the other chickens to death because they are so stressed. The local food movement (locavore movement) also avoids the monoculture tendency in the current farming practices which means you can grow a variety of things to eat rather than just fields and fields of corn (most of which is not to eat anyway).

This is a major reason why I am so excited to live in Puerto Rico. I can eat local and healthy here in Colorado in the summer (with a lot of help from sprinklers or it’d be too dry!), but not so much in the winters. I can’t wait until we can eat off of the land year round! In fact, there is often so much food that one family could never eat it all. Imagine: Oranges, grapefruits, passionfruit, mangoes for breakfast, fresh avocados, tomatoes, goat cheese, and eggs for lunch, and salad, beans, fried plantains and maybe some fresh meat for dinner with a fresh lime and mint with local Bacardi rum or a lime slice for a Medalla Light (local Puerto Rican beer). All from your own yard or within 100 miles! And that’s just an idea…I am sure we will have to be very creative in order to use all the different things out there.

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Tomatoes Galore! Tales and tails of Gardening


Me, Pony and Shana

Shana and I went to the Master Gardener discussion on vegetables including tomatoes. We walked around Plumb Farm and saw the turkey, ponies, cow, lamb, chickens and garden out there. We didn’t realize it at the time, but we asked the Master Gardener to take our picture with Shana’s Cell phone. Right as we were squatting to get this picture, the pony turned around and pooped right by our faces. Then he turned around and we got this snapshot. It was pretty funny.

After talking about gardening again with the Master Gardener, it made me think about what to do with all those extra tomatoes I have waiting to be planted in the greenhouse. There is no way we can plant all of them (probably 20-25 planters full) unless we dug up our yard. (Which I would do if Britton would let me, but he won’t.) So I posted an ad on craigslist. We’ll see how many people come by. Hopefully all these gorgeous tomato plants will be used as fruitfully as possible.


Tomato Plants taken out of the greenhouse

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