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Category Archives: Flowers

German Chamomile

The main part of the growing and harvest for the German Chamomile in my garden is nearing its end, so I thought it would be fitting to have a post on it.

There are 2 types of chamomile that are generally grown for herbal tea / medicinal use – German Chamomile and Roman Chamomile. In my garden we’ve chosen the more common German Chamomile since it is the type that goes into the chamomile tea we are familiar with, it’s what my wife grew up with Europe, and it has the flavor and medicinal properties we want from the plant.

If you’ve never grown and harvested your own chamomile to make tea with, there are a few things you’ll want to know.

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  1. One German Chamomile plant can get really big if it is in an ideal location (approximately 18-24 inches tall and 2-3 feet in diameter, which is what mine did this year). You should only grow it in a sunny spot where you have room to let it get big so that you can maximize your harvest.
  2. You want to pick the flowers in the morning & only after the petals have opened fully and are starting to stretch downward towards the ground. This is the time when the essential oils are at their peak. If it isn’t windy when you are picking your chamomile, you’ll probably detect a faint, but wonderful aroma of freshly cut apples.
  3. Dry your chamomile in a warm, dark place spread in a thin layer across newspaper or cardboard. You don’t want the flowers to have a hard time drying out, otherwise mold will ruin them.
  4. During the drying process, check on them 1x/day to make sure they are drying out and haven’t been attacked by mold. If you have sufficiently spread out the chamomile, mold should never be a problem & drying shouldn’t take longer than 1 week even when temperatures in your garden shed are in the low 60′s during the day.
  5. When they are thoroughly dried, bring them inside and store them in a cool, dry, and dark location. If you want to preserve the essential oils for as long as possible you can also store them in airtight containers.
  6. Don’t store your herbs in jars sitting in a sunny window like I saw in a cafe in Reno, NV around 2006/07. The heat and sunlight will break down the essential oils and flavor (and it still horrifies me that the proprietor didn’t know better since he had been in the food business since the mid-1980′s)

After all of that you’ll have your own “bulk” organic chamomile tea which is a nice tea just for drinking, but also has calming effects on the person drinking it. That is why it is used as a natural remedy for nervousness & insomnia (provided the person isn’t jacked up on caffeine & sugar from too much coffee, tea, or soft drinks).

Don’t forget that you can also mix and match other herbal teas from your garden with the chamomile if the mood strikes you. One of my wife’s favorite garden herbal tea mixes is Spearmint & German Chamomile.

 
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Posted by on June 10, 2011 in Flowers, Herbs

 

Garden Economics page

After starting to populate the gardening economics page, I’ve realized that I need to put things into a table to facilitate the analysis. I will take care of that in the coming days as well as update the blog with new entries on different topics that also include photos.

 
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Posted by on April 27, 2011 in Blog news, Flowers, Fruit, Herbs, Projects, Vegetables

 

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Gardening Economics – an update

I’ve started to populate the gardening economics page on this blog where I will record the running tally of my harvest this year. There are some things that I haven’t planted yet and haven’t added to the list yet, and others that are already growing, but haven’t gotten to the point that they can be harvested.

The page will continue to evolve and as it does, my wife will be the final arbiter on what amounts to a “bunch” (i.e., a bunch of arugula, a bunch of flowers). Her judgement on how to measure things will provide my “reality check” and prevent me from falling prey to “optimistic exaggeration.”

 
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Posted by on April 22, 2011 in Blog news, Flowers, Herbs, Projects, Vegetables

 

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Hungarian Bread Seed Poppies

Here’s a photo of some poppies coming up randomly / in the wrong place. I couldn’t figure out why they were there and then I realized that’s where I harvested Hungarian bread seed poppies last year.

 
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Posted by on March 29, 2011 in Flowers, Propagation

 

It’s bulb planting time!

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It’s mid-October in the SF Bay Area & after 2 highly unusual early season storms that dumped enough rain to cause flooding in the area, I’m about ready to get out and start planting both flower bulbs and bulbs that go in the vegetable garden.

Flower Bulbs in My Garden

Flowers that will go in are Iris, Grape Hyacinth (Muscari armeniacum), Freesia, Amaryllis (also known as the Naked Lady), and Calla Lilies (white, yellow, & red). An additional flower that some will plant with the bulbs is the Tecolote Ranunculus, which is actually a tuber. I find this odd because tubers will rot if they are in the ground during a wet winter like we have in California. Dahlias like potatoes and ranunculus are tubers and you don’t want them in the ground during the rainy season, particularly if you are like me and bought over $100 of Dahlia tubers last year. (FYI, the photo of the flowers in this post are Tecolote Ranunculus).

Edible Bulbs in My Garden

On the edible side of things this year I am planting Chesnok Red garlic, which is a hardneck garlic from the Republic of Georgia. I also decided to go with another hardneck variety called Georgia Fire (also known as Cichisdzhvari), which is also from the Republic of Georgia and it stores for longer than the Chesnok Red.

The other interesting thing about Georgia Fire is that it is a porcelain garlic, which are known for high levels of “Allicin” that apparently has positive health benefits for lowering cholesterol, boosting the immune system, decrease blood pressure, etc.

Last year I planted Siskiyou Purple softneck garlic, but even though they are supposed to store for longer than hardneck garlic, there were several bulbs that didn’t do well in storage compared to the hardneck, so they are out for this year’s planting. Furthermore, the hardneck garlics are prized by chefs around the world for hot spicy flavor, whereas the softnecks have a more tame flavor. Last year’s posts on the garlic harvest can be found here (garlic part 1, garlic part 2)

Storage times

  • Chesnok Red – 5 months
  • Georgia Fire (Cichisdzhvari)- 6-7 months
  • Purple Siskiyou – up to 10 months

Also on the edible side of bulbs that are being planted are red shallots, Flat of Italy (flat red onions), and Gold Princess (flat yellow onions). My luck with shallots has been spotty, most likely because I’ve done them via seeds rather than planting an actual bulb.

I am going to try both seeds and starter bulbs this year and have ordered French Red Shallots from Peaceful Valley Farm & Garden Supply in Grass Valley, CA (which is also where I bought my soil blockers — I’ll write about that later).

As for the onions, my track record is spotty there as well, but in my defense, the problem of cats digging up seedings was a serious problem last growing season and one that will be adequately addressed this time around with chicken wire. We did manage to get a couple of wonderful shallots and red onions, but not in the quantity we should have.

Fertilizing for Bulbs

To get your bulbs to grow (for edibles and flowers) and to ensure they bloom (for flowers), you need to fertilize. I am going to make my own fertilizer mix and will be avoiding bone meal because it is so processed these days that the consensus of university agricultural programs is that most of the nutrients have been “boiled off.”

Before I fertilize I’ll test the soil and try to best determine what areas need more and which need less. I’ll also base part of that decision on what I intend to plant in one area or another since there are plants that are light feeders, medium feeders, and heavy feeders.

One basic fertilizer recipe I have found on Mother Earth News in an article written by Steve Solomon is listed below:

Organic Fertilizer Recipe

Mix uniformly, in parts by volume:
4 parts seed meal
1/4 part ordinary agricultural lime, best finely ground
1/4 part gypsum (or double the agricultural lime)
1/2 part dolomitic lime

Plus, for best results:
1 part bone meal, rock phosphate or high-phosphate guano
1/2 to 1 part kelp meal (or 1 part basalt dust)

***I did find another homemade fertilizer recipe in the book “How to Grow More Vegetables” that basically lists different amounts of alfalfa meal (N), phosphate rock or soft phosphate (P), wood ash, and crushed granite (K). This is more of a complex recipe because you may also have to add in soil modifiers to bring in minerals such as calcium, sulfur, and trace minerals.

Grape Hyacinth (Muscari armeniacum)

 
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Posted by on October 21, 2009 in Bulbs, Flowers, Herbs, Tubers

 

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