tomato chess that is!!! The players are arranged, the spectators piled on the sides...and OH NO... a salt shaker to the right... waiting for unsuspecting spectators or one of the losing chess tomatoes....
i went back to visit the community greenhouse and had a tour by one of the hosts...
i went back to visit the community greenhouse and had a tour by one of the hosts...
this Rhubarb (inside the greenhouse) and the Rhubarb in the picture below(outside the greenhouse) , were both grown by seed, this year... i've never tried growing Rhubarb by seed, but it definately is interesting and i might let one of my Rhubarb plants go to seed next year...
my kindly host gave me one of these beans to sample.. mmmgood! i'm not sure of the variety, but it looks much like a Scarlet Runner, but has white flowers and the bean didn't have a 'fuzzy' coating like the Scarlet Runner has....
the fall crop of Choi is just starting, beets to the left and in the far left is kale... because of the mild climate, rarely snow and not a whole lot of frost the fall crops should do quite well ... the cold weather crops do quite well in the Oregon coastal climate, the sun days are short, a lot of fog or rain or just grey days...the 'field' behind the garden is their 'poor man's golf/driving range course!! soooo fun!!!
nothing like 'organic' means of insect control! a lovely little Skink stayed still long enough for a picture...
an alligator lizard was sitting on another raised bed... one of my hosts felt she was pregnant.. apparently she's very friendly and comes out when people come into garden...
all in all, the community greenhouse has a wonderful 'organic' feel, no wonder the plants were doing so well... as one of my hosts explained... we learn more from our mistakes and 'failures' than when the crops all do well.. they had a bumper crop of tomatoes this year, next year the plan is to have less tomatoes so there is more room for other types of veggies... the squashes didn't like being outside, too cool and damp, and did much better in the greenhouse... the newly transplanted raspberries had been munched on by the elk but with better fencing should do well next year.. the hosts request dogs to come visit, more dog scent, less likely the elk will come and raid the gardens... and surrounding the gardens were lots of huckleberry bushes, blue and red, and lots of salal bushes... how lucky can they be!!!
thanks to my hosts for the tour, and thanks for the bag of tomatoes, cucumbers and zucchini!!