Thursday, June 18, 2009

PL Meetings -- Four Months At-a-Glance

July 15 or 22, 9:30-12 – Financial Security Advice (location TBA)

August – Canning using the cannery equipment. If we bring it here we can can anything we would like as long as it isn’t liquid. (Anyone who is interested needs to contact Christine Francis by the end of June so we can reserve the equipment.)

September 16 , 9:30-12 – Native plant tour (location TBA)

October 14, 9:30-12, at Amy Rippy’s – Canning demonstrations (bottling) Meats, fruits and vegetables

June Gardening

(from Pat Welsh’s Southern California Gardening a Month to Month Guide)

Do the last thinning on deciduous fruit trees after June drop has occurred. The trees naturally drop an overload of fruit but there might be more to do. Clean up the fallen fruit before it rots and spreads disease. (If it isn’t rotten, chop and add to compost pile.)

Pick outside leaves of lettuce. Pick beans (not early in the day when the dew is on, because doing so can spread rust and mildew) and summer squash daily while still small, but pick tomatoes when fully ripe.

If you didn’t side-dress the rows with fertilizer last month, do it now. Most crops need additional nitrogen at some point during the growing season except beans (unless they show signs of distress). Too much nitrogen for beans prevents them from bearing. Corn needs additional nitrogen and plenty of water when they start to tassel out. The best time to side-dress tomatoes with additional nitrogen is when they start to bloom.

Water regularly and deeply.

It’s not to late to put in seeds – you will just harvest later. (Corn, cucumbers, green beans, lima beans, leaf lettuce, okra, peppers, pumpkins, New Zealand spinach, summer squash, winter squash, melons, beets, carrots, Swiss chard, radishes, turnips and tomatoes.)

Heat lovers such as eggplant , peppers and tomatoes do well and grow rapidly when put in from transplants this month.

Pest control – continue to release beneficial insects and arachnids. (Identify in a book like Starcher’s Good Bugs for Your Gardens) Wash off aphids with soapy water. Handpick large bugs and beetles. Mint, (which is very invasive – try planting it in a 1-gal. can to keep them contained) basil and dill are said to protect tomatoes from hornworm. Marigolds as well as other herbs are also very good to combat pests. Plant them near and in your garden beds.

Clip runners from your strawberry plants. Keep the ground deeply mulched with pine needles or straw. Sprinkle bait under organic and plastic mulches against sowbugs, snails, and slugs. Don’t let the plants go dry now, or fruiting will stop.

Monday, June 15, 2009

Additional Notes for Alternative Cooking Demonstration

1. CERT (Community Emergency Response Team) Training: This free training originated from the police, fire, medical, etc. teams being overwhelmed in a recent fire. The communities are training citizen voluteers to be available to help in a future emergency. They teach (basic medical, search/rescue, how to safely enter buildings, triage, organize people, etc.). You get a vest, a hat and a card that gives you access to areas otherwise blocked off. Jean, my friend from Vista raved about the training she is getting by doing this. If you are interested in getting this training you will want to apply soon for the CERT Training. See more information at:

If you live in San Diego City, they are now taking applications for the next class in October (6 weeks of classes):
http://www.sandiego.gov/fireandems/cert/classes.shtml

If you live in San Diego County, not in San Diego City (ie., Del Mar, Solana Beach, unincorporated areas, etc.), each city has their own arrangement. Del Mar and Solana Beach team up for a 4 week training. Call the contact for your city from the website below to find out more info and to put your name on the list:
http://www.sdcounty.ca.gov/oes/community/oes_jl_CERT.html .


2. To get rid of gophers: Ace Hardware has the "Underground Exterminator" for $17.99. See at:
http://www.acehardware.com/search/index.jsp?kwCatId=&kw=gopher&origkw=gopher&sr=1
This is a rubber coupling that takes the carbon monoxide from your car, through your garden hose and into their tunnels. It humanely puts them to sleep, including those in the nest and they don't see/smell it coming. All the other methods I have seen are about a 50% kill rate since you have to get them into a trap, eat the poison or be near the bomb to work. I haven't tried it yet because my gopher went to my neighbor's yard, but I have it handy for the next time. It has gotten 5 star reviews on the internet.


3. Mickie Cross demonstrated a dehydrator. It is available at Walmart (ship to store) for $44.88:

http://www.walmart.com/catalog/product.do?product_id=1120727