Sunday, May 22, 2011

Portola Redwoods

This weekend Matt and I teamed up with Ian and Erin to hike in Portola Redwoods State Park.  This park is one of our favorites, and we made a 5 mile loop by connecting several trails.  We started on the Sequoia Nature Trail, then turned onto Iverson Trail to see Tiptoe Falls, then connected to Summit trail, then to Slate Creek Trail, and finally to Old Tree Trail.  Of course, there were lots of gorgeous redwood groves and plenty of banana slugs.

Tiptoe Falls, Portola Redwoods SP

sprouting

I've been experimenting with sprouting things in our kitchen lately.  It's remarkably easy.  This week, I've sprouted chickpeas and green lentils: just soak overnight, drain the following morning, and rinse 2-3 times a day for the next few days.  It helps if you have a sprouting jar, and I keep mine inverted over a towel during the day.  We've been enjoying our sprouts as a quick snack or in salads:

sprouting chickpeas

I planted a few chickpea sprouts as an experiment

sprouted lentil and chickpea salad


Sprouted lentil and chickpea salad

(This is a variation on one of our favorite chickpea salads.)

16 oz chickpeas, rinsed and drained
1-2 cups freshly sprouted green lentils
1 large garlic clove, minced
1/2 red onion, finely diced
1 celery heart with leaves, diced
3-4 tablespoons olive oil
3-4 tablespoons champagne vinegar
red pepper flakes
salt and pepper to taste

Directions: combine all ingredients, adding more champagne vinegar, oil, and red pepper flakes as you like.  Enjoy!

Sunday, May 8, 2011

Tales of backyard gardening

Matt and I have been contemplating how to deal with our squirrel problem in the backyard for several weeks now. The discussion was heightened with the sighting of a baby bunny eyeing our newly-planted veggies on Easter Sunday. So while we were at OSH yesterday, we hatched an idea for how to keep our plants safe and un-eaten: a massive anti-critter cage to protect our vegetable planters. The project took most of the weekend and no less than 7 total trips to the hardware store. It was worth it!

First, we went to the nursery and bought some delectable baby lettuces and a few new succulents to add to our collection. We also bought a couple new planters since the zucchinis are growing fast and need more space. Here's Matt modifying the planters with drainage holes:


Once the planters were ready, we transplanted the zucchinis, planted the lettuce, potted the succulents, moved the garlics, moved the dill, started a flat of bell pepper seedlings, and planted more flat-leaf parsley. There was another trip to OSH in there for more pots, as well. We made sure to take a break for bubble tea in the midst of the gardening blitz:


Next, we measured and drew up a couple of plans for how to build the anti-critter cage. We settled on PVC piping and plastic netting as the easiest and least-expensive option. So on Sunday, we made the first of many trips to OSH to gather materials. The assembly was actually quite easy. Matt measured and cut everything to size, thanks to a super handy new pipe-cutting tool we picked up:


Next we assembled everything:

And checked the fit to make sure it would be the right size for our planters:

Finally, we painted it and attached the netting:

And finally, the finished product:

We are quite pleased with the results!  Next, we may have to build a separate cage for the tomatoes.

All in all, our garden is shaping up for the summer quite nicely. So far we have:

6 red leaf lettuces
6 green leaf lettuces
2 very large zucchini plants
6 soybean vines
2 pickling cucumbers
4 pepper varieties (yellow bell, miniature red, chocolate bell, red bell)
2 tomatoes (one cherry, one heirloom)
6 flat-leaf parsleys
1 fern-leaf dill
1 lavender
1 fennel
3 strawberries (freebies from last year)
6 flat-leaf parsley
1 very frisky regular parsley (which has recently sent up a huge stalk and is about to flower)
1 rosemary
7 basils
1 mint
1 passion fruit vine
1 navel orange tree
1 avocado tree
and many, many sprouting garlics

With any luck, we will thwart the local squirrel and rabbit populations and actually get to enjoy some garden-fresh produce this year!

(new baby lettuce)

(the passion fruit vine flowering)

(sprouting garlics)

Monday, May 2, 2011

Cataract Trail

This weekend Matt and I met up with Hope and her dog, Dewey, to hike Cataract trail up in Marin.  The hike was punctuated by a very angry rattlesnake who tried to bite Hope's dog, but luckily we all escaped unharmed.   This out-and-back hike follows Cataract creek, which winds through a beautiful mossy forest and eventually plummets roughly 1,100 ft in about a mile to reach Alpine Lake.  The return trip can be pretty steep in sections, but it's good training for our upcoming trip to climb Mt Washington!