Take A tour Of The Walkerland Greenhouse

in #garden6 years ago (edited)

I thought it was about time I showed you what's inside the Walkerland greenhouse this year!

It looks very tidy and tame right now but it wont be long before it becomes an aromatic jungle of green with splashes of orange, yellow and red.

The tomatoes and nasturtiums will climb tall (with a little coaxing from me) and beneath that all of the peppers and herbs will flourish with thanks to the bees and other pollinators that buzz around this space happily.

The Greenhouse

The greenhouse is a basic wood frame covered with plastic. It's got two massive doors on both ends, and a little pop up vent above each door. Both sides have drop down flaps that open up for good air flow on those super hot days. It has two long raised beds inside. There is also a simple drip irrigation system that we need to repair.

We are currently repairing the sides of the greenhouse, they have rotted away and it's been quite tricky because nothing is level or straight. It was in rough shape when we moved here and there have been a lot of tricky repairs that have required some creativity and a willingness to forego perfection. It's been worth it though, I really do love this greenhouse.

IMG_5276.jpg

This is the nifty flap above each door, powered by twine and gravity.

This flap plus the whole greenhouse will be sealed up tight tonight because would you believe it, after several days of a heat wave with a humidex of 35C ...we have a frost warning tonight. I've got a lot of plants to tuck in safely before I got to bed tonight. :(

IMG_5280.jpg

What's Growing

I've really simplified what we are growing in here this year: herbs (both annual and perennial) peppers, tomatoes nasturtium and very possibly peas too. I also have a small patch of ginger planted in here. I'm not sure how that will go but it's a fun little experiment.

Everything is heavily mulched with straw to regulate the soil temperature and help retain moisture in the soil. This means the plants require less watering which is always a good thing!

IMG_5319.jpg We strongly dislike tomato cages BTW - such horrid, flimsy contraptions! We inherited these with the greenhouse so I use them but I also hang twine from the rafters and use that to support the tomatoes when they get really big.

Greenhouse Kale!

I almost forgot about the kale! It's such a wonderful plant to grow. I planted the kale in this photo when it was still winter outside. We've been eating heartily from these plants since early spring. The plants are very healthy and seems to be doing just fine in the heat of the greenhouse. The kale tastes lovely and sweet and not at all bitter which I know can happen when it is too hot. Fingers crossed that we'll be enjoying this kale all summer.

IMG_5310.jpg

Peppers

Most of the peppers were started from our own saved seeds. They are doing great. One of them is called 'Fish Hot Pepper' and it dates back to pre-1870. Other varieties we are growing are: sweet banana, marconi yellow and king of the north.

IMG_5282.jpg

Tomatoes

A wide range of heirloom tomatoes are planted in the greenhouse: cherry, paste and nice slicers with names like: mortgage lifter, black cherry, sweetheart, green zebra, red zebra, amish paste and more! We also plant some tomatoes outdoors to keep things nice and diverse in the garden but they always do best in the greenhouse.

IMG_5316.jpg

Nasturtium

I am a big fan of nasturtium and grow them just about everywhere I can. They are great at self seeding so I always have little volunteers popping up here and there around the garden. We also save the seeds in the fall and I end up with jars filled with seed. The leaves and flowers are edible and very tasty (if you like water cress you will love nasturtium)The flowers add such a beautiful burst of colour to salads, beverages and cakes.

IMG_5312_01_01.jpg

It's hard to imagine right now but each nastirtium plant will become quite big and will be beautifully adorned with red, yellow and orange flowers. You can let it grow along the ground where it will suppress weeds or you can help it grow upwards on trellises. I tend to do both. Here is a wild example of what it can grow into.

IMG_8945.jpg

Herbs

most of the herbs are started from seed in the house. This year I treated myself to a few extras from the nursery including stevia and lemon verbena. Neither are perennial or hardy here but It would be nice to have some in the herb cabinet.

Over the summer I will trim all of the herb plants regularly for a nice steady harvest over the summer. We will dry the herbs on racks so that we have a nice range of herbs to choose from over the winter for cooking, teas, remedies and more.

Basil

We are growing Italian large leaf basil and another called Genenovese Basil. Neither are hardy here so they are planted as annuals. I find basil really easy to start from seed and tend to grow quite a few plants.

IMG_5305.jpg

Winter savory

This is a perennial herb in our zone 4 climate. This is it's third year in the greenhouse and it has flourished. The bees really enjoy it in the autumn when it flowers which is a nice added benefit to growing it in here.

IMG_5314.jpg

Rosemary

Rosemary is an annual for us. I only planted three plants this year - most of my seeds didn't germinate. It should be plenty for our needs but I do find it finicky to start from seed. I've never grown it in the greenhouse so I am curious to see how it performs.

IMG_5306.jpg

Stevia

This is a new one for me, I've never grown stevia before. After doing a little reading I discovered that stevia is a member of the Asteraceae family, which includes sunflowers and chrysanthemums.

IMG_5313_01.jpg

Lemon Verbena

I am excited to be growing lemon verbena for the first time this year. It is not hardy here and has to be started from seed each spring but we will harvest all we can for making teas and tinctures. I can't wait to see how this one grows. I have some planted in the garden and some in the greenhouse to compare.

IMG_5307_03.jpg

Diversification

I also wanted to mention that I always plant things in multiple areas of the garden. A lot of the plants growing in the greenhouse are also in other areas of the outdoor garden. It's interesting to observe the difference in health, pests, and production depending on where you plant things. I learn a lot from this and can adapt our growing methods accordingly. It also means that if something goes wrong (a dog decides to dig for treasure for example - Molly!) there are still other plants to fall back on.


[@walkerland ]
Building a greener, more beautiful world one seed at a time.
Homesteading | Gardening | Frugal Living | Preserving Food| From Scratch Cooking|

You can also find me at: walkerland.ca | Facebook

Photo copyright: @walkerland

big_golden.png

LadiesOfSteemit-01.jpg

Sort:  

I just adore lemon verbena! I planted 4 in the herb garden on Friday.

I start rosemary from seed each year. Some years it does poorly, and some years it does well. This was a "well" year.

Did you know you can use nasturtium leaves in place of bread for sandwiches? They make an interesting sandwich....

Have the King of the North peppers performed well for you? I tried them for 2 - 3 years here and they didn't do well.

I love your greenhouse, even if it needs a lot of work. Greenhouse envy....

I love nasturtium. I eat a lot of it (lol). I use it in place of lettuce a lot but have never tried it in place of a bun. My husband would not be impressed but I love kale wraps where you use the kale to wrap the food. I have used them in stir fries, salads, smoothies, cakes, cookies, you name it. You can also pickle the seeds for a mock caper - I have not done that yet but will give it a try this year.

Yes, the King of the North peppers have grown well for us in past. Fingers crossed for this year too! :)

thanks! :) I really do feel lucky to have a greenhouse. I think it was the whole reason I wanted to move to this house. (haha).

Here's a bit of story for you:

When we bought this place (lo, those many decades ago) I was young and had had horses all my life. We bought this place because it had a wonderful barn and cleared land for pastures. But there was no house, but that wasn't important... There was a 105' x 30' barn big enough for 11 horses or more.

Now all these decades later, had it had a greenhouse....or 2....instead....

Farm.at.beginning.East.crop July.1983.jpg

This is what we bought, a cornfield with barn in back...

Beautiful! Such dreams to stand in a cornfield and imagine what will be. You've created a magnificent spot. Your farm is so beautiful.

I planted dwarf nasturtiums all along our row of tomatoes and the kids are really excited at the idea of the flowers being edible (like they'll actually eat them, but who knows, they may surprise me). I didn't realize the leaves were edible, too!

It got hot so fast here, I completely missed the boat on planting spinach so I'm a bit jealous of your lovely kale which translates to nice green smoothies for me ;)

I've broached the idea of a greenhouse to the Husband but he wasn't favorable. People around here will grow plants outside in cold weather in low, glassed in boxes so maybe I can talk him into those instead. I'd love to get a head start on things like you did!

oh yes, the leaves are nice and peppery and I love them mixed with kale. It's a powerhouse of nutrition. We've had a few smoothies this week, it's so good to have some stuff to blend up again. It was such a loooong winter and I was so tired of the food in the pantry. I wish you lived closer so we could share.

there is some kale in the garden but it's seed kale from last year. It's chewed up and looks quite rough compared to the lovely stuff in the greenhouse. I am so thrilled by this little discovery. Hopefully the heart does not turn it bitter. The spinach that I started alongside this kale bolted ages ago so I know that one does not work. I'm going to make a shade hut to try and plant some spinach and other cooler weather plants ...just to see what happens.

I absolutely love the idea of the glass cold frames, they are so lovely. I had some not very pretty ones made from wood and plastic at our old house and they are very effective.

We just has to run around the garden wrapping everything in blankets and buckets and whatever else I can find. Frost? Seriously! I'll be anxious all night because that blast of heat really got things growing and there's a lot of stuff that can't handle frost above ground right now. Drought, heat waves and frost and June just started - this is going to be a very interesting year around here.

Omg just read this! Frost! Holy cow!! Wishing you the best!!!

It was registering zero degrees on the greenhouse thermometer at 5AM this morning (eek) but everything did just fine! So thrilled! :)

wow! it was chilly here too oddly enough- but likely in the 50s so nowhere near freezing. glad everything did okay on your end!!!

Hi walkerland,

Your post has been upvoted by the Curie community curation project and associated vote trail as exceptional content (human curated and reviewed). Keep creating awesome stuff! Have a great day :)

LEARN MORE: Join Curie on Discord chat and check the pinned notes (pushpin icon, upper right) for Curie Whitepaper, FAQ and most recent guidelines.

Wow, I don't know anyone else growing Stevia... I'd love to know how that one turns out for you, please keep us posted! We had a ton of sunflowers last year that did very well, perhaps we could have some success with Stevia also. Thanks for sharing

I sure will! I expect most places you can grow it in pots for the summer. A pot would be good so you could try and bring it in as a house plant for the winter. Maybe check your garden centre and see if they have some?

Sure enough, west coast seeds has them available at numerous greenhouses and garden centers around... somehow Stevia never caught my eye before. Look forward to seeing how it progresses for you!

Loving your diversity dear! My internet connection is poor tonight so photos aren’t loading so I can’t see your plants or greenhouse but I’m sure they’re lovely. I’ll have to check back in to see them ;) lol. Love your interesting sounding peppers! I was so negligent this year on seed starting everything is quite late - luckily we were given some free peppers from the feed store when Ini went in there the other day lol and had lots of volunteer tomatoes in the high tunnel I transplanted around. Totally lazy about THAT this year ;)

Volunteers are the best! They always seem to be such hardy plants. I think I have some cucumbers popping up with the carrots which is cool because I forgot to start any. It is so cool that you've got tomatoes and peppers even though you didn't start any. That is completely perfect in every way!

This greenhouse is nothing exciting compared to what's inside your grow tunnel but it should be a good amount of food for us and that's the goal. Usually I have a lot of random stuff packed in but I go too far and I can't care for it all properly ... trying to have some restraint and focus this year. (it's so hard).

it sounds awesome and like an amazing amount of diversity and food :) definitely feel you on the restraint. we're trying to do that too ;)

Hey @walkerland, Your post has been featured in the offgrid-online #outdoor-adventure curation post - feel free to have a look at:
https://steemit.com/adventure/@offgrid-online/outdoor-adventure-1-an-offgrid-online-curation-quest

Coin Marketplace

STEEM 0.29
TRX 0.12
JST 0.033
BTC 63381.65
ETH 3169.65
USDT 1.00
SBD 3.85