How does the garden grow? Winter was incredibly warm this year, and we were able to pretty much continuously harvest crops. We're about two weeks ahead of schedule here as far as planting goes.
During the railroad era the promise of self-sufficiency on small lots lured poor immigrants from Southern and Eastern Europe into the Pinelands. Many were hungry. My father was named for an uncle who basically died of starvation in northern Ukraine. His side of the family lived in the Great Sand Belt near the Pripyat Swamp—Europe’s equivalent to the Pine Barrens that stretched across the edges of the Fennoscandian Ice Sheet.
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A. Collards (front) and Chinese mustard greens (specifically Serifon, back) are still providing fresh greens.
B. Senposai, a hybrid of cabbage and komatsuna (Japanese mustard spinach), is tough as nails in heat and cold. It has the sweet taste of cabbage and the tenderness of komatsuna.
C. Various forms of chives, including garlic chives. The cultivar Allion (bottom right) is the most robust and mildest (least stinky) form of garlic chives.
D. Flat Italian parsley (right) and cilantro (left) produced during all but the coldest spells this winter.
E. Leaf lettuce, butterhead lettuce, garlic, heading broccoli, cauliflower, spinach, shelling peas, broccoli raab, and Jerusalem artichokes.
F. The planting hoe my grandmother (mother’s side) brought over from her Lemko village in the Carpathian Mountains (now Poland).
During the railroad era the promise of self-sufficiency on small lots lured poor immigrants from Southern and Eastern Europe into the Pinelands. Many were hungry. My father was named for an uncle who basically died of starvation in northern Ukraine. His side of the family lived in the Great Sand Belt near the Pripyat Swamp—Europe’s equivalent to the Pine Barrens that stretched across the edges of the Fennoscandian Ice Sheet.
Marsh, E., Demitroff, M., and Schopp, P., 2019: The southern Pine Barrens: an ethnic archipelago. SoJourn: A Journal Devoted to the History, Culture, and Geography of South Jersey, 3, 2: 7–25.
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