Bike Ride to the River Road Gardens

I rode my bike this morning the 4 miles to the River Road Gardens, where there’s a vegetable stand Saturday mornings; there’s also CSA shares available at different times of the year:

I bought some beets and kale, they just fit in my bike bag:

Yum! I’m happy to be biking; like I said in earlier posts, my belly dancing seems to be reducing my back pain so I’m expanding my repertoire of physical activity, moving beyond long dog walks and swimming (which I don’t do with my dog).  Next week I hope to start a bike commute to work a couple times a week (it’s just 6.5 miles one-way) before the heat sets in. If it happens, there will be photos here.

Aphid Attack

I’m not really the most mindful gardener. If I thinned my lettuce–and pulled up the old lettuce plants–I’d probably get aphids later in the season.  Supposedly the abrupt presence of an aphid colony indicates a garden out of balance. Oh well. Every February when we have our first warm spell of 3+ days in the 70s and mild nights my beautiful winter lettuce crop becomes…..inedible. At least for me. It’s impossible to wash off aphids and I don’t like a salad with little things moving around on the leaves.

But, if you’re a chicken, it’s a different story. I picked all my lettuce the other day, loaded it into 5 gallon buckets, and gave it all to an administrative assistant at the hospital where I work: she has chickens. Apparently, her chickens were very happy with the–to them–inexplicable bounty.

I picked most of my kale in the other bed, washed, chopped and froze it; it’s aphid-free at this point, and, I must say, extremely yummy steamed and eaten with nothing added.:

The tomato cage is in the bed for nights when there’s a freeze; I just throw an old bed sheet over the whole bed and the cage props it up. Some poppies have self-seeded in the bed, too. There are also scallions and pansy volunteers.

March 15th is about the last frost date in Tucson; then I’ll plant my summer plants: tomatoes, beans, cukes for pickles.