Tag Archives: Gardening

Science Saturdays: Crystal Tree

I didn’t have high expectations for this kit but was surprised at how much interest the kids had. They set it up quickly and checked in on it for 2 days before smashing it and throwing it out.

About 1 hour after setting it up

I think that because the crystals started forming very quickly and grew larger than expected the kids were pretty impressed. Obviously, this is just a quick one off but it was fun to check in on it through out the day.

Theo’s review: “not a scam at all!” You will have to trust me that is high praise.

Harvest Season

We all love harvest season.

Peaches Everywhere

A lovely peach season

Peach Ice Cream

The kids help make peach ice cream

https://photos.app.goo.gl/53YhZ4MX1DgbD7Mi8

Peach Caprese Salad

Erin Makes the peach version of our favorite summer salad

Apples Everywhere

A lovely apple harvest

Fun Apple Dishes

We make normal stuff, but also start to get weird as we need to use up so many apples.

  • German Chicken with Apples in mustard sauce
  • Home Made Apple Sauce
  • Apple Crisp
  • Shepherd’s Pie with beef, spicy peppers, and apples.

Spaghetti Squash

We have two plants making a bunch of spaghetti squash this year.

Our favorite dish is spaghetti squash burrito bowls… basically make taco filling and put it in a spaghetti squash and bake it.

Peaches, Gardening, and Japanese beetles

I was recently asked how I get such nice peaches and for tips on winterizing / care… I kind of laughed as I don’t really do anything in particular. I thought my response was kind of humorous so, here it is for others to enjoy, and I guess perhaps it might help someone out there.

Denver Peach Tree Care

I have crazy gardens both year round hydro-ponic and seasonal outdoors. I have what seems to be a very productive garden, but I treat all of it more as an art than a science. Too many of my hobbies end up very science, numbers, and on computer screens. So when I got into gardening, I basically made a rule of no book learning, just experimentation. So any advice I give needs that caveat, it might not be the best way to do it, but it works for me.

  • winterizing, um… I don’t do anything… I do put fruit spikes into the soil near the tree twice a year and one of those is in the winter.
  • You might get some tiny fruit in the first year, but if you pick them all off the tree will put more energy into making roots and you will do even better in the future.
  • peach care… I dug a big hole and put 3-year-old trees in the ground. I have a watering system that waters a bit daily
  • I prune the tree more on bonsai aesthetics vs any advice about being good for fruit
    • I do prune any branches that look too thin to support fruit
  • I occasionally thin the fruit, but I mostly leave that up to the squirrels

I distract the Japanese beetles by letting them eat all my roses, and some of my apples… So they really don’t have any time left to eat peaches. The squirrels sadly prefer peaches over apples, which is why I have two peach trees and one apple tree. When we have a boom havest I pull about 500 peaches and apples… Squirrels extract about a 20-30% tax on fruit…. Probably higher for the strawberries, which they seem to go nuts over, and I thought squirrels like nuts.

Occasionally I spray with a mint based organic bug spray, but I am not convinced it does anything, but it does smell nice which is a plus.

Anyways, happy to share anything that might help, but my urban farming philosophy can mostly be summarized as plants really want to grow, put them in the grown and give them water and sun. 

Science Saturday: Mushroom Kits

I like to do various semi-education activities with my kids, most often on Saturdays. We call these Science Saturdays activities. I am going to post about some of the successful activities and the less-than-great semi-educational activities.

Mini Mushroom Grow Kit

Mushroom growing kit
Mushroom growing kit

Growing Mushrooms clearly takes a bit more than a single Saturday, but it is a great science activity with the kiddos. We grew a back to the roots Mushroom mini grow kit. That can be started in just a few minutes. The initial setup involves opening the box, cutting the bag, and soaking it in water. All the while discussing mushrooms, it was super easy to start.

mushrooms growing
mushrooms growing

Then it is fun to watch as it grows from tiny baby mushrooms to something we can eat in just 2 weeks. We grow tons of stuff with the kids, with a summer outdoor garden and our basement hydroponic garden (which I will cover in a future post).

kiddos growing and eating mushrooms
kiddos growing and eating mushrooms

If you have any questions about it, this is a pretty good youtube video that includes setup and a timelapse of the mushrooms growing.

Our kids love eating and cooking mushrooms, so it seemed like it would be fun to grow some so they could see the process and eat their bounty.

The mushrooms start coming up fast, and I think Theo pulled his first one off the box and popped it in his mount by day 6 after starting the kit.

preparing the mushrooms
preparing the mushrooms

From reading a bit about these kits, we should be able to grow two or three crops of mushrooms. We just started the second batch yesterday.

Our kids enjoyed sauteing them in butter, the first batch we harvested a bit too late, and they were a bit dry and cooked up chewy. We will see how we do with the next batch.

Full Mushroom Kit photo gallery