Tuesday, March 21, 2017

Our Sponsers

No, this isnt really a commercial. But I'd like to give credit to the people who have help support this community garden.

Wiki Wiki Market in Naalehu
Ace Hardware in Naalehu
Territorial Seed Company
and several local residents who have donated tools and supplies

This community garden is run by volunteers and donations. We appreciate and support the businesses who help.

Welcome Back !

Yes, it's been a long time since we've posted any updates. But that's going to change. We are going to try to post a monthly update, maybe even more frequently. We'll see.

So what's been happening? Lots!

We are still at our location. We weathered two horribly wet years which tended to shut down or limit our activities. These past six months have been fairly dry, so we are back in full swing again. We are growing food and sharing it among garden volunteers and our community residents. We have been experimenting with different growing techniques. We have added many new items, including herbs. The garden is expanding and now hosts mini- greenhouse tables and three screened greenhouses. More garden areas have been derocked and made into growing beds. We recovered from the damage caused by a major windstorm, and erected a new lunch area.

So we have lots of photos to share with you and lots of news.

Friday, June 12, 2015

June 9, 2015

The blasted rain still hasn't let up. The mornings are beautiful and sunny, but by lunchtime it's cloudy with rain soon to follow. 

Our new tomato plants are struggling. We haven't had enough sun to make them happy. So we don't have high hopes for them unless the weather pattern changes. Gee, I thought we were suppose to be in an El NiƱo! The eggplant and pepper plants look terrible. So we yanked them out. Time to try growing replacements.

The older sprouting broccoli is still producing small florets, though the plants are starting to look over mature, the younger broccoli looks super. 

So does the young cabbage. 

The spinach is starting to bolt, but it still is tender and lushly green. Must be because of all the rain. The garlic chives that we drastically cut back due to bugs is now growing well. It's about 10" high already. The chard looks like it's swallowing steroids! It apparently loves the wet, cloudy afternoons. 

We harvested potatoes today, a variety called Purple Majesty. They are real dark purple. And it's a great producing variety for our location. 

Here's today's harvest, not including the greens (kale, chard, spinach, broccoli greens, herbs). 


Today's lunch was made from the excess from last week's harvest. Pumpkin soup with chunky vegetables (pipinola, green onions, chives, carrots, broccoli). It was delish! 



End of May + June 2

Boy, we've been getting a lot of rain recently. Not so much large volumes at any one time, but something just about every night. It's been a hard few months trying to grow certain vegetables. But the greens, spring onions, and potatoes are thriving still. 

So what's still growing well for us? Potatoes. Sweet potatoes. Beets. Chard. Kale. Broccoli. Cabbage. Turnips. Radishes. Green onions. Chives. Basil. Beans. Taro. Spinach. Carrots.

What's doing poorly? Cowpeas. Tomatoes. Eggplant. Peppers. Peas, because of disease. The pipinola aren't doing poorly, but they aren't doing great either. 

But we are still getting harvests. 

The harvest above doesn't show the greens because people pick what they want of the kale, chard, spinach, and herbs. 

We had a bag full of tangerines given to us this week,  they also were shared among the volunteers. They turned out to be quite juicy and sweet. 

Many, many weeks ago Matt started onions from seeds. Several weeks went by and we finally planted them out into the garden....just wee thin seedlings that we planted in clumps rather than try separating them. Finally this week we began separating the onions and replanting them. 
We know from prior experience that these newly transplanted seedlings will grow very rapidly. It not be long before we are harvesting green onions. 

Tuesday, May 19, 2015

May 19, 2015

Recently the weather hasn't been too kind for the garden....and the volunteers. Every day for the past two weeks there has been rain of some amount and duration. And it's beginning to show in the veggies. Aphids are showing up everywhere. Flea beetle populations are exploding. Spittle bug is attacking the oregano. Mildew is starting up on the kale, cowpeas, and gourds. And a fungal disease is destroying all the peas. Not fun. 


Today we repaired some of the damage by removing sick plants, trimming back the chives, and removing older leaves in order to open up plants to more air and light. We hope it helps. 

On a good note, we planted lots of new stuff. An entire bed of Lancelot leeks got in today. Three beds of seed potatoes went in....a general red skinned variety and an unusual purple. Chard, beets, and assorted greens were added to the garden too. Missy brought several tomato seedlings, so we can now look forward to cherry tomatoes and roma's. 

The pallet fence that has protected the garden area for the past year was in need of a little attention. .....wow, it's been a whole year! Doug and Matt tackled the job, getting everything re-aligned and stable. 

The one thing that is doing better than super, in spite of the rain, is the last planting of potatoes. They went into the brand new bed that Matt created. To say the least, they are growing like super plants! They are the tallest potato plants we've ever had. They're well over the top of a five gallon bucket. 

Today's harvest was meager. But it's been quite some time since we had such a paltry harvest. But at least everyone had something to take home. Sweet potatoes (whites, oranges, purples), broccoli, pumpkins, chard, two types of kale, green onions, carrots, cowpeas (only a few), plus we picked our first two gilfeather turnips. And five dozen eggs got shared. 

Sunday, May 10, 2015

May 5, 2015

In spite of difficult weather, the garden is still producing. But we have gone through and cleaned out all the plants that are not thriving. Time to restart certain things. Luckily we have plenty if starts and seed potatoes waiting for round to get planted. 

We tried a red mustard for the first time. Nobody knows what it tastes like, but it sure is attractive. 

We are getting a nice harvest if sprouting broccoli buds. We have also Ben harvesting leaves from the extra  plants that we plan to thin out. 

The pole beans are pau (finished) so we let the last got to seed. They will be used to start the next crop. 

Some of the older plants in the garden are also becoming over mature. The salad burnet visually looks lush and fine, but with the plants now older, even to young leaves are tough and not pleasant tasting. So the plants got the old heave-ho. Same with the spinach plants below. 

Harvest today included spinach, red mustard, green beans, radishes, beets, snap peas, broccoli, potatoes, pumpkins. Plus chard, kale, green onions, and an assortment of herbs. 

Monday, April 27, 2015

April 2015

Flea beetles, aphids of kale , pea virus, mildew on cowpeas

We are growing our own onion starts this year. The seed is small and difficult for us to sow thinly. So the seedlings came up in clumps. Prior experience has shown us that we can allow the seedlings to grow together for a while, then when more developed they can easily be separated and transplanted. So for now they are in clumps. 

Our Swiss chard is growing strongly. We sowed a mixed color package of seed. So we are seeing a rainbow of colors. While the colored ones are a tad tougher, the colors are appealing. We find that the chard responds very favorably to being mulched. 

This time we tried growing long beets in addition to the standard round ones. They did just fine. Some got quite large before we got to them but they were still tender and sweet. 

The sprouting broccoli is starting to produce buds. The broccoli is a bit crowded so we plan to remove the smaller plants, harvesting them for their leaves and small buds. That will give the larger plants more room to develop. 

The spring we are seeing lots of the pineapple plants producing. Some are already growing the stem sucker, which becomes the replacement plant. You can see the sucker in the photo below growing out the side of the stem below the pineapple fruit. There are also several small slips growing from the base of the pineapple. These two can be planted but take longer to produce the next fruit. 

Now for the bad news......

Aphids have moved into the kale. We didn't notice them at first until they had already caused a lot of damage. We got rid of them using soap spray, but even so, the kale took a nose dive two weeks layer. We have removed those damaged plants since we have plenty of other kales for picking. 

The snap peas are succumbing to some sort of pea disease. We haven't identified the culprit yet. 

Mildew is finally showing itself in the garden. For months now we have been anticipating it. The weather seemed ideal for mildew. The first crop to show mildew this time is the cowpeas. 

Vog attack! The volcano has been acting up lately, sending bursts of vog our way. The taro has been burned and so have the gourd leaves. Long sections of gourd vines have been burned.