Spring Is Beginning to Get Sprung

Yesterday, I got a call from a friend because she has a lot of garlic growing in her yard and wondered if I wanted any. Once you start gardening, freebies are impossible to turn down, so I headed over to her place to dig up a bundle. It was the most beautiful Spring day. There is something magical about Spring colours when the sky is bright blue and gives the new greens a yellow hue. The top photo was the view from her garden in East Nashville.

I haven't had the chance to plant the garlic, but here's what else has been going on in my East Nashville Edible Garden.

Peas! These are one of my favourites. I was rather reserved in 2015 so stepped it up this year and have three different kinds of garden pea, plus the sugar snaps and snow peas. The beets, carrots, and salads are coming up, too, and the fruits and herbs are starting to bloom. The strawberries are throwing out flowers and, since each one becomes a fruit, the berries aren't too far off.

Although planted, the beans remain underground and there are a few seedlings left to go in. The kale and chard are in pots, but will go into the ground this week, along with the onions, leeks, and shallots, while the peppers and tomatoes will be kept inside a little while longer. It's not quite warm enough for them to be outside all day and night.

It hasn’t all been a success story, though. I had planned to grow cauliflower, savoy cabbage, and broccoli but after lovingly tending them from seed to seedling in a grow box, and I mean lovingly … 

… they were eaten within a week of being in the garden by worms munching at the stems. I begrudgingly let it go with a plan of attack ready for the little blighters in the Fall.

As if I haven't enough seeds already this year, I just bought some more — including squash and melons — from my favourite online seed store, Baker Creek. (I’ve now banned myself from the site until the Summer, knowing full well there is no chance I’ll stick to it.) There's still time to order, if you want to have a go at planting those this year.

I will confess that I’m new to growing melons and squash, so it will be another learning curve. When I started the garden three years ago, I planted what I knew and loved, which were the foods my dad grew on his allotment at the back of our house in England. As well as having his experience at hand for those particular foods, they took me back to my childhood: the June strawberries which we would long for every other month off the year and stuff ourselves silly when the time came around; the daily bowl of raspberries I’d collect from late Summer through the Fall; the leeks, peas, and carrots that were the brightest orange you could imagine. I remember knawing around the middle core, saving that most juicy part until the end. I still do that sometimes.

Another staple were his potatoes. When there weren’t any left in the garden once the cold set in, they would be in a huge paper bag in our garage ready for Winter feasting. So, from the first year I began planting, the potatoes were in. They've always done well, both directly in the ground before I started mulching in my second year, and after. This year, though, I read about a no-dig growing method when using mulch so am giving it a go.

Traditionally, potatoes are planted about four inches deep in the ground and, as the plants grow, the surrounding earth is mounded up around it, a little more earth being added as the plant continues to grow. The potatoes can be dug up earlier for new potatoes or left a little longer for larger ones.

This year, instead of planting in the ground, I placed my potatoes on top of the soil.

Then, rather than the usual four-inch wood chip cover that's on the rest the garden, the potatoes will sit under about eight inches. Instead of just mounding the extra four inches, I built a border from cedar fence posts (using the same technique I used to build all my borders). That way, the mulch stays in place and I can plant other crops very close to it. Once the potatoes are ready, there is no need to dig (which usually results in a few potatoes being stabbed), just a bit of ferreting around in the chips is all that's needed. And you shouldn’t need to weed or water, either. Now to just sit and wait to see if they grow.

Just a note about planting: Don't plant store-bought potatoes; you'll need seed potatoes to begin with. I order mine though Grow Organic. This year, I bought Burbank RussettViking Purple, and Desiree Red. All these varieties are good for both the Spring and Fall which will hopefully make the replanting easier, and it's not too late to get an order shipped for this year.

My other hope for this method is that harvesting and planting happens at the same time, which means even less work. When one plant and all it's potatoes are dug up, the best potato is replanted in the same space, on top of the soil, and covered again, ready to grow when the seasons allow. That means, if this works, once the ground work is done, that's it — a potential lifetime's worth of potatoes.


Singer/songwriter Susan Enan spends any time not on the road or in the studio working in her East Nashville gardenFollow all the Edible East Nashville action on Instagram.

Sowing the Seeds with Love

Every year in the garden, the see-saw tips from "I have no idea what I’m doing" to "I think I’m beginning to understand." And then, just as quickly, tips back to "I have no idea what I’m doing" as the next predicament arises. In any field of learning, it’s a cycle that takes you from being completely baffled to feeling like Einstein, and then back to being baffled all over again. So, I’m starting 2016 having learned so much in the two years since I started the garden, but knowing there is still so much to learn. The first lesson will start with seeds.

You know you are a gardener when you have more seed catalogs delivered than home and clothing put together! It’s that time of year when all the 2016 orders have been placed and some have started to be delivered. I’m growing almost everything I grew last year, along with a few additions to expand the garden. Baker Creek is my go-to again this year for seeds. Now that I’ve got the hang of growing most of the vegetables, I’ve added a few more varieties to some types so I can compare tastes. 

Last year, the parsnips, cauliflower, and brussel sprouts didn’t grow, but it will take a few years of failure for me to completely give up on anything, so we’ll see what 2016 will bring. I’ve cut back on lettuces, since their season here in Tennessee wasn’t that long. The arugula did really well, though, as did the spinach and kale, so they will be my main leafs this season. Another failure last year was my rhubarb. I love rhubarb, but it’s not that easy to grow in warmer climates. Still, I ordered some more to try again, along with some potatoes, from Grow Organic.

My biggest disappointment, by far, in 2015 — partly because it was the first thing I planted — was the death of the apple tree. It budded in the Spring and then died. Who knows why, for sure, but the city was working on a sewer line not too far from it and it ended up leaking. I’ve order the same multi-variety tree, along with another one, from Bay Laurel Nursery. Lastly, I ordered another gooseberry bush and some more early-season strawberries (since I managed to kill many of mine while transplanting them!) along with a variety of everbearers which will produce berries over a longer period of time. They came from Nourse Farms.

Here’s the complete list:

Baker Creek
Beets: ChioggiaGolden, Detroit
Broccoli: Waltham
Brussel Sprouts: Catskill
Cabbage: Perfection Drumhead Savoy
Carrots: Pusa AsitaPusa Rudhira RedKuroda 8″ LongCosmic PurpleAmarillo, Danvers
Cauliflower: Erfurter
Chard: Five Colour Silver Beet RainbowKale: Blue Curled Scotch
Leek: Autumn Giant
Lettuce: ArugulaAurura Mixed OrachButter King, Red Wing Mix
Onion: Bronze d’AmpostaAustralian Brown, Zebrune (Shallot)
Parsnip: Hollow Crown
Pea: Oregon Sugar pod II (Snow Pea)Wando,Lincoln, Kelvedon Wonder
Peppers: Corno Di ToroRed Mini Bell, Red Belguim
Radish: Saxa 2Purple Plum, Pusa Galabi
Spinach: Bloomsdale Long Standing
Tomatoes: TappyPrinciple Borghese, Sungold Select II
Herbs: Basil Genovese, Dark Purple Basil.

Grow Organic
Potatoes: Viking PurpleDesiree, Burbank Russett
Rhubarb: Victoria Cherry

Bay Laurel
Fruit Trees: Multi-Variety Apple, Fruit Salad (on Nemeguard)

Nourse Farm
Strawberries: Earlyglow, Seascape
Gooseberries: Hinnomaki Red

For the past two years, I’ve sown my seeds outdoors when the weather starts to warm a little. But this year, after discovering the wonderful Gary Pilarchik from the Rusted Garden on YouTube — and his video demonstrating how to make a simple indoor grow box — I wanted to try with some starts inside. (The follow up is also useful.) 

Another first for this year is seed soaking. For a seed to sprout, it needs to take in moisture, which it does from the soil. Soaking it first is like giving it a huge glass of water in one go, instead of the sips it takes from the earth, so germination is much faster. The general rule is, "Don’t soak anything for longer than 24 hours," but I discovered some seeds need much less and started to swell after 12. You want to avoid sprouting before planting as the seeds are very delicate once that starts to happen and are likely to be damaged if you pick them up. 

So I didn’t have to stick labels on my glasses, I lay them on a labeled paper towel. (See photo above.) The seed packets will tell you when is the best time to sow your seeds indoors. I could have been earlier with some of them, but next year I’ll do better, tipping that see-saw once again from "I have no idea what I’m doing" to "I think I’m beginning to understand."

For now though, it’s time to hurry up and wait.


Singer/songwriter Susan Enan spends any time not on the road or in the studio working in her East Nashville garden.