keep sowing, planting and watering
The drought in the Waikato is not over. Now is the most important time to get winter vegetables growing. Take time to plant and sow carrots, lettuce, silverbeet, broccoli, leeks, spring onions and spinach. Water twice a week until the rain comes :)
Harvest and store pumpkins
Check that the whole plant is dead and brown, and the pumpkin has a hard skin. You can leave pumpkins to dry for a few days on the ground outside, but check that rats and mice do not eat them. Pumpkins will keep for months in a cool dry place.
Citrus will be fruiting soon
Many gardeners in Nawton planted fruit trees last year. Some of the mandarins, oranges and lemons have little fruit which will ripen this winter! Give each tree a bucket of water once a week, and pull out weeds
Recipe - fruit muffins
These fruit muffins can be made with apples, feijoas, blueberries, persimmons, peaches..
2 cups self raising flour
1/2 cup sugar
1 egg
1/4 cup oil
3/4 cup of green top milk
1/2 teaspoon of cinnamon
1 1/2 cups fruit cut into even sized pieces
Preheat oven to 200°C
Mix the egg, milk and oil together. Add to the rest of the ingredients in a big bowl and mix until just combined and moistened. Don’t over mix or the muffins will be tough and not rise evenly.
Spoon into lined muffin tins. Bake for 15 – 18 minutes.
Tree Crops Conference 2013
The 2013 Tree Crops Conference is in Hamilton on April 26th to 28th. There are field trips, workshops and speakers, all about growing your own fruit.
The Conference starts on April 26th with Apple Friday. Everyone is welcome (you do not have to be a NZTCA member). The admission fee is an entry into one of the apple competitions: apple juice, apple pie, apple strudel etc. through to a piece crafted from apple wood. Entries close on April 10th.
Kumara
Some gardeners have already harvested their kumara, while others are waiting until April. Kumara harvesting tips:
- Harvest before the first frost
- Harvest on a sunny day
- Harvest when the soil is dry
- Leave the kumara to dry and form a hard skin before you store them
How to keep late beans and tomatoes producing
Some gardeners planted late tomatoes, peppers and beans. As the nights get colder, these summer vegetables will slow down and die. You can keep them warm, and producing for longer, by covering the plants with microclima cloth. No need to build a frame, just drape the cloth over your plants, it is very light and lets rain and air through
You can buy microclima from garden shops. It will last for years if you look after it.
Happy Growing!
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