Peter was attracted to the garden and so am I. The difference is, it is my garden. Eating vegetables from it doesn't make me sick, and when I leave my garden, I always leave with my jacket and shoes still on. I don't have a problem with mischievous bunnies in my garden, thank goodness! If I did, I probably wouldn't have harvested what Tricia and I pulled from the garden on a beautiful Saturday afternoon. I'm talking carrots.
My carrot crop wasn't as abundant as in prior years, but it wasn't too shabby. We only pulled the fat, ripe carrots. There are numerous carrots that will be maturing a little later, and we'll be pulling them up in a couple of weeks when they mature. Let's take a look. I normally look at the carrot tops to clue me in on which may be ripe. This one below catches my attention as a potential carrot that is ready to pull.
Large carrot greens that are lying down instead of standing straight up |
A fat Atomic Red Carrot! |
A healthy haul |
I always plant a variety of carrots, including Berlicum, Cosmic Purple and Atomic Red along with an Organic rainbow mix of red, purple, orange, yellow and white carrots.
The greens always look pretty, but they wilt quickly. As always, we share the garden greens with our animals (not Flopsy, Mopsy, Cottontail, and Peter), but our cows and chickens. They love 'em.
Sharing the bounty |
We took them to the back patio to clean them up. This is done by pouring some rainwater in the harvest bucket, shaking them vigorously in the water to loosen the soil from the carrots.
Like a gold nugget from a mountain stream, we pull out a gleaming, beautiful carrot.
All cleaned up! |
But we have another product too. The once sparkling clean rainwater is now laden with topsoil. We take our soil serious around here. That goes back to the garden. I swish it around and pour back over the carrots still maturing.