Monday, February 19, 2007

Frozen Food, The Old Fashioned Way

Speaking of the great freeze (mentioned last post) we lost a few food crops and some ornamentals. The philodendron out front and what was left of the lawn were damaged pretty well, as was the night-blooming jasmin. Only the jasmin matters, since we planted it and like it, but they all look like they are bouncing back.

The potato patch did the big death, though, and was not going to recover. Planted last fall, the potatoes were well on their way to a bumper crop starting in spring. With the tops dead, we got about 10 lbs out of the whole plot.

For every harvested potato I saw 8-10 tiny future-potatoes that could have been harvested. Very frustrating, but since we don't rely on these for food, only disappointing.

The bell papers that nearly croaked in the summer heat, and have been producing prodigiously all fall and winter, simply keeled over due to the freeze, dead, dead, dead.

Interestingly, the lettuce and spinach made it just fine; eventually we figured out that the raised bed is next to the house on the south side. Not only is it warm and sunny due to the southern exposure, but the house reflects light and heat back during the day and radiates it at night. (Not such a good thing in summer though.) In addition, the crawlspace has two vents right there, and the heater and the water heater were burning all night down there -- venting above-freezing air right onto the bed.

Serendipity for sure.

The Mandarin Orange crop was meager to start with, with only two dozen fruits on the whole tree, but the tree and fruit survived. I also started a good fire in the portable fire pit next to the lemon tree, then let it burn down and sit as coals all night. Don't know if it helped, but the lemons made it through just fine too.

Saturday, February 17, 2007

The Weather Outside May Be Frightful,
But at Least the News Arrives Wirelessly


The Great Freeze of '07 is over, and now it's Summer in February. Ninety degrees in the backyard yesterday; a mere 89 degrees today. What is the world coming to? Apparently these February temperatures are breaking records -- most last set in the 1970s -- much like the record cold of a mere three weeks ago!

As weird as it is, the warm weather makes for easy gardening, helps one get stuff in the ground early enough to enjoy it for early summer. Of course a warm February usually means a cold, wet, even snowy spring around here and the local mountains. Except when it means a warm dry spring, or the occasional warm wet spring. See, our weather has always been a little, well, variable. Just not quite this variable.

Well, if you are interested in the weather in our backyard, now you can check up on us anytime you feel like it. With some Christmas money this year I indulged in a long standing wish and installed a small, professional grade weather station in our back yard. ( I went with Oregon Scientific WMR 968 largely because of its solar powered sensors.) Temperature, humidity, barometric pressure, wind speed and direction, rainfall etc. all reported wirelessly to the base station in the house, along with indoor temperature and humidity.

The wireless receiver with all the readouts is cool enough, but it attaches to the home computer and feeds its data to WeatherUnderground.com. So if you want to see how the weather is over here, you can check for yourself online.

Click on over to www.weatherunderground.com and search on "pasadena, ca" or just use this this link. If you like charts and graphs (I find the barometric strip chart particularly interesting) go view our historical data page here. The weekly and monthly charts are pretty fun!

It's nice to be able to get the weather info from inside the house, without having to run outside to get the rainfall information from a physical meter, or read an outdoor thermometer. And it's kind of fun playing with all the features of the weather software.

Wonder what the weather will be like next week? Tornadoes?