Winter Vegetable Gardens
By
Carroll Uithoven
The coastal south is blessed with long growing seasons and plenty
of moisture. While thoughts of vegetable gardens usually occur in
early spring, many in Baldwin County turn to the raising of cole crops such
as broccoli, cauliflower, and cabbage, to provide fresh veggies for their
table. Three such winter gardeners include one native and two transplants.
While the crops they raise are basically the same, their garden sites and
methods vary as much as their backgrounds.
A
Baldwin County native who returned to his roots in 1988, Gus Utter is the
grandson of one of the founders of the Silverhill community. “In 1902,”
states Utter, “my grandfather and several of his Swedish friends from Chicago
took advantage of an offer to travel south via train to St. Louis and Mobile.
From there a ferry transported them to Fairhope. They then traveled
to the area now known as Silverhill, where they were able to purchase land
for the price of $15 per acre. If a man purchased a minimum of forty
acres, he received a 10% discount as well as a reimbursement of his train/ferry
fare.”
“I
was born and raised in Silverhill and attended school in Silverhill and
Robertsdale, continues Utter. “As a teen, I spent most summers on
my grandparents’ farm in Minnesota. I served in World War II, and
came back to Alabama to attend Auburn University where I earned a degree
in Agricultural Science in 1952.”
“Upon graduation, I
moved to Minnesota to work for a canning company and was placed in charge
of the spraying and harvesting division. In 1954 I married a Minnesota
girl and bought a farm of my own,” notes Utter.
In 1957 he took
over the running of his grandparents’ land until 1960 when the land was sold,
and he and his bride moved to New York. There Utter attended training
at the USDA school. He was then sent to Cape Canaveral, where he spent
twenty-two years as an inspector of plants and animals being brought in
and out of the country.
Gus
retired and moved back to Silverhill in 1988. He is a member of the
award winning Volunteer Fire Department as well as the Baldwin County Master
Gardeners. He has earned over seven hundred hours with the gardeners,
participating in such projects as building butterfly gardens for schools,
landscaping lawns for Habitat for Humanity, and creating stakes to hold pots
at plant sales. In addition to his volunteer work, Gus is famous for
his yard art, cutting out plywood figures that his wife paints for various
holidays. He also has made many small rock figures, which he has given
to people all over the world. He has a herd of about thirty goats and
a yard full of flowers.
Gus’s
main love, however, is vegetable and fruit gardening. He has several
large sour orange trees and a large kumquat tree. He also enjoys
raising rhubarb, especially when he once read that rhubarb could not be
grown in the south. Other fruits found in the Utter yard include persimmons,
blueberries, and loquats.
To
prepare for his winter garden, Gus uses his tiller to work up the soil.
He adds goat manure and chopped up leaves as mulch. Buying his plants
at the Robertsdale Feed Store or Hamburg’s in Foley, Utter uses a timetable
published by Bill Finch of the Mobile Register to determine what to plant
when. Gus has several fenced areas in which he plants his garden.
By keeping the areas separate, he is able to rotate his crops.
This winter Gus planted
cabbage and broccoli and was dismayed to find rabbits were eating his broccoli
stalks. To discourage the varmints, Utter spread blood meal, a twelve
percent all natural nitrogen product, around the plants. Utter also
keeps a small wire screen over the plants, raising the screen, as the plants
grow taller. In addition to broccoli and cabbage, he enjoys planting
romaine and leaf lettuce.
Gus
Utter is a jack of all trades. To visit his country home is to find
a love of nature and all things creative. Although Utter has cut back
some on his gardening in order to care for his wife, he finds time to enjoy
life to its fullest.
Alan
Yankie, a retired chemist and resident of the Rock Creek area in Fairhope,
comes from a family of gardeners. Growing up in Washington State,
Yankie remembers digging and eating new potatoes from the family plot as
well as keeping jars full of Colorado potato beetles. As a youngster, his
first crop was a selection of gourds.
“I
was probably in the third or fourth grade and thought gourds were really
neat plants. I planted them on a very large, aged compost pile, and
they did very well. From that experience,” explains Yankie, “I learned
two things—compost is good, and if Mother Nature is given a chance, she
can do a great job!”
Throughout
his formative years, Yankie worked in the family garden. As an adult
he continued his gardening efforts wherever his job took him. After
thirteen years of living in West Mobile, frustrated with the shade encroaching
on his garden spot, Alan and his wife Nevin began their search for the
perfect house site. Their search ended with the Rock Creek lot, which
came complete with southern exposure and a gentle slope leading down to
a small pond. The Yankies moved into their new house three years ago.
Before the landscaper could begin his work, Alan staked off a plot measuring
fifteen feet by thirty feet in which to place his garden. Since the
existing soil was mostly sand, Yankie’s first step was adding compost.
“Composted
leaves are very important for proper soil nutrition,” states Yankie.
“I spent many afternoons riding around, collecting bags of leaves in the
back of my SUV. I then placed the leaves in compost bins under my
deck.”
Once
the soil was properly mixed with composted leaves, Alan created his raised
beds, which in effect are wide rows. “Each bed is about three feet
wide and one foot deep,” he explains. “I started with sloped sides
for each bed, but this winter I added wooden sides made from treated 1 x
4’s which are held in place by stakes made from treated 2 x 4’s. These
wooden sides add stability and aid in weed control. Between each bed
or row, I place a mulch of pine needles, leaves, and grass clippings.”
“In
addition to leaves,” Yankie adds, “I now use manure from a local horse farm
for soil amendment, and I rarely use commercial fertilizer. Since my
garden spot is going on its fourth year, I will start withholding phosphorous
when I do use fertilizer, probably a 15-0-15 with some slow release as that
is what is locally available.”
Every
August Yankie pulls up the plants from his spring garden, stirs the soil,
and covers it with a sheet of visqueen for about two weeks. A compost
infusion is needed every second or third crop in any given spot.
For
his cold weather crops, this enterprising gardener begins planting in mid-January.
“If the weather is supposed to stay reasonable, I plant lettuce, English
peas, spinach, and other salad greens along with cruciferous vegetables
such as broccoli, cauliflower, and brussel sprouts. By mid-March I
add beefsteak tomatoes, peppers, cucumbers and squash.” Yankie also
keeps various types of onions growing year round.
As
a trained chemist, Yankie is very methodical in keeping records.
His logbook, started in 1987, notes the dates and types of plantings as
well as what works and what doesn’t. Because of his background, Yankie
delights in experimenting with different varieties of plants. One
of his latest experiments involved analyzing the various ingredients found
in a spring mix or mesclun.
“Both
Nevin and I relish a good salad. I studied the different types of
greens found in a spring mix purchased at the local supermarket. I
planted them all, tatsoi or spoon cabbage; mizuna, a sharp-toothed type
of lettuce; osaka, a purple mustard green; radicchio or purple cabbage;
and Swiss chard, the filet mignon of the lettuce world. We were really
appreciating our spring mix when I discovered that the black beetle appreciated
the mixed greens just as much as we did.” To combat the beetles, Yankie
applies Sevin dust to the seedlings. To mature plants, he applies a
mixture of summer oil and water, an environmentally friendly pesticide, which
suffocates the beetles.
By
carefully selecting plants that provide a good yield and need only reasonable
maintenance, Yankie is able to continue his love of experimentation while
putting supper on the table. The Yankies as well as their friends
and neighbors, all enjoy the fruits of this small, well-planned garden.
Magnolia
Springs boasts a year-round gardener in Charmaine Peterman. Charmaine
and her husband Tony were residents of Dothan, AL, for nearly twenty years.
During that time Charmaine raised lots of corn, which she sold at a local
farmer’s market. In addition, the Petermans maintained a vegetable
garden and a large pecan grove, the proceeds of which they planned to use
for their retirement.
A
visit to Baldwin County, however, changed everything. “We fell in love
with the area,” explains Charmaine. “I bought a subscription to
The Onlooker, and every chance we had, we drove down to search for that
ideal spot on which to build.”
The
Petermans located their dream spot on an old house site located on County
Road 26 West. The Lipscomb family, as a result of a Spanish land grant,
originally owned the majority of the land in this area. Through the
years, the land had been divided among various family members. In July
of 1989, the Petermans contacted Wilmer Lipscomb and soon made a deal to
purchase five acres.
“When
Tony retired from Ft. Rucker in 1995, we began work on our house.
We moved down in 1996 and have thoroughly enjoyed every minute since,” notes
Charmaine. “I was determined to continue my vegetable gardening but
on a much smaller scale.” As a result, Charmaine’s garden measures
thirty feet by one hundred feet.
In mid-August Charmaine begins preparation for her fall/winter crops.
“I
always use seeds to start my plants,” explains Peterman. “I take pleasure
in studying the seed catalogs including Burpee’s, Park, and Wayside Gardens.
By raising my own seedlings, I can be sure exactly what I am getting.”
Once
Peterman’s seeds arrive, she is ready to begin the process. The first
step is to fill her collection of wooden ammunition boxes with potting
soil. She sprinkles the seeds over the soil and covers them with
another thin layer of soil. Peterman then places the boxes where they
can receive a couple of hours of morning sun. The boxes spend the
rest of the day in a shady, breezy area. Charmaine’s seedlings include
cabbage, broccoli, and cauliflower.
“To
protect the plants from fire ant invasion, we keep the boxes elevated.
We used to place the boxes on bricks, but now we use platforms made from
sawhorses and planks. We have found that the higher the boxes are from
the ground, the fewer problems we have with those pesky ants!”
Charmaine’s
garden spot was once a part of a large soybean field. Because of
the nutrient deficiency based on long seasons of soybean crops and the
sandy soil, Peterman adds mulch every year. Her live oak trees provide
a great source. Over the years, she has also added poultry and horse
manure as well as sheet rock scraps salvaged from the building of their house.
After adding mulch and watering the area overnight, Tony Peterman is enlisted
as the “tiller man!” By September 20, the seeds have grown to transplanting
size and are moved from the boxes to the garden.
This
fall Peterman planted about thirty of the Mariner broccoli offered by Burpee’s.
She prefers this type of broccoli due to its cancer- fighting abilities
as well as its ability to produce lots of side shoots. She also had
the same number of Milky Hybrid cauliflower from Park Seed, which produces
a head measuring nearly eight inches across and weighing nearly two pounds.
As for cabbage, Peterman chooses the Tropic, a giant hybrid measuring twelve
inches across and weighing up to fifteen pounds. The Petermans also
plant Danver’s Half-Long carrot seeds directly into the garden.
Other
fall crops include various types of greens including spinach, Swiss chard,
and a red-tipped leaf lettuce purchased from Old Type Feed in Fairhope.
Charmaine often adds beets, yellow straight-necked squash, and cucumbers
to her winter mix.
The
growing season begins in October, as the days become shorter, the nights,
cooler, and the rains begin to fall on a regular basis. By December,
the garden is ready for harvest. After freezing and canning all the
produce she wishes to keep, Peterman happily shares her bounty with grateful
friends and family.
All
three of these members of the Baldwin County Master Gardeners agree that
proper soil maintenance is the key. Have your soil’s pH level checked.
Be sure that mulch is added regularly. Contact the county extension
for advice on planting times as well as what types of plants are suitable
for out area. Start small, but don’t be afraid to experiment with
different varieties. Most of all be creative in all the steps from
soil preparation to harvest. Then you will be able to enjoy a fine
meal fresh from your own winter garden.
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