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Keeping busy with the TPC gardens lately

These past month has been very busy for us here in the TPC gardens, especially since we have so much time at home these days.  We had let the weeds take over in the front garden box and we were running behind on starting some seeds this year so we made it a priority to get some work done.  There were areas to clear, boxes to build, and the birds had started nesting nearby.

One of our natural bug killers in the TPC garden
One of our natural bug killers in the TPC garden

In the front garden box, the borage and amaranth were growing quite well along with the flowers we had saved from prior years.  Unfortunately, all the other seeds failed to sprout and we were pretty disappointed.  We had been diligently weeding and keeping an eye out for any signs of growth after planting but had no luck.  We honestly left it alone for awhile after realizing that and the weeds went absolutely nuts while we discussed what to do next.  So there was quite a bit of weeding we had to do around the borage and amaranth to clean it all up.  After we found some echinacea seedlings, we grabbed basils and sweet peppers from the back garden and happily planted those where the seeds failed.  Now the front garden is still mostly herbs and edibles, happily growing and producing, but not quite how we envisioned it earlier in the year.  Kind of like most of our lives right now, appropriately.

We made a lot of progress in the back gardens but there is still so much to do.  It’s just that time of year.  We got the tomatoes, peas, and peppers all in the ground. Then we fenced and covered them in to protect from wildlife and neighborhood cats; the plants seem quite happy now.  We are going to try a different method of staking and caging them this year; I’ll go into more details with that once we finish and I have more pictures to help explain it.  The fruit trees all seem to be working hard but we have lost pretty much all of the plums and every single one of our nectarines.  Blackberries are popping out left and right while peanuts are going nuts in their containers.  We also got our seedlings into larger pots over the weekend in addition to starting more seeds of cilantro, beans, peas, cukes, melons, sage, watermelons. We also started almost a dozen trees.  Not sure what will actually survive or not but we will keep pictures and share as the year goes on.  All in all, we counted roughly 75 plants that got repotted, planted, or started over one weekend alone.  Whew.

You can see here that when we start seeds at this point in the year, they stay together in the shade of our oak tree to avoid the increasing heat here in Houston.  Don’t worry, these babies are all labeled so we can keep track of what is and isn’t sprouting.   We learned the hard way that we have to label our seeds! If they grow, we’ll start separating them when they reach four to six inches tall.  They stay outside for their entire time so transplanting them later isn’t really a big deal.  We all enjoy playing in the dirt around here (good thing we make soap!!) so they’ll probably get moved into the ground around that four to six inch size.  Guess we better get to finishing those planter boxes over the next two weeks.

Hope you enjoy the pictures of our little micro farm.  It’s not perfect, is always a work in progress, but shows that even a little yard can bring something yummy into the kitchen with a little bit of work.  We will gladly keep updating you on how everything is growing and going over the course of this year.  Dorothy has been documenting our garden for a few years now so we are considering showing more of how we do this since people have been asking.  What would you like to see more of on the blog?  Drop us a line in the comments below or feel free to email her directly with your thoughts.  We’ve been growing some of our ingredients for so long that we sometimes forget how many people are new to us and aren’t aware of the TPC garden.  Make sure you subscribe to get alerts when we post again.  You can also find our Facebook page here; make sure to like and follow it for updates too.

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Still here and staying calm during COVID

Our supervisors hard at work

Like most of our city, we’ve made the painful decision to stay home amid the COVID-19 situation.  Luckily, our main base of operations is our own house and our junior staffers were on spring break for the first week.  The kids enjoyed their free time, caught up with their friends online & by phone, playing games and guitars, and watched more YouTube than their parents would probably want to calculate honestly.  The adults spent most of that time trying to remain busy and calm, counting the days until the next farmer’s market and our children back to school.  Dorothy finished getting the soap making and book keeping all moved into one room of the house (woohoo!)  There was massive progress on getting garden boxes and beds prepared, weeded, and planted.  Then week two kicked in and we faced the dilemmas of school closures, markets and events being canceled, and the general worries of being a parent and small business in this rapidly changing situation.  It’s been stressful on our whole city and we wanted to let you know we’re still here, doing fine but just like most of you it’s a bit crazy.

Our supervisors hard at work
Our supervisors hard at work in March 2020. They make sure we take regular breaks and get some fresh air.

We hope that you and yours are all doing well as you can in all of this.  We’re working with our local markets, fellow vendors, wholesalers, private labelers, and charitable groups from a distance to help share information and updates with our cherished customers and followers until this has passed.  There are no markets or events for the month of March, including Founders Day at Wunderlich; they have all been canceled as of March 19th.  We’ve been advised that Schulenburg SausageFest, Mancuso’s GatorFest, and Chappell Hill’s Bluebonnet Festival are now canceled also.  Fingers are crossed that all of these measures do the trick in ending this, everything will be normal again soon, just in time for spring crops and the farmer’s markets to reopen.  We’re looking forward to seeing everyone again soon, happy and healthy.  Please do keep reaching out to us for information as you need it.  We’re monitoring our texts, emails, and voicemails to respond to everyone as quickly as possible.   We’ll keep posting info as we get it here to the website and our Facebook page; plus more pictures from the scene here on the blog. We’ve also tried to ensure that the website inventory is up to date so your orders will be processed quickly and smoothly.

Great employee
Great employee in the booth at Wunderlich Feb 2020

As you can see, our supervisory crew has approved of the new layout in the soap room and will ensure that we find time to relax a little when stress gets too high here. The kids are back in school and staying busy. We’ve used this time to reflect on how we’ve expanded our skills over the past year, enjoy the little moments, and finished getting our liquid soap making back on track. Dorothy will get posts made for you about when the liquid soaps will be live, how we’ve finally conquered bread making, learned cheese making and canning and blacksmithing, grew new produce, crafted a vendor group of talented local artisans and makers that are outstanding in their fields, and the personal goals we hit over the past year. Make sure to subscribe so you’ll get notified as the posts go live; some of the stories out of it all were honestly funny and a good read.

Stay safe and healthy everyone.

Happy Washing!

The TPC Team

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Playing in the dirt on the micro-farm

Aloe shoots in the TPC garden
Rosemary in the TPC garden
Rosemary in the TPC garden

We’ve been hard at work in the gardens so far this year. We ripped out more grass and flowering bulbs for planting edibles and built more boxes to grow in. The greenhouse was taken apart as our part of the world reached the 70s and we started moving everything from it out into the growing areas. Most of the plants made it through the winter here in Houston and we’ve spent the last few weekends in the booth, transplanting, evaluating what containers we have or want, or working the garden beds to get them ready.

Since we are the geeks that we are, planning the garden beds and containers is a multi-week event here. We literally pull out all seeds that we’ve gathered, purchased, or been gifted over winter and spread them over the table top. Then out comes notes of prior years gardening, our gardening books, Dorothy’s infamous gardening binder which is stuffed with info she’s saved over the years, and then pull up our favorite websites so we can learn about anything we’ve never grown before. We also grab little two to five inch plants for transplanting if needed. This year we hit a new geeky record as graph paper was pulled out and a diagram of the planting beds was made to scale! Yep, we literally mapped out where everything was going to be planted in the front beds on graph paper in hopes of keeping some sanity this time.

The back yard micro-farm area was planned mostly over the Christmas and New Year’s break as we cared for everything in the green house. The grape trellised wall will be back this year and this time we’ll try to keep it scaled back a bit. In past years we’ve honestly let it spread as far as it wanted but the massive crop was a bit much to handle last time! Just in case we accidentally get another harvest like that we’re plotting to learn wine making. We learned our family’s not big into jams & jellies, the kids can only devour so many pounds of grapes before they go bad, so wine making seems to be a logical next step for us. Would be a lot of fun to make wine out of our grapes and then make that wine into soap. We’ll see how it goes this year and keep you updated.

Freshly transplanted sage in the garden
Freshly transplanted sage in the garden

The fruit trees are in full swing, except for the plum tree which is driving Dorothy nuts. We lost our blueberry bushes but that was due to the dogs, not weather. All of the citrus trees are flowering and putting out new leaves and branches. The nectarine tree is covered in fruit while the fig tree is popping out leaves like crazy. Blackberry vines are awake and producing also; we’re anxiously awaiting those! We are keeping fingers crossed this year that our limes and grapefruit make it through. If all goes well, there should be produce in our booth at the farmer’s markets. We also expanded the herbs and veggies in our little growing patches with hopes to grow enough to share. The aloe is sending up shoots constantly and those should be split out soon to give away at markets also. Keep fingers crossed for us!

For those who worry, we have kept our pretty flowering plants too. We’re all fans of the pretty colors and varying flowers we’ve grown over the years. One gardenia was lost, not sure what killed it but it’s gone, and a rose bush we thought was destroyed has come back strong. The butterfly flowers (lantana, duranta, calendulas, coneflowers, daylilies, etc.) all seem to be doing well. We still have multiple varieties of roses everywhere too. The plumeria tree is showing signs of waking but will be a bit before any flowers might emerge. We love having these in both the front and back to bring in the bees.

Gardenia Blooming
Gardenia Blooming

We’ll be trying hard to keep better updates for everyone here online about our little micro-farm. We realized that in the past years, we’ve mostly shared info with people as they visited us in the booth and that’s not really helpful to everyone. It seems to be a bit surprising to people that we grow so much in our little corner of Houston, smack in the middle of a subdivision. It also seems to be a shock how much of our ingredients come from our own garden. Pictures will be added here to the blog and website in addition to our social media to keep you in the loop. And feel free to ask questions online or in person about what we’ve got growing. Odds are we’ll whip out our phones in the booth to share pictures of our little projects in addition to answering your online queries.

We must wrap it up for now as there are weeds to pull before the day ends. Stop by and say hello when we’re out in the market or we’ll see you here again soon. For easier updates, follow our blog and like us on Facebook to get alerts when the next post goes live or market days. Have a great time out there, stay safe, and happy washing!

One of our favorite bug killers in the TPC garden
One of our favorite bug killers in the TPC garden