Tag Archives: Flowers

Collards in Bloom, or, What’s going on with the yellow flowers?

Collard, like many greens, will continue producing leaves you can harvest and eat during cool weather, but once the temperatures rise, collard plants will start producing seeds, a process called bolting. collard plants create hundreds of tiny flowers on stems that grow out of the center of the plant. After the flower petals fall off, in a couple weeks, you’ll see little pods forming on the stems. These pods contain the collard seeds. Let the pods ripen and dry on the plant, then harvest them. Remove the seeds from their pods, then save them in a paper bag until the next growing season. One thing to note: collards, broccoli, Brussels’ sprouts, cauliflower, cabbage, kohlrabi, and kale, except Siberian kale, are all in the species Brassica oleracea, so they will all cross polinate. If they cross polinate, your seed will be a hybrid that may or may not produce anything. If it does produce, it won’t be the vegetable you want. So, if you’re saving seeds, only let one type go to seed and pull the rest of the plants before they produce flowers. For example, only let your collards produce seeds and pull your kale, broccoli, and cauliflower before they bolt.

cybersources:   Save your fruit and vegetable seeds! .

see also with good pictures:   Saving Collard Green Seeds | breathingplanet

Steve’s commentary: So, if you have Collards flowering in your area: please, decide now whether you want to save seed. If so, pick the best plants and save the seed according to the directions above. If not,  and for the rest; cut off the flowering tops. You can continue to harvest the leaves. Or, and especially for poor specimens; pull them up and dedicate the space to a more productive crop. If you don’t, seeds will eventually fall to the ground and are likely to return, unwanted, next year. Seed saving is a real sustainable gardening practice. So save the best and compost the rest!

Mike's box after

Mike's box before, with collards in bloom

Alexis and Eren among the collard flowers

GreenThumb Announces 2010 Harvest Competition in Brooklyn

All NYC gardeners are invited to attend and enter the competition!

SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 12, 2010
11 A.M. – 5 P.M.
THE INVISIBLE DOG ART CENTER
51 BERGEN STREET, BROOKLYN, NY

The fair is a wild new take on the traditional County Fair, a day-long celebration of art and food grown in Brooklyn! Festivities engage all the senses: hear live music performed by local Bang on a Can marching band Asphalt Orchestra; taste delicacies prepared by local chefs inspired by ingredients from Brooklyn farms; view specially commissioned work exploring the culture of agriculture by local artists; get a feel for materials needed to produce your own food in workshops by Brooklyn Food Coalition; participate in a Blue Ribbon Competition hosted by GreenThumb; and browse a marketplace with some of Brooklyn’s small-batch artisanal food purveyors curated by Greenpoint Food Market. Cap it off with The Food Experiments’ live cooking competition, Brooklyn Roots, featuring savory samples and refreshing drinks from Brooklyn Brewery, Six Points Brewery, Red Hook Wines, Brooklyn Oenology, Kings County Distillery and others.

This event is part of Crossing the Line, the fall festival of the French Institute Alliance Francaise (FIAF).

For rules and categories on this years Harvest competition go to http://www.greenthumbnyc.org/news.html?news_id=91

For more details on the Farm City Fair go to http://www.fiaf.org/crossingtheline/2010/2010-09-ctl-farmcity-fair.shtml

The Invisible Dog Art Center
51 Bergen Street, Brooklyn, NY
Between Boerum Place and Smith Street
Train: F, G to Bergen St; A,C to Hoyt-Schermerhorn
Bus: B61, B63 to Atlantic Ave and Boerum Place

More Information

Olympian veggies

Congratulations to all the winners at GreenThumb’s harvest fair and first annual urban farmy olympics:

displayed for the judges

displayed for the judges

Gourds in competition

gourds galore

lush blooms

lush September blossoms

Veggie variety

veggie variety

winners! (next year we'll be up there)

winners! (next year we'll be up there)

Dyanne honors garden these garden champions, veteran gardeners successful in their first year on Staten Island

Dyanne honors garden two garden champions, veteran gardeners successful in their first year on Staten Island