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Poppy Corners Farm

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Walnut Creek, California
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July Cooking: Fruit Desserts, Canning, and Pickling

July 31, 2019 Elizabeth Boegel
Blueberry, Huckleberry, and Blackberry Cake

Blueberry, Huckleberry, and Blackberry Cake

Harvest is fully upon us this month. Most of our cooking consists of picking whatever veg is ripe and making a salad, or roasting it as a side dish to a simply prepared meat. More accurately, the meat is the side dish, and the veg takes center stage. Warm tortillas stuffed with roasted peppers and onions, and topped with a few slices of marinated grilled skirt steak; lashed with guacamole or sour cream or homemade salsa. Warm pita slathered with homemade cucumber tzatziki, piled high with cherry tomatoes and extra cucumbers, garnished with some grilled chicken. Drumsticks glazed with soy sauce and honey, with a side of cucumber/tomato salad dressed with rice vinegar and Mirin. Thickly sliced tomatoes with a hunk of fresh mozzarella and a sprinkling of basil, drizzled with balsamic vinegar, with herby focaccia. You get the idea. No recipes necessary.

I get the weeklyish newsletter from Essex Farm, which is a full-diet CSA in upstate NY (oh yes, I would join if I lived nearer, I truly love this idea). In the latest newsletter, I was struck by this sentence: “If you have abundant herbs, good butter, salt and fresh vegetables, what more do you really need in the kitchen? That’s the beauty of summer food. It’s nearly impossible to be a bad cook this time of year. If you are spending any time wondering what to make these days, my advice is think less, do less, see how naked you can get food to the table, and how delicious it is anyway.” Amen and amen.

Meanwhile, it is my absolute pleasure to pick from the groaning berry bushes and make delicious desserts. I like them all in all their forms - Buckles, Cobblers, Slumps. My most recent edition of Cook’s Illustrated has a little glossary of fruit desserts, which has really helped me understand what’s what:

Sonker: Syrupy cooked fruit baked under a pancake batter.

Pandowdy: Pie dough or bread that is pressed into fruit as it bakes.

Slump/Grunt: Fruit cooked beneath dollops of soft dumpling dough that ‘slump’ under heat.

Crisp: Fruit baked under a crunchy, streusel-like topping, which often contains oats.

Crumble: An oat-free streusel baked over fruit.

Cobbler: Biscuit dough dolloped over fruit to resemble cobblestones.

Buckle: Thick cake batter poured over fruit, usually with streusel.

Brown Betty: Sweetened fruit baked with layers of bread crumbs and butter.

Cake: Cake batter topped with unsweetened fruit.

Clafoutis: A tart made with fruit baked in a sweet eggy batter.

Let us not forget the British ‘Summer Pudding,’ made from fruit, sugar, and stale white bread all pressed together using a weight. The juice of the fruit saturates the bread and makes it a sort of molded shape. This is absolutely NOT my favorite thing, but it is certainly a clever way to use up stale bread.

The cake in the above photo was made using my favorite strawberry cake recipe from Martha Stewart; it’s simple and highly adaptable to any fruit. Once you start making these different fruit desserts, you will hit on recipes that you can adapt to whatever you have on hand. You can make a streusel out of almost anything and it will taste good. If it’s oat or granola based, that could even be breakfast rather than dessert. Nothing tastes as good on a cold late-autumn morning than an apple crisp. You could even cook the apples the night before, pop them in the fridge, top them with a quick streusel in the morning and bake. Serve with yogurt!

My other kitchen projects consist of preserving everything I am able, for winter. Hanging herbs on the drying racks. Extra berries in the freezer. Blanched green beans in the freezer. Simple tomato/basil/garlic sauce in jars in the freezer for winter shakshuka. This weekend we will make and can our first batches of crushed tomatoes and garlic dill pickles. I will also make our first batch of freezer pesto. Tom’s already made both sweet and dill relish, as well as jam. From now through October, this will be our focus. I’ll make and can salsa, make and can tomato paste, dry and smoke herbs, hot peppers, and spices. I’ll roast and freeze sweet peppers. And we’ll continue to eat everything fresh, as much as we can, as often as we can.

What are you harvesting, eating, and preserving from your garden?



Tags seasonal recipes, vegetable garden, fruit garden, cooking
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East Coast Travel

July 29, 2019 Elizabeth Boegel

We’ve been gone for the past two weeks, traveling on the East Coast. We rented a car and had ourselves a good long road trip (around 2000 miles!), visiting several states - NY, PA, MA, NH, CT - and also a bit of Canada! It is good to be home, though a little difficult to face the garden at the moment; there is so much to tackle and so much to preserve.

We started out in NYC, natch - the kids had never been there, and we spent a very brief time giving them the barest overview of this wonderful city. Unfortunately we were there during a serious heat wave. The temps were in the high 90’s, which by itself would be ok, but the humidity was simply awful, and it made traveling around the city (walking, subways) very difficult. I think the kids enjoyed it despite the heat, but I was having a hard time. I have very few pictures of our time there which tells you I was simply not as engaged as I would have liked to have been. However, we stayed in a tiny apartment on the Upper West Side, which was really ideally located - only a block to Central Park, two blocks to the train - and near to several wonderful restaurants. The very first night we were there we walked up Columbus Ave to Milk Bar, an outpost of Christina Tosi’s dessert stores (she started at Momofuko back in the 2000’s). We enjoyed both cereal milk ice cream and crack pie, two of the desserts she is most famous for. Delicious! We spent the next day walking and ‘subwaying,’ heading downtown to Chelsea Market for breakfast, then up to the High Line which was just so innovative and beautiful. If you’ve not heard of it, it’s an old rail line that has been converted to a garden, my kind of place! Then across town and up to the Met Museum, which is where we spent the entire afternoon (and could have spent days, of course). That evening we took in a Broadway show and had the best ramen of our lives at a little spot called Ippudo.

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The next day, we drove to Long Island, so the kids could see the house and neighborhood where Tom grew up. His family lived in Rockville Centre, in a beautiful house. We visited the St Agnes Cathedral, where they attended church, the Front St Bakery, which had wonderful treats, and Jones Beach, about 30 minutes from their house. We drove through Queens and found the house where Tom’s mom had lived, Brooklyn where she was born, and Levittown where Tom’s parents had lived when they were first married. We had delicious pizza for lunch at a local spot. We drove back into the city and took a boat tour down the East River to the Statue of Liberty and around the site of the Twin Towers, then back up the river and under the Brooklyn Bridge. Dinner at the thriving seaport concluded this fun day.

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It was time to leave the city and drive across Pennsylvania, eventually to Pittsburgh to visit Carnegie Mellon. On the way, we stopped at the Rodale Institute, the innovator of organic agriculture research and study (they are now concentrating more on regenerative organic agriculture). Luckily, we happened to be there on their annual Field Day, with tractor rides and open houses (barns) and all kinds of vendors. We were able to take a tractor tour of the property and I was really in awe of their beautiful experimental gardens. There were many conventional farmers on the tour and I enjoyed listening to them talk about the pros/cons of regenerative agriculture. I heard them talk a lot about reduced costs due to cover cropping, and reduced erosion in this summer of midwestern flooding. I spoke with one of Rodale’s guides and he said that the farmers come to learn, but also to challenge their findings, because they truly believe conventional is best. But they are slowly coming around.

We really loved Pittsburgh. It reminded us a little of San Francisco, with its hilly winding streets and happening neighborhoods, good coffee and good food and lots of culture. We enjoyed learning a little ‘Pittsburghese’ (the local dialect) and visiting the Heinz History Museum to commemorate the 50th anniversary of the moon landing. (We also enjoyed their Mister Rogers exhibit.) Carnegie Mellon, the university, is very impressive and we all thought it might be a good choice for Adam. We were on the tail end of the heat wave, which made being outdoors difficult, and so it was lovely to be in a beautiful Craftsman home in the Shady Side neighborhood of the city. (When we weren’t with family or friends, we stayed exclusively in Airbnbs and we had great ones.)

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From western PA we drove north to the border, stopping for lunch by Lake Erie, and crossed into Ontario. Our house was about a mile and a half away from Niagara Falls, so we were able to walk down to see them rather than trying to find $40 parking. It was hot and crowded, but the falls were spectacular nonetheless. We were interested to learn that Tesla and Westinghouse had designed the upstream hydroelectric plant in 1895, the first of its kind. We drove about 30 minutes north to have dinner in the little town of Niagara-on-the-Lake, a wine tourist destination and a much cuter town. Here we saw fireflies for the first time on our trip, hooray! We ended the night by watching the sun set over Lake Ontario, wishing we had time to explore nearby Toronto.

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Then we headed back through the border into Western NY, to spend the night with Tom’s sister Emily and her family in Syracuse. Western NY is beautiful, and we decided to drive along the Finger Lakes, stopping for good coffee in a hipster warehouse in Batavia, and a delicious lunch in Geneva on Seneca Lake. We couldn’t resist stopping at a farmstand for corn and blueberries. Emily and Jim rolled out the red carpet for us and we spent a delightful supper (with a salad that I am still dreaming about) with our nieces and nephews and grand-nieces and nephews as well! Our niece Meghan makes jewelry and I had asked her to bring a selection; I picked out some simple earrings and a beautiful necklace for Kate (she has an Etsy shop if you’d like to see more). In the morning we watched bunnies on the lawn (I know they are a garden pest, but we enjoy seeing them since we don’t often), birds in the feeders, and walked around Emily’s pretty flower and herb beds. Jim identified some of the roadside trees I had been noticing (Sumac, and Butternut, a white walnut) which gave me great satisfaction.

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We drove on to Troy, which is near Albany, to see Tom’s alma mater, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute (another impressive program, mostly engineering), and stayed the night near there. From Troy we took the road up into Vermont, passing through Bennington (which we loved) and over the Green Mountains (taking a picture from the top), then through Brattleboro and on into New Hampshire. We stopped at a farm called Stonewall, in Keene, to eat a picnic lunch and look at the new calves, goats, sheep, and gardens. We bought tomatoes and maple syrup from the farm, too. They had a creek running through their property (the entire farm is open to the public every day) and lots of kids were playing in it, which made us feel happy.

From there we drove to Derry, NH, to visit Tom’s college friend Terrance, and his wife Trina and son Tad. They have an extensive property with a barn (!) and we had a good time exploring it. They had just completed a magnificent master ‘wing’ that they gave to us for the night, which was quite a treat! We visited a local ice cream place supplied by a local dairy, and walked around Robert Frost’s old farm, which had signs with his poetry all over, very contemplative. We so enjoyed visiting with them and getting to know Tad, who is a precocious almost-first grader.

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From Derry, we drove down into SW Massachusetts, near the Berkshires. My friends Chrissy and Luke, and their two-year old daughter Naia, moved last year to Easthampton. We loved driving through Amherst, and Southampton, both really cute little towns with a very Berkeley vibe. Lots of colleges there (including Smith) insure a younger culture. The family lives in a beautiful little house with a garden that was clearly loved by the previous owners, and Chrissy has fully embraced it too - the house is decorated so lovingly and carefully and simply, and her garden is thriving with veg. We had the best lunch of our trip there, with a salad Chrissy made from her garden, and lots of local specialties including pate and pastries from a local bakery. We loved spending a few hours with them and playing with Naia and the dogs. We were very taken with this area of the world and can see ourselves living there in the future. Of course, we’d have to embrace winter.

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From there, it was a quick-ish jaunt down to Connecticut, to the town of Norwich, where Tom had been stationed in the Navy 27 years ago. We stayed in a spectacular house in Groton, which is just where the Thames River meets the Long Island Sound. We spent a good deal of time sitting on the porch, watching boats go by. We saw two submarines heading out to sea, which was incredible and very poignant for Tom! We went swimming a block away at the beach which had clear, 65 degree water and very gorgeous sand. We went to nearby New London for a dinner of lobster rolls and fried clams, which brought back a very clear memory of childhoods in New England, camping with my folks. It was very hard to leave the town of Groton. We loved it there and could have stayed a week. We’ll definitely go back.

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The only thing that pulled us away from the beach was the knowledge that we had the best part of our trip coming up, a Boegel family reunion at the Mohonk Mountain House in New Paltz, NY (in the Hudson River valley). Mohonk is an old-fashioned resort (and I use that word very deliberately, because they pride themselves on that). They were having their 150th anniversary, and it is an amazing place. Tom’s parents used to go to Mohonk for romantic weekends, and their kids (Tom is the youngest of five) decided it was the perfect place for us to gather and remember Mom and pay tribute to her life. The resort itself is up in the mountains in the Minnewaska State Park Preserve, a beautiful area, full of interesting rocks which climbers love (The Trappes/Gunks). There is a huge lake at Mohonk which was formed by both earthquakes and glaciers and fed by precipitation only. You can see that this interesting topography allows for a lot of outdoor activities. Adam did several rock scrambles, Tom and I took a fascinating geology hike with the in-house naturalist, and we all boated and swam in the lake. There were three fabulous meals each day (with “Chef Action Stations!”) along with tea and cookies each afternoon. One night we participated in their ‘Barnival’ which was a carnival in their old barn, complete with entertainment and local beer. We had a lovely ‘service’ for Mom Boegel in their extensive gardens (and oh, the trees, beautiful copper and tricolor beeches, towering oaks and maples, basswoods and horse chestnuts) and released some Painted Lady butterflies in her honor. We saw all kinds of interesting bee-like creatures, rabbits and deer; enjoyed the horses and the stables, and loved talking with the family members and getting to know their kids (our grandnieces and nephews). We were very reluctant to leave Sunday morning, especially because we had a full day of travel to get home, but home we came.

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image credit: Jake Burns

image credit: Jake Burns

image credit: Jake Burns

image credit: Jake Burns

We had such a wonderful trip.

A few other impressions:

  • The water, oh the water. I took two very deep baths and countless pounding showers. Rivers and lakes and creeks and streams. We Californians forget what it’s like to have endless water.

  • Electric cars are becoming ubiquitous in CA. On the East Coast, we saw five electric cars. All were Teslas. Gas was cheap everywhere we went, compared to over $4/gal here. Perhaps the incentive to go electric is simply not there. Also - very little infrastructure for electric.

  • Good coffee was hard to find. Many places use sub-par, un-fresh beans. We don’t consider Starbucks good coffee, but that was widely available. In Canada our only choice was Tim Horton’s which was undrinkable. Dunkin’ Donuts are everywhere; we can’t understand why. Our best coffee was the cups we made ourselves with Peet’s when we could find it. We sought out local roasters - they were few and far between - when we found them we gratefully supported them.

  • Good, cultural, ethnic food is now pretty much everywhere and a lot easier to find than it used to be. Still, we tried to have local specialties as much as possible. As ever, Adam is our leader in that, always finding the interesting local tidbit to eat.

  • I’ve now seen Book of Mormon twice, and this time, while still really fun, it struck me as very racist. Anyone else feel that way? I mean, I know the South Park guys make fun of everything, but still….

  • Plastic water bottle usage is going strong everywhere, unfortunately. Composting in other cities seems non-existent.

  • I love regional accents.

  • We are very happy to be in the ‘our kids are teenagers’ stage of life. It’s easy to forget how much work little ones are.

  • Folks in hot and humid summer climates are hermetically sealed into their houses. It didn’t seem to matter how nice the early morning or evening was, the house stayed closed. I know there are reasons for this; as Terrence said, “We’ve worked hard to keep the humidity out of the house and we want to keep it that way.” We realized that we wouldn’t want to live in a place where we need to do that. We love being able to open the doors and windows for at least part of each day, and we live a lot of our day in the outdoors. There’s something to be said for the moderating influence of the sea.

  • It’s nice to be home, where we could pick berries for breakfast, tomatoes for dinner, and have two neighbors stop by to give us pears and blackberries. I got started on tomato harvesting but have yet to pick all the blue/black/huckleberries, or the beans, or the cucumbers. I am noticing blight on our tomatoes for the first time ever (our chilly wet May?). It isn’t as good a year as I wanted it to be. Our cucumbers are suspiciously yellow and need some attention. I will pick our first delicata squash tomorrow for dinner - it is at least three times bigger than it’s supposed to be. For dessert tonight I had the first ripe apple.

  • Hard to believe school starts in two weeks.

Tags travel
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New-to-Me Tomatoes from Wild Boar Farms

July 14, 2019 Elizabeth Boegel
None of these are from Wild Boar. I just wanted to show you what will become our first Caprese salad of the year!

None of these are from Wild Boar. I just wanted to show you what will become our first Caprese salad of the year!

Every year, there are certain tomatoes that I grow because they have been proven in our garden; they are consistently excellent and I can count on them. Tomatoes like Black Krim, Cherokee Purple, Ukranian Purple, Italian Heirloom, Hungarian Heart, Sun Gold… I could go on, but I’m pretty sure I’ve written about all of these tomatoes before. Today I want to share some varieties that you may not know and that are also in my garden for the first time. I’m finding them very exciting and I think you might, as well.

These are all from Wild Boar Farms, local to us in Vallejo. Brad Gates is the owner and main propagator, and he is famous for his wildly colored tomatoes. I’ve grown his Pink Berkeley Tie Dye in years past and liked it very much, so when I saw him at the Heirloom Expo last year, I bought a few new kinds to try.

First up is Indigo Apple, a small slicer or salad tomato, which starts out green with deep purple shoulders and then ripens to a reddish plum color. They also have these funny little horns.

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The second is called Brad’s Atomic Grape, which is probably the tomato Wild Boar Farms is most known for. It’s a grape tomato, but an extremely large one, larger than some of my plum/paste tomatoes. It starts out green with deep purple stripes and then turns a deep red/purple/green stripe.

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The third is a cherry, absolutely prolific (maybe the most prolific cherry in our garden so far), called Blue + Gold Berries. These apparently take quite a while to ripen and we have yet to get any even close to ripe. They start out blue and white, and then deepen to a rich gold color. I’ll have to show you how they look ripe at a later date!

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The fourth tomato that I am trying is a slicer called Black Beauty. It is almost entirely black, but the inside will apparently be a deep, rich red when ripe.

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There is a fifth I’m trying called Lucid Gem, but the colors in that one will show on the inside when it’s ripe - it’s supposed to look like a stained glass window. At the moment they are still fully green, so not much to see there.

All of these have heightened anthocyanins, the compound that gives them these rich dark colors. That means that they are particularly good for us (although all tomatoes are good for us, truly).

The one drawback is that they are all hybrids, so the seed won’t come true if you save it and plant it next year. But, I’m happy to support Wild Boar Farms and this fabulous propagation project by buying fresh seed. These tomatoes add so much color and interest to the garden and, eventually, our plates!

Tags tomatoes, vegetable garden
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Cooper's Hawks in our yard

July 13, 2019 Elizabeth Boegel
image credit: Geoffrey Groom on Cornell Lab of Ornithology

image credit: Geoffrey Groom on Cornell Lab of Ornithology

I mentioned that Tom and I had seen three young Cooper’s Hawks learning to fly, around our yard and our neighborhood. Well, now they are learning to hunt, and it’s so fascinating to go outdoors with the binoculars and watch them as they learn to navigate life.

I’ve made a three-minute video, below, of the hawks in our pepper tree and in the neighbor’s pine tree, which is right on the other side of our fence and easily viewed. Our neighborhood has lots of hawk habitat. There are stands of mature trees all around the houses - pines, oaks, eucalyptus, and redwoods. Then there are open areas for hunting - the yards. Our yard is especially good for hunting because we have created as complete an ecosystem as we can, with available water, food, and shelter for all kinds of creatures, including lots of birds. Our neighbor with the pine tree also has birdfeeders, so there are an abundance of little birds. Hawks tend to eat medium-sized birds, like blue jays and mourning doves. But they also eat mammals like squirrels and rats, and they also eat chickens. These juveniles are too small, and do not yet have the skills, to take down larger prey, but they will be able to eventually. This morning, on the pine, we watched them trying to figure out squirrels. It was so interesting.

I have yet to discover why the juveniles are calling to each other as they do in the video. You’d think they’d want to be silent while hunting, which is how the adults do it. My best guess is that they are ‘keeping in touch’ with each other, trying to stay together as a group as they are learning and growing.

I hope you enjoy these sights as much as we do!


Tags wildlife, IPM, birds
2 Comments

Why are so many flowers yellow?

July 10, 2019 Elizabeth Boegel
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I’ve been out in the garden this morning, picking some almost-ripe tomatoes and bringing them in to their usual place on the piano, to ripen. As I was doing this, I realized that an awful lot of flowers are yellow. This intrigued me and I started to wonder why that is.

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We live in a time of miracle and wonder, as Tom likes to say. Remember the days when we had to go to the library to find stuff like this out? Or to the World Book Encyclopedia? We had a shelf of those that my parents bought in 1964. As a child, whenever I was bored, I would go look through them. Oh gosh, remember boredom? Does that exist anymore?

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Heavens, before I croak out something like “well, sonny, back in my day,” let’s move on, shall we? What I meant to say was that you can go to Google Scholar and type in ‘why are so many flowers yellow?’ or ‘color in flowers’ and get to read all kinds of interesting scientific papers, most of which don’t really answer the question, only pose more questions, but that is why we are never bored anymore, right? All hail the Google rabbit hole.

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ANYWAY. It’s actually hard to find the percentage of yellow flowers in plants. I did see that early spring plants are often yellow, which is a way to signal early food for pollinators. Wait, let me back up. Why would flowers have color to begin with?

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Fossils suggest that early flowers didn’t have much pigment, but rather were a dull yellow or pale green before they evolved over 100 million years ago to produce colors. It is assumed that they evolved that way to attract pollinators. Apparently many plants have evolved colors that match the specific visual systems of different insects or birds.

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You might remember that bees (and many other pollinators) have compound eyes. Our own eyes can only detect three colors - red, blue, and green. Bees cannot see red, but they do see blue and green, and also UV light - that means they can see colors we cannot see. Many flowers have ultraviolet nectar guides, a sort of pattern that we cannot see, that are like runways lighting the way down to the inside of a flower.

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Bees have awful long-distance sight, so they use scent rather than sight to find nectar, but those compound eyes provide amazing up-close vision, allowing them to see these specific colors and patterns once the smell has lured them to the flower.

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Color we see in flowers is the result of reflected light from various plant pigments. These pigments can be anthocyanins, compounds that make autumn leaves red, or blueberries blue. Flavonol pigments make yellow and chlorophyll pigments make green. There are flavanoid pigments that are colorless to us, but also absorb UV light and make colors available to bees and other pollinators.

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Therefore, a bee balm that appears red to us might appear white to an insect. Yellow and white flowers (to us) may appear blue to insects. In the course of my research, I also learned about flowers such as borage or fleabane, which turn different colors over a season (like from pink to blue), are doing so to signal to pollinators which flowers are new and have a lot of nectar, and which are too old to produce (thank you to the University of Vermont for much of this post’s information!).

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Native bees have evolved to drink from the blossoms of the plants that evolved with them, which is why it’s a good idea to have a percentage of your plants as natives. But they will readily drink from exotic species, and honeybees will forage on almost anything - it is a generalist species. However, there is evidence that bees prefer (what appears to us to be) blue and white flowers. Birds tend to prefer (what appears to us to be) red flowers. Have you ever noticed (I have!) that many red flowers seem to have yellow centers? Could that be those UV light patterns directing bees to the flower, even though it is red?

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Evolution is crazy, yo.

I couldn’t find any solid information about yellow flowers in particular and why it seems that nature makes so many flowers yellow (it could just be a coincidence that I’m seeing so much yellow this time of year). But I’ll leave you with this paragraph of an abstract which I found, entitled ‘Pollinator Preferences for yellow, orange, and red flowers of Mimulus verbanaceus and M. cardinalis’ which are both monkey flowers. It is authored by Paul K. Vickery, Jr of the University of Utah.

“Red, orange, and yellow morphs of Mimulus verbenaceus and M. cardinalis were field tested for pollinator preferences. The species are closely similar except that M. verbenaceus flowers have partially reflexed corolla lobes, whereas M. cardinalis flowers have fully reflexed corolla lobes. On the basis of over 6000 bumblebee and hummingbird visits, highly significant (p < .001) patterns emerged. Yellow, which is the mutant color morph in both species and is determined by a single pair of genes, was strongly preferred by bumblebees and strongly eskewed by hummingbirds in both species. Orange and, to a lesser extent, red were strongly preferred by hummingbirds but eskewed by bumblebees in both species. Thus, strong, but partial, reproductive isolation was observed between the yellow mutants and the orange- to red-flowered populations from which they were derived. Color—yellow versus orange and red—appeared more important than shape—partially reflexed versus fully reflexed corolla lobes—in determining the preferences of the guild of pollinators in this particular test environment for Mimulus verbenaceus and M. cardinalis."

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So it would seem that native bees prefer yellow, at least on those particular flowers. So interesting!

Other news:

*Tom and I watched three juvenile Cooper’s Hawks fledge over last weekend. They hung about in our yard and on the nearby power lines, together in a group, for quite a while. It was an amazing thing to see.

*Highwire coffee, a local roaster and the place I go to collect coffee chaff for chicken coop and garden purposes, has just been awarded a seal by the Rodale Institute for their organic ‘Conscientious Objector’ line of beans. We think Highwire makes truly delicious coffee and we are happy they are being recognized for the work they do with organic farmers. Their coffee bags are also compostable which is a huge bonus.

*Just another urging to go see The Biggest Little Farm if it is playing near you. Tom and I saw it again this past weekend, and it’s just such a great movie.

*Shoutout to the Merritt Horticulture students from LH1 who came by for a garden tour and talk last night. What an amazing group of people, with some amazing projects and ideas in the works, and many of them already ‘farming’ just like I do here. It was great to hang out with like-minded folks and plant nerds again. I’ve missed the Hort department and was super glad to be a part of it again for a night!

*Did you know I put ‘tags’ at the bottom of each post? This is so if there is a subject that interests you, such as pollinators, you can click on that tag and see everything I’ve ever written about pollinators. It’s not a fail-safe program; the other day I tried to find Tom’s instructions on how to build our garden trellises, and I’m still looking (you should be able to find it under the ‘projects’ tag, but clearly I didn’t tag it that way). You can also go to the Archives and search a word or a term, like ‘cooking,’ and find all the recipes I’ve talked about.

*The harvest has begun. Cucumbers, beans, tomatoes, and some hot peppers are starting to come ripe. This caused me to see that I was not prepared to start preserving the harvest. Here is your reminder to make sure that you have plenty of mason jars, lids, rings on hand; labels, pickling salt, pectin, etc. Here we go!!!










Tags flower garden, pollinators, insects, learning
5 Comments
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