Pea Planting Day is a special anniversary for us.
February 22 is listed on my planting calendar as the first day to plant peas in the Willamette Valley; it also happens that this is the day W and I got engaged to each other, 45 years ago!
Peas are traditionally the first vegetable sown outside in the spring because they will germinate and grow in very cool soil. We plant peas today to ceremonially kick off the start of the planting season, and also to remind ourselves of the beginnings of our relationship; the day we decided to be together forever.
Agenda Today:
1. Prepare to plant
2. Pea planting ceremony
3. Permaculture pea tips
1. Prepare to plant:
Since I can't predict the weather, I always turn the pea bed on a clear day some time in advance of today, to be ready. As I turn the soil in the pea bed, I remember that plowing is a sacred act of connection to the Earth Spirit, and to my farmer ancestors back in time.
2. Pea Planting Ceremony:
1. Prepare to plant
2. Pea planting ceremony
3. Permaculture pea tips
1. Prepare to plant:
I built a new box for the peas this year, and the ducks are helping me to turn the soil. |
2. Pea Planting Ceremony:
Planting is such a basic act of life, and we will plant maybe a hundred seeds this year. Today we plant peas with attention, and we plant together. We plant peas as an offering to the earth, and an offering to our relationship.
We also drink a little wine, and spill some on the ground, to bless the soil.
We also drink a little wine, and spill some on the ground, to bless the soil.
3. Permaculture pea tips:
These tips help to make pea growing more efficient and use the whole plant:
- Staggered planting: I'll sow peas every 3 weeks, so I get a harvest over a longer period (starting now and ending mid-April).
- When harvest starts, I'll pick every other day and freeze any I don't eat: Peas are easy; just bag them and put them in the freezer as soon after picking as possible. There is no need to blanch.
- Succession planting: When the first plants begin to slow down, I will snip them at the base (leaving the nitrogen in the ground) and slip in a spinach plant or two.
- Mulch: I don't like to put pea vines into the compost because they are stringy, so I chop them up with a lopper and spread them around as mulch.
- Save seeds: And finally, I will save a few pea pods that have started to turn brown and just leave the seeds in the pods until fall planting time - early August.
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