Choose The Right Tomato Varieties
Choose the right tomato variety for your garden
With more than 10, 000 known varieties, how do you choose which tomato to grow? Host Emma Biggs talks about things to consider when choosing tomato varieties for your garden.
Emma talks about:
Days to maturity (DTM)
Growth habit
Fruit Type
Flavour
Appearance
Disease resistance
Seed type
Did you know that Micro dwarf varieties are about 6-12 inches tall, while dwarf varieties stay between about 2-4 feet?
If you’re interested in reading more about things to consider when choosing a tomato variety, visit Emma’s blog post, which talks about DTM, growth habit, fruit type, flavour, appearance, disease, and seed type.
Sandy Soil and a Greenhouse on Vancouver Island
Gardening on Sand on Vancouver Island
Meet Donna Balzer, a Vancouver Island food gardener.
Donna tells us about gardening on her very sandy soil, talks about how she uses a greenhouse to harvest year-round, and shares some of her favourite crops.
As well as being an avid gardener, Donna is a horticulturist, garden journalist, and broadcaster. She co-authored No Guff Vegetable Gardening with Steven in 2011.
Donna has a passion for soil and soil biology, and loves teaching other people about it.
Get more food gardening tips from Donna on her blog and podcast, at DonnaBalzer.com.
Artistic Front-Yard Garden, Anti-Inflammatory Food, Grow Luffa
Food Garden Life is a show about pushing garden boundaries. If you’ve tuned in before, you might notice the change in the show name. With this episode we celebrate 2 years on the air. WHY THE NAME CHANGE? As we looked through past interviews, we realized that we invite mostly people who grow food and edible plants. To celebrate that focus, we’re calling the show Food Garden Life.
Artistic Front-Yard Veg + Anti-Inflammatory Food
Our first guest is garden and wellness expert Shawna Coronado from Arizona. Shawna is a garden expert and the author of 8 books. She brings together gardening and healthy eating. Shawna talks about getting community buy-in for her front-yard vegetable garden—and about making that garden a work of art.
Her most recent book, Stacked with Flavor: An Anti-Inflammatory Cookbook with Dairy-Free, Grain-Free & Low-Sugar Recipes, was inspired by her struggle with severe degenerative osteoarthritis. When Shawna found herself crippled by the condition, yet not satisfied with the idea of living the rest of her life on pain killers, she tried changing her diet as a last-ditch effort. This book shares that journey along with practical, flavourful cooking ideas. Shawna gives a practical look at how to undertake an anti-inflammatory diet.
Grow Luffa
In the second part of the show, we chat with natural beauty products expert Janice Cox about growing luffa (a.k.a. loofah). Hear about using luffa for personal care, as a natural sponge, to hold water in flower pots, for arranging flowers—and to eat! Janice talks about 3 key things to give your luffa plants: sun, support, and pollinators.
Janice found that when she gave talks about natural beauty products, she always had a lot of questions about luffa—so she wrote a book about it, called, “Beautiful Luffa: A Guide and Workbook for Growing, Using, and Enjoying Sponge Gourds.”
Luffa aegyptiaca is the type of luffa most often offered for sale at seed companies; it is quite fibrous, making it suitable for a strong scrubbing sponge (it is also known as Egyptian cucumber.) Luffa acutangula is the best bet for eating.
In Emma’s Tomato-Talk segment she chats with Hanna Jacobs from Matchbox Garden & Seed Company in southern Ontario about some of Hanna’s favourite tomatoes.
In the Biggs-on-Figs segment, Steven chats with Will Pananes from south-central Pennsylvania about his innovative use of a heat column to overwinter fig trees. Look at the 2015 blog post titled, “Making a Heat Column for In-Ground Fig Plants.” There will be more photos to come from Will in fall 2020…stay tuned to the blog!
“You have to be a little crazy!”
Will Pananes talking about finding ways to grow figs in cold climates
Heat Column to Protect Figs
An Innovative Overwintering Idea
Excerpt from The Garage Gardeners Radio Show, March 2020
In The Biggs-on-Figs segment, Steven talks with Will Pananes, a fig grower in Pennsylvania who uses heat column to protect his figs over the winter.
Garden Financial Literacy, Rooftop Edible Gardens, Tomatoes with Stories
Gardening and Financial Literacy
Our first guest is Ciara Byrne from Nevada. She tells us how the organization Green Our Planet is training a generation of student “farmpreneurs.” Students operate farmers markets at schools—and, twice a year—there is a giant market with students from many schools setting up in one location. The next market will have over 700 fifth-grade students selling fruit and veg from school gardens.
Ever thought that financial literary could be taught alongside gardening? Green Our Planet uses markets as an opportunity to teach more than gardening: they are an opportunity to discuss customer service, negotiating skills, and marketing.
Ciara is a documentary film maker who, in 2013, found herself working in Nevada. Green Our Planet was set up to use filmmaking as a crowdfunding platform for green projects. When Green our Planet successful funded a school garden project, Ciara saw the opportunity to help many more schools.
Green Our Planet has helped develop Nevada’s first STEM garden curriculum for schools (science, technology, engineering and mathematics). Green Our Planet is now growing gardeners and entrepreneurs beyond Nevada. Ciara’s work was recently honoured by the Obama foundation.
“Making school fun is critical.”
Rooftop Food Gardens
In the second half of the show, we chat with Hilary Dahl from the Seattle Urban Farm Company. She combines a background in landscape architecture and urban planning with her passion for creating edible gardens.
Hilary has recently been involved in some inspiring rooftop garden projects in the Seattle area. One of these is the Amazon campus, where a collaboration with a not-for-profit organization means that food harvested from the rooftop garden is used for culinary training for community members.
Hilary explains that the building of many new multifamily dwellings in Seattle has given her the opportunity to be involved in a number of edible rooftop garden projects. She talks about rooftop challenges, and also considerations such as weight and irrigation.
Hilary shares another interest with us: broadcasting. She hosts a fantastic podcast about edible gardening called Encylopedia Botanica.
“Every design I did had some sort of food element.”
Visit the Seattle Urban Farm Company website for more information.
Tomato Talk Segment
In the Tomato-Talk segment, Emma chats with Colette Murphy from Urban Harvest seeds about tomato varieties with a story.
Urban Farming to Build Community
Zawadi Farm
Our in-studio guest is Jessey Njau, who left a corporate job to farm his Toronto backyard. Originally from Kenya, Jessey explains that the name of his farm, Zawadi, means “gift” in Swahili.
His motivation to change careers stemmed from a desire to refocus on family and community. He talks about the relationships he has grown and the generosity he has encountered. Jessey sees food production as a powerful opportunity for social change. “The regenerative context means a lot to me,” he says.
“I love it! My blood boils if I’m not in the land”
As Jessey enters his fourth year of growing, his operation has grown to include more yards, as neighbours see what he is doing and offer him their yards.
“I’m close to having about a quarter acre collectively of backyards”
But it hasn’t all been easy. When first selling at a local market, many people said, “I can find this produce cheaper.” Not sure how to handle the price objection, Jessey remembered the advice of a friend, who told him that to succeed in business, “you need to be crazy.” He decided to be crazy—to break the rules—and sent shoppers home with free vegetables, saying, “Talk to me when you come back next time.” When those shoppers came back, they didn’t talk about price any more. “Once they tasted it, they flew,” he says.
“He was rejuvenating a city by growing food”
Jessey Njau talking about inspiration he felt after Michael Abelman’s book, Street Farm: Growing Food, Jobs, and Hope on the Urban Frontier
Tomato Talk Segment
In Emma’s Tomato-Talk segment, she describes some of her favourite tomato varieties that she has written about in her Harrowsmith Magazine blog.
”It looks like a brain…or a whole bunch of cherry tomatoes fused together.”
Broadfork Dance
Do you use the broadfork? Check out Jessey’s video below…maybe you can help with his project.