Size Matters

It is fall, and there are a lot of things to put into the compost bin.  At my school garden a hard frost hit two nights ago, and while it made parsley leaves stand out in exquisite relief…       it also turned the dahlias to mush (but they were oh, so beautiful in […]

September Storm Slaps Summer Silly

Well, now we don’t have to worry about how we’re going to root prune this thing next spring! Though we’d probably all like to think of ourselves as record breakers, there’s little comfort in breaking weather records.  Portland put one into the books this month as we closed September off with over 6 inches of […]

Cautiously Ecstatic

Way back when at the beginning of the year, I wrote a post about pre-nuclear potatoes, the latest thing in spuds.  These things, at least by name alone, seemed potent, exotic, perhaps even dangerous.  I was hooked, if not only by the name then by the promise of huge, mutant-like yields (without radioactive exposure!).  I got […]

We Like Our Cilantro Four Ways!

It’s that wild and whacky time of the year in the garden when certain characters, like the cilantro I’m profiling here, are not just doing double duty, not just a triumvirate of power in the garden, but a veritable quadrilateral of usefulness to us on the rooftop and down below in the kitchen.First let’s start […]

Preparing for a King and a Kingdom with Straw

Many of you may be thinking that I’ve gone bonkers and am having Baby-Jesus-in-the-manger hallucinations in the mid-summer’s heat.  No such thing.  Today we hauled up ten bales of straw to the rooftop to prepare for the Rot’s new regal inhabitant Stropharia rugosoannulata, the King Stropharia mushroom.  Straw bales await their ascent through the […]

Katy Did Visit…And Perhaps She’ll Stay

  Last week marked the second time this season I’ve spotted a katydid up on the rooftop, though never before in the 7 years of the Noble Rot rooftop garden’s lifespan.  I always love to log a new creature in any of the gardens where I work because to me it’s an encouraging sign of greater ecological complexity.  […]