Showing posts with label growing tomatoes. Show all posts
Showing posts with label growing tomatoes. Show all posts

Sunday, May 17, 2020

DIY Tomato Baskets


We've had a rocky start to this year's main summer garden due to crazy weather, but now the majority of our plants/seeds are planted ~ praise the Lord! Now it's time to get our pepper and tomato plants set up with baskets and stakes. Tomatoes and pepper plants grow best when they are staked, we like to add the cages or baskets for added security. We definitely don't want to risk losing our plants on account of storms, wind, or simply the weight of their produce.


We currently have around 100 tomatoes plants and around 30 pepper plants in the ground ~ mercy we're going to be busy this summer, lol. So all those plants needed baskets and stakes. Thankfully, we have accumulated quite a good many baskets over the years but we were definitely in need of some more. 
  

We purchased wire fencing to make some of our new baskets, but we were also gifted with some used hog wire.  Second-hand supplies are the best since they help to build the homestead on a budget. To make the baskets it's super easy. Take the fencing and create a long tube big enough to go around your plants with a little extra for plant  growth. Use wire cutters to cut the fencing and then connect the ends by using zip strips or by bending the wire around the edges to connect the two ends.


This year we splurged and purchased a few t-stakes to use to stake our plants. Any long narrow pole-like items can be used as a stake. We have used sticks, t-stakes, wooden posts, metal poles, you name it we've probably used it. Take your preferred stake and hammer it into the  ground inside of one side of the basket. Then attach the stake to the basket with either thin wire, twine, or zip strips (pretty much anything works as long as you efficiently connect the stake to the basket). To help further secure the basket, we pile some soil around the bottom of the basket on the opposite side of the stake. 


You can purchase pre-manufactured tomato baskets from the store, but they can be expensive and don't work nearly as well as the baskets made from wire fencing. We try to make the most of our money, especially on the homestead, and being able to use things over and over again is so important. We have purchased the pre-manufactured tomato baskets, but they tend to break easily. 

When it comes to the fencing we prefer the hog wire, but it's more expensive than the welded wire fencing. The only draw back on the welded wire fencing is that the holes can be a little small for putting your hand through when trying to pick the tomatoes or peppers. To circumnavigate this issues, simply cut the wire to make larger 'windows' to pick the harvest.

We've learned a lot over the past 18 years of building our little homestead, so much of it has come through trial and error. We have often searched out the wisdom from those who have walked this path before us ~ sometimes to our benefit and other times not so much. Homesteading is a very personal journey. What works for one family may not work for another. No two homesteads will ever look the same and that is absolutely okay. It's easy to get wrapped up in having a 'pretty' homestead ~ for us it's more important to keep the cost to the bare minimum and simply get the job done as efficiently as possible. These DYI tomatoes baskets may not be as attractive as the store-bought versions, but trust me when I say they are more than adequate to stake our plants for many years to come. 

With Love & Hope,
Jennifer

Wednesday, July 31, 2019

Tomatoes for Days


This year's tomato harvest has been one for the books. We've canned a variety of different tomato based items including tomato sauce, spaghetti sauce, and salsa. Even with all that we've canned, which is pushing 200 jars, we've still not met our goals for the year. Sadly, there's just only so many hours in each day and we are plum tuckered out! 


Mashing tomatoes with mama's monster masher is a prize job for many of my little ones. When I am making tomato sauce or spaghetti sauce, I do not peal my tomatoes. I simply quarter my ripe tomatoes and throw them in a large pot. As the tomatoes cook down we mash them to help speed up the process.


I use my stick blender for EVERYTHING! It is truly one of the best investments I've ever made for our homesteading and homemaking adventures. Once the tomatoes are cooked down enough (usually about an hour of cooking down and mashing) We bring out my stick blender and puree the tomatoes. All of the skins do not get pulverized, but enough of them do that it doesn't bother us. If you really wanted to, you could strain them to remove the few little peelings left behind.


When it comes to deciding what to can and when to can, I always start off with tomato sauce because I can use that in more meals than anything else. I typically fill up about 50 pint jars for pizza sauce (and no I do not can pizza sauce, it's just way to easy to whip up when needed that I spend my summer canning season devoted to other canning needs). After I have my pint jars filled then I move on to quart jars of tomato sauce. The quart jars of tomato sauce is used in soups and stews, which we eat a lot of since they can fill a large family on a strict budget! After I've got my desired amount of tomato sauce in quart jars, I move on to spaghetti sauce or salsa. That changes every year, It depends on which one we've used the most of throughout the past year.


I love my big stainless steel stock pots. They have paid for themselves over and over again. I didn't even spend a whole lot for them. The first one I found on clearance at Target many moons ago for $40, and the other one I found on Amazon for around $35. I did not invest in any high dollar stockpots because these work just as fine. 


This year we've had quite a few jars to bust throughout the canning process. Of course this is heart breaking after you've worked so hard to get the produce to that point, but it is just part of the process. I feel like we've had an abnormal amount of jars to bust because we moved the jars 4 times in 12 months (insert groan and eye roll). It seems we continue to be 'bit in the bottom' over buying that money pit of a house. But, I'm trying to stay focused on looking at the bright side and just be thankful we have the jars to can and the produce to put in them ~ BUT most importantly we no longer live in that house! 

All of these pictures were taken at different times throughout the summer gardening season. I love to watch our larder fill up and to see our hard work from beginning to end, it really helps to fuel me on to the finish line. 

As I shared in my last post, we have had to quit picking the bulk of the garden and have given so much away. I'm trying not to feel guilty over this, but it's super hard. Admitting you're NOT super woman is hard, lol. Even though we're scheduled to begin our homeschool year on August the 5th, I am hoping to get in a few more canning sessions. Lord willing I will be able to process the 30 pumpkins littering my storage room, a batch of mild salsa, a batch of tomato sauce, and a large batch of applesauce. I keep trying to remind myself that there is a light at the end of the tunnel and we CAN do this! 

I can do all things through Christ who strengthens me. 

Philippians 4:13 (NKJV)

With Love & Hope,
Jennifer