L is for lettuce
We’re not having the best early summer ever. The tomato and pumpkin-family seedlings are growing really slow and even an easy crop like radishes are going to seed almost straight away. Some of the fruits are growing OK but they are far from harvesting – we haven’t even let all the bird nets down yet. We are harvesting some berries here and there, but the best by far at the moment is the lettuce.
We have quite a few lettuce types that are doing OK – they are all inter-mixed, potager style. At times we had so much that Patricia started getting inventive. This dish is called steamed lettuce. You basically steam fresh lettuce in a steamer for a minute or two, then dress it with olive oil, salt or with garlic butter. A yummy alternative.

Steamed lettuce
Although we had a bit in excess, there was never yet enough to swop or trade in any meaningful manner. In fact, our lettuce is now getting depleted so fast, we can’t keep up. Our salads are being rationed – we have serious competition for our resources! The little chooks just love it when we throw fresh lettuce into the brooder or in the area where they are getting “trained” to free-range. Forbid they should discover the lettuce patch… these guys don’t know about “fair share”; I doubt they ever will.

Lettuce chook feed – they are growing fast!
Chicks are looking good! In England, when we had our long hot spell, the lettuce just stopped growing. It would sprout, but then just sit there. Do you know why?
No idea, but our tomatoes are doing that this year – sprouting and then stagnating. I’m starting to think my seedling mix (which I learnt on a market gardening course 🙁 ) is to weak ito nutrients. I’ve just read of a guy using vermi-compost (worm castings) in his seedling mix, so I’m going to try that as soon as the worms get productive.
Super hot and dry here, tomatoes won’t set but the lettuce, silver beet and rhubarb are loving it. Go figure . Love your posts.
Thanks Yvette 🙂 Yeah we have very similar, the tomatoes are battling to make the jump from sprout to plant (if that makes sense) – they just seem to stagnate, but the lettuce and rhubarb are also flourishing. Silverbeet that came up by itself is also doing well (chick food!) so we’ve just planted out a ton of seedlings too.