Born and raised on a South Kaipara farm, Keren Mackay has now moved from being a Professional Countrywoman on a 10 acre block to a slightly bigger block near the town of Palmerston in Otago – where countrywomen tend to live on 10,000 acre blocks rather than 10! Apart from working part time for Heritage New Zealand at Totara Estate near Oamaru, Keren has launched a new venture called The Professional Countrywoman Network. To find out more go to http://professionalcountrywoman.com
Vintage Style Garden Design Wall Calendar
Vintage Style Kitchen Garden Wall Calendar
This vintage style Kitchen Garden wall poster will not only look gorgeous on your wall but is a very practical guide to getting started in your vegetable garden. Don’t know what to plant where and when? Check the plan for the current year and follow the guidelines for the current seasons.
Shows a 4 year crop rotation cycle to encourage healthy gardens and long term sustainable gardening for us and the earth. A beautiful and useful gift for gardeners everywhere whether you are experienced or a beginner
Special online offer. Regular price is $16.10 + p&p per poster but if you buy online it is 2 for $19.90 + P&P of $6.75. Buy one for yourself and one to give away to a young gardener! You can either email me with your order on keren@professionalcountrywoman.com
Sunday, 7 September 2014
September in the Family Vegetable Garden
Monday, 11 August 2014
Garden Notes for the Family Vegetable Garden - AUGUST
Tuesday, 29 July 2014
Chitting Potatoes
Its a good idea to purchase your seed from the store as they are guaranteed disease free but plenty of people choose clean disease free seed from their own crop. This is how old varieties have survived over the years. Put the seed potatoes into egg trays with the eyes looking up and then pop in a warm dry light place (but not direct sunlight)for them to start sprouting. I also use wooden trays lined with straw for bigger crops. If lots of 'eyes' have sprouted rub some off leaving 2-3 strong ones. Get them in the ground before they get too lanky though.
In the meantime you can also get a head start on the season by warming up the ground where your plants are going to go. Lay down black polythene, frost cloth, a cloche, an old window - anything that is going to warm up the soil. If you have a plastic or glasshouse then you can get them in the ground sooner as well - but I will be waiting for a few weeks yet.
Farewell to a Gardening Aunty.

(The photo shows her reading us a funny story and then having a laugh! Go Aunty!)
Saturday, 7 June 2014
June in the Family Vegetable Garden
After a rather mild wet autumn, you may have noticed that winter has started to show up over much of the country! Days are shorter and the winter solstice is coming up on the 21st of June which is of course the traditional garlic planting day. From now on we will be thinking ahead and preparing the beds for the new season when we rotate around to Year 2. Avoid digging cold wet soils if possible. Your raised border beds will be warmer and less sodden so get a few plants into them for early spring eating. Check out the pre-season preparation on your wall chart to know the conditions your crops will be happy with.
This is the bed we have had our legumes and sweetcorn in this year but will be planting brassicas and leafy green veges (Group2) next. They will appreciate the nitrogen fixed by the beans and peas. There will be a bit of a cross-over if you have sown broad beans for eating in autumn – leave those of course for spring eating. If you sowed broad beans as a green crop then dig them in now. All green crops can be chopped up at about 15cms height and dug into the top layer of your soil. Add lime, manure, blood and bone and leave for a month or so and then you can start planting a few brassicas for spring. If your Bed1 border bed is raised then this should be warmer and well drained and you can get a head start on the season. Pop a few brassica plants in or even some of the winter type lettuces that prefer the cooler weather.
Bed 2, the top right hand bed, will be the new home for the beans and peas of Group 1. At the moment it is the home for your Year 1 winter root crops, and robust soup and stew plants such as celery and leeks. Keep weed free and liquid feed your growing plants. Celery is best home grown if you are a juicer. As a commercial crop it is one of the plants most sprayed and you really want to avoid this in the concentrated from of vegetable juice. For your root crops, lift the last of your beetroot as it won’t like the frost. Store beetroot and carrots in a clamp or in sacks in your cool dry shed. Parsnips and Swedes are nicer to eat if frosted so you can use your ground like a larder – only harvest when you need to. As you harvest root crops prepare the ground for the legumes. If warm enough, try a green crop – maybe oats to add carbon. Otherwise dig in plenty of manure, wood ash, blood and bone and lime. Leave to weather until spring. If you do have a bit of space free, sow a row of broad beans.
Bed 3 is the bottom right hand one in which all the heat loving plants such as tomatoes, cucumbers, pumpkins etc have been growing. It should be empty by now with the frost dealing to any plants still in – pumpkins will sweeten with a bit of frost so don’t worry too much about leaving them out for a bit. Harvest them and store in a cool dry place but keep checking on them for signs of rot. Group 4 is a bit of a mixed bag in terms of cultivation but they pretty much all don’t like fresh manure or too much nitrogen -Which is why they are last on the crop rotation cycle. Your tap rooted veges such as parsnips, carrots etc like really friable well cultivated soil –otherwise they won’t grow straight. So plan where they are to go and dig over well. Potash and potassium is what you are looking for so wood ash, a bit of blood and bone and lime can all go in. If you plant a green crop go for buckwheat, oats or barley which will break up the soil and add carbon. Seaweed will be a great for where you want to plant potatoes or beetroot.
The star of the month will be garlic and shallots. As they will be in the ground for the next 6 months, plant them in the Border Bed 3 where you can keep an eye on them. Prepare the soil as in last month’s blog and plant anytime from now on. They will require plenty of manure as opposed to some of the root crops. Try some onions at the same time.
Bed 4 (the bottom right hand bed) will still have you winter brassicas in and as it will be some time before you need to think about rotating to the heat loving crops for Group 3, then just care for the plants you have now. Keep up the liquid feed to slowly growing brassicas and harvest everything when ready. Welcome winter salads.
Weed, mulch and feed. Asparagus plants may start to show up in the shops this month. It may be a bit early to put them in but they will survive if you heel them into some damp sawdust and wait for the soil to warm up in Spring. Asparagus will love a seaweed mulch. Lime and blood and bone will be good. Rhubarb will be dying down now but love good manure so if you haven’t done so already, give the plants a good weed and then mulch with a good manure and straw based mulch. You can pot up new strawberry plants from the runners or last season’s plants. Weed and feed last years plants and you should get another crop this year.
Saturday, 17 May 2014
Getting ready for Garlic and Kay Baxter
At the moment I still have sweet pea plants looking very lush and healthy on the fence. These are ones that flowered late summer and into autumn but I am sure they should be well dried off by now. Just watching them to see what is going to happen but then they will be a really useful addition to the compost.
Tuesday, 13 May 2014
Preserving Black Boy Peaches
2. It is freestone – the stones come away from the fruit
3. You don’t need to peel it so much less fuss than some other peaches.
4. It tastes really good – enough tartness to give it a black doris plum flavour.
5. Looks gorgeous in the bottle.
6. The tree itself will grow true from seed here in NZ.
7. It doesn’t mind a cooler climate.
8. The tree is healthy and vigorous and doesn’t seem to be bothered too much with disease.
There are a number of methods of preserving fruit and any number of books out there so choose your favourite. I use the Open pan overflow method from the good old Edmonds Cookbook. (I still have my sauce and chocolate cake encrusted copy from the 80s.)
Sterilise your equipment.
Put your clean washed preserving jars into the oven and turn up to 110 Celsius. When the light goes out and the temperature is reached turn the oven off and leave the jars in the oven. Put the seals and rings into a covered saucepan on an element and bring to boil to ensure they are sterilized. You can rinse out a clean teatowel in boiling water too to wipe around the lids of jars.
Prepare the bench.
Cover the bench beside the stove with newspaper and put a couple of wooden boards out ready for the hot jars. I use a big old enamel pie dish to catch the overflow of fruit.
Cooking the fruit.

Using your biggest preserving pan, make up a syrup. You can choose what strength of syrup to use and I tend to make up a medium one which is 1 cup sugar to 2 cups water. A heavy syrup is 1:1cup and a light is 1:3. Don’t be afraid of sugar in this instance – it is a preserver. I am more wary of the false food modified corn syrup-type sugars you find in most commercial products than worry about proper cane based sugar used to preserve my own home grown fruit for the family. (If you want to know more read Michael Pollan’s The Omnivore’s Dilemma – the first half on the corn industry in the USA is an eye-opener)
Fill the pan just over half full with the water and sugar and bring to the boil so the sugar dissolves.
Wash the fruit and cut in half with a good short bladed vegetable knife. The stones should come out freely. When you have enough for a pan full, tip them all very carefully in at once. You will have to bring back up to a boil and top up syrup if necessary to cover the fruit. This way they will all cook evenly. I don’t like to overcook as I don’t want my fruit to break up. It’s sort of poaching them. About 10 mins. Poke a large piece of fruit to see if tender.
Filling the jars.

Cook the next batch of fruit and repeat until all finished.
The next day check that the seals have taken, wash the jars and shelve for winter eating.