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Annabel Langbein's February Garden

I love February, with its blistering, baking heat. Finally it’s hot enough for my eggplants and chillies to ripen. Tomatoes, cucumbers and beans and other summer crops are flat out setting their seed and the harvests just pour in – it can be hard to keep up. If you can’t keep up with the tomatoes be sure to get them into jars or the freezer. As hard as it is to imagine, summer will soon be over. So, as they say, make jam while the sun shines.

In the pickling garden I planted for my Through the Seasons TV series last year, the winter soup beans and cucumbers are now fully fruited. I like making crisp gherkins and bread and butter pickles with the cucumbers. As for the beans, I leave them on the vine for another month to fully mature and dry out so they can be stored in jars for winter soups and stews. It’s so satisfying having my own supply of dried beans – next year I think I’ll try growing lentils as well.

Depending on the climate in your area of the country, late February or March is the time to start planning your next round of planting to keep you going with harvests over autumn and winter. People often forget about planting a winter garden, but it’s so pleasing to go out in the cold and pick cauliflower, leeks or overwintered beets and carrots.

Your spring and summer crops will have used up all the nutrients from the soil so to ensure your winter crops prosper give the soil a good top up feed with compost and sheep pellets before planting. You will need to wait for the soil to cool down a little before planting seeds. If it’s fiercely hot and dry your seeds won’t germinate – they need heat and moisture. An optimum soil temperature of around 18 degrees Celsius serves well to germinate most seed types.
In my Wanaka garden I plant broccoli and cabbage seeds and seedlings at this time of year (planting seedlings seeds gives you a four or five week lead on planting seeds). While it’s still hot you'll need to shade them after planting, so I usually plant them under other plants or pop them in a shady place. Make sure you plant in the cool of the evening, and use Tui Organic Seaweed Plant Tonic to prevent that transplant shock. It really does amazing things for plant roots. Be sure to water in well and every day until your seedlings are established.
It’s still too hot to plant spinach, coriander, rocket, cauliflower and Asian winter greens, such as bok choy, tatsoi and mizuna. Wait until late March plant these varieties.

And don’t forget about the bees, which can often go hungry in autumn and winter. I like to plant phacelia or tansy seeds in autumn. They germinate three or four times throughout the year, bloom for 45-60 days and continuously produce nectar throughout the day.

Planting Guide for late February/early March

  • Beetroot seedlings and seeds – harvest in April or will hold through winter
  • Broad bean seeds – harvest in spring
  • Carrot seeds – harvest throughout winter
  • Brassica seedlings – harvest in autumn
  • Fennel seed and seedlings – harvest in autumn and throughout winter
  • Lettuce seed and seedlings – harvest in autumn
  • Silverbeet seeds and seedlings – harvest in autumn and throughout winter
  • Spring onions – harvest in autumn

Although best known as a cookbook author and publisher, Annabel Langbein is also a highly experienced and knowledgeable gardener. She studied horticulture at Lincoln University and for many years has grown her family’s fresh produce in her gardens and orchards in Wanaka and Auckland. Her seasonal harvests are the inspiration for many of the inventive but easy recipes in her latest book and TV series in association with Tui.

Buttercrunch Cucumber Pickles

This is a great way to store a surplus of summer cucumbers so you can enjoy them throughout the winter. A jar makes a great gift.

Prep time: 20 mins + 12 hours standing
Cook time: 15 mins
Makes: 4 large jars

Ingredients

  • 3-4 telegraph cucumbers, very thinly sliced (about 12 cups)
  • 4 large onions, peeled and very thinly sliced
  • ½ cup salt
  • 3½ cups sugar
  • 4 cups white vinegar
  • 2 tsp turmeric
  • 1 tsp celery seed
  • 2 tbsp mustard seed
  • 4 cloves garlic, thinly sliced

Method

  1. Place sliced cucumber and onions in a large, non-corrosive bowl, sprinkle with salt and cover with cold water.
  2. Leave at least 12 hours then drain off all liquid.
  3. Place the sugar, vinegar, turmeric, celery, mustard and garlic in a large pot and bring to a boil over high heat.
  4. Add the drained cucumbers and onions. As soon as the liquid boils remove from heat and transfer to sterilised jars, leaving 1cm gap at the top.
  5. Screw down tightly with sterilised lids and store in a cool place.

Photo credit: Annabel Langbein Media

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Annabel Langbein's February Garden Comments

  • this is so yummy, thanks 9

    lesley lincoln

  • Hi, for the cucumber pickle, how long do you have to let them wait before you can start eating them? Wasn't sure if it's a right away thing or they need to pickle for awhile first. Thanks Mel

    Melanie Butzbach

  • Love to read your blog...it makes me feel warm. Here on the other side of the world we have snow banks so high you can't see over them, in fact some are as high as houses. But the seed catalogues are coming in and the anticipation of spring is pulling us through the February. keep letting us know how things are progressing the warm summer sun.

    Wendy

  • 2nd year of no potatoes or just little ones under when I dig . Planted labour weekend , do u know why please

    Raewyn Coley

  • Hi Raewyn, please see our Potato Growing Guide here: http://www.tuigarden.co.nz/howtoguide/potato-growing-guide - did you dig in compost or sheep pellets before planting, and regularly feed your potatoes during the growing season? It is also important to keep mounding your potatoes as the shoots grow. Thanks, Jenna - Tui Team

    jenna

  • Looks like psyllid fly attack. Had same problem. Uses Maverick but did not solve problem. Also same on tomatoes

    Patrick

  • Hi Patrick, try Tui Caterpillar Eliminator for Fruit & Veges, it treats potato/tomato psyllid http://www.tuigarden.co.nz/product/tui-caterpillar-eliminator-fruit-veges-shot Thanks, Tui Team

    jenna

  • Hi Melanie, you can eat them straight away :) Thanks, Jenna - Tui Team

    jenna

  • Jenna - my coriander and basil are hardly growing - we are at Burkes Pass, Sth Canterbury - my favourite herbs! Any suggestions?

    Julie

  • Hi Julie, are you growing your coriander and basil in pots or the garden? Have they been regularly watered and fed? Thanks, Jenna - Tui Team

    jenna

  • Hi, can you replace telegraph cucumbers with apple cucumbers?

    Lisa

  • hi Jenna, the coriander is in long pot, the basil in a concrete water trough. What could I feed them?

    Julie Greig

  • Hi Lisa, that sounds like a great idea. Annabel hasn't tested it with apple cucumbers but is sure it will work. Let us know how you get on! Thanks, Jenna - Tui Team

    jenna

  • Hi Julie, as well as keeping your herbs well watered, feed both your basil and coriander with Tui NovaTec Premium Fertiliser - perfect for herbs in pots and containers, see: www.tuigarden.co.nz/product/tui-novatec-premium-fertiliser They also need warmth and lots of sunshine to do well - it is getting late in the season for basil and coriander in the garden. You can also check our our herb growing guide here: www.tuigarden.co.nz/howtoguide/herb-growing-guide Thanks, Jenna

    jenna

  • Hi Julie, we are delighted to inform you that your question was chosen to feature in our newsletter (dated 27 Feb) and on our website. Please email your address details to info@tuiproducts.co.nz and we will post out your prize. Thanks, Jenna - Tui Team

    jenna

  • hi just wondering if you can do this with apple cucumbers also?

    lynette

  • Hi Lynette, we haven't tried it with apple cucumbers but can't see why not. Let us know how you get on if you give it a go. Enjoy, Tui Team.

    jenna

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