Spring & Summer Vegetable Gardening Class

Spring is coming, we promise! Be ready with East Hill Edible Gardening’s class “Spring and Summer Vegetable Gardening”. Our next offering of this class is Wednesday evening, February 27th from 6-8.

An abundance of fresh veggies grown in our garden right here in Pensacola.

In this single 2-hour class we’ll teach you how to grow an abundance of fresh spring and summer vegetables including: peppers, tomatoes, eggplants, summer squash, potatoes, green beans, okra, sweet potatoes, southern peas, lima beans, cucumbers, winter squash, sunflowers, warm weather herbs (basil, rosemary, thyme, etc.) and more! We’ll also be talking about a selection of less common vegetables like Malabar spinach, tomatillos, yard long beans, and roselle.

In addition, we’ll show you how to choose the best vegetables to grow and when to grow them so that you can continue to have fresh and healthy vegetables through even the hottest part of the year.

Register through Friday, February 22nd and get this class for only $25 – after that the class is $30. Our classes are very popular (particularly in the spring) so be sure to register early to reserve your spot.

Lessons are taught at the Vickrey Community Center which is behind the Roger Scott Tennis Center and close to Cordova Mall and the airport.

To register contact the Vickrey Center at 850-912-4056 x 1.

This class is intended for gardeners who already know the basics of gardening. If you are just starting, please check out our “Easy Weed-Free No-Till Organic Gardening” class series.

For more information about the class, contact East Hill Edible Gardening. You can reach us at Renee@EastHillEdibleGardening.com, or 292-8155.#

Tomatoes! Tomatoes! Tomatoes!

Pictured above are Speckled Roman and Tigerella tomatoes, two striped varieties available now.

East Hill Edible Gardening has the largest selection of tomato plants available in the Pensacola area. We are offering 38 varieties of tomatoes this season (see descriptions later in this post)!

Yes, it’s early for tomatoes, but the weather has been much warmer than normal and for most of us there is no threat of freezing in the next 2 weeks. In fact, it looks like great tomato-growing weather ahead which means we have more time to grow some of the bigger tomatoes. If a freeze does come, these plants can be easily covered by a cardboard box for the night. We’ve already planted more than 30 varieties in our own garden, some of which are blooming!

The following varieties are available now. We have more thorough descriptions at our booths. Lots of them are heirlooms, some are newer intriguing varieties bred for taste, most are open-pollinated, and a few are hybrids (because they offer great disease resistance):

Atkinson – good meaty tomatoes, great for our area
Aunt Ruby’s German Green (lg. green, spicy & sweet
Best Boy – flavor plus great disease resistance
Better Boy – Classic tomato flavor – good disease resistance
Big Rainbow – beautiful deep yellow with red streaks
Black Krim – Juicy, dark red-purple fruit, rich sweet flavor
Brandywine, red – classic heirloom tomato
Brandywine, yellow – yellow version of above
Celebrity – Superior all-around w/ fantastic disease resistance
Chadwick – large cherry tomato
Cherokee Purple – Cherokee heirloom – superb taste
Costoluto Genovese – Robust, tangy, “tomatoey” flavor!
Creole – Juicy with outstanding flavor – great for the South
Early Girl – early red meaty tomato with lots of flavor & aroma
Eva Purple Ball – excellent flavor- great for hot, humid areas
Gardener’s Delight- German heirloom – cherry
Glacier– performs well in cool weather
Golden Girl – disease resistance + great flavor
Homestead – Firm, tasty flesh. Wilt resistant and productive
Juliet – Crack resistant sweet cherries shaped like romas
Kellogg’s Breakfast – heirloom orange beefsteak
Large Barred Boar – 1 of my favorites – intriguing colors
Matt’s Wild Cherry – small cherry tomatoes, prolific
Mortgage Lifter – heirloom – use to pay off your mortgage!
Peron – Solid, meaty mildly acidic interior. Insect resistant
Pink Bumble Bee – stunning cherry tomato
Prudens Purple – meaty, pink heirloom, PGS’s favorite
Riesentraube – Massive yields with rich, full tomato flavor
Roma – Good, rich tomato flavor – doesn’t need staking
Rutgers – Heirloom with good yields and flavor
Speckled Roman – pretty striped roma tomato
Sub-Arctic Plenty – another that performs well in cool weather
Taxi – bright yellow and sweet, early too
Tigerella – Early, flavorful and high yielding
Yellow Pear – yellow pear-shaped cherry

Plus several more cherrry tomatoes including:
Black Cherry
Coyote
Gold Nugget

An Abundant Backyard Harvest

A wonderful backyard harvest from our garden including, yellow squash, zucchini, sage, rosemary, eggplant, Italian tromboncino squash, cucumber, bitter melon, onion, potatoes, green beans, eggs, and honey. Your backyard can produce these great foods for you!