AGRICULTURE REPORT
What is an “Agriculture Report”? Well I was inspired by @quiteayarnblog‘s ongoing series of posts titled “Agriculture Report” (and this title always cracks me up) that are actually updates of what is going on in her garden. I just had to adopt this same title for updates on what is going on in my garden/my “garden report“…
I figured I would get one more “Agriculture Report” in for the year now that the growing season in Colorado’s Front Range where I live. I think this is the only update I am providing since my July 19, 2024 post Agriculture Report: Plantings Gone Wild .
As I mentioned in the July post, the free seeds I got from one of my local libraries really took off! Here is what the plants looked like in the raised bed John built at the end of September:
I’d routinely been getting tomatoes from the upstairs porch tomato plants and I started getting tomatoes AND our first cucumbers from the seed planted crops in the raised bed!

John made a Cucumber Salad with our first cucumbers (which are the first cucumbers I’ve ever grown!):

We recently returned from a trip to the Oregon Coast and the weather at home had changed radically (getting colder and colder at night) and there is rumor of a big freeze and possibly snowstorm at lower elevations (we live at 6000 ft above sea level). It has already snowed at the higher elevations (we have a lot of 14,000+ ft above sea level mountain regions in Colorado). So it was time to shut down the garden for the season. Plus it was time to “blowout” our sprinkler system/winterize it, so the plants wouldn’t be getting any more irrigation and where going to die out.
We harvested a bunch of tomatoes, cucumbers and zucchini (but only a little as the rest did not ripen they were planted too late) from the raised bed:

John made pickles with the cucumbers and so far they taste delicious (they are still aging in their “pickling”):

In addition to the cucumbers from our raised bed, John used a hot pepper (not sure what I planted) and fresh thyme from our garden.
Besides vegetables, we had some luck with free flower seeds we got from the library. It took awhile but the Cosmos flower seeds I planted really took off:
We plan to put in a couple more raised beds next season, and I will be more organized in my free seed plantings (I hope the library hands out free seeds again next year). I did overcrowd the one raised bed, and the carrots, onions and spinach I planted from the free seeds did not grow.
Oh and would you like to see some photos of real harvests? A couple weeks ago we went to the Sunday Farmers’ Market in Parker and the fruits and vegetables were bountiful!
They have one stand at the Farmers’ Market that allows you to fill a large bag for $15 with whatever they have at their stand (and they have a lot of choices). They are very liberal on how the interpret “fill a bag” and they let me balance a very large head of cauliflower at the very top of the bag! They were also giving out free acorn squashes with purchase (I made a nice soup from mine) – I think they had more squash than they knew what to do with.
CONCERT
October 12 we went to see an awesome outdoor concert by our favorite Icelandic band, Kaleo.
We did see them at Red Rocks Amphitheatre this summer, and it was wonderful to get to see them again but at a smaller venue – Breckenridge Brewery’s Littleton Colorado Campus’ Farmhouse Concert Venue.
Here is a little clip from the concert I took:
And here is the full performance of this song that made John fall in love with the band as much I did when I first heard them around 2016:
But our favorite of their songs is not sung in English, it is sung in their native Icelandic language – Vor í Vaglaskógi – and based on Icelandic folklore:
Hope you enjoyed the music! The lead singer, JJ Julius Son (Jökull Júlíusson) has quite the voice/vocal range, and we love the musicianship of the band.







Colorado’s bounty is fantastic! Great work on your garden and, of course, the local library for such a neat seed exchange!
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I had never heard the band, but I like their sound! Thanks for the links! And great Agricultural reporting! I am at the end of bean season here, and our garden is subsiding into mud and mildew!
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Thanks for stopping by and I do love their music. Oh no mud and mildew! Well at least you had a nice harvest 🙂
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There might be hope for the carrots and spinach. I have had them start sprouting from seed a year later after I had completely forgotten them 🙂
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Oh! Thanks for that information – perhaps they will surprise me next season 🙂
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You certainly made the most of your garden space! Now you made me want squash soup…
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Thanks so much, we hope to expand it a bit next year 🙂
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What a great growing season you two had. It’s unreal how much produce you can from raised beds and pots. I wish we had a farmers market like that. John’s pickles look delicious!
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Thank you, I was pretty pleased especially since I am still learning how to garden in Colorado. The pickles are. yummy and I appreciate having a nice farmers market nearby 🙂
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You had quite a year agriculturally! You had some great tomatoes and cucumbers from your raised beds! Hope the pickles are delicious 🙂 What a great band!
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Thanks so much! It was my best ever in Colorado so far. I am looking forward to stretching myself next year. I even have a book I might read on Colorado gardening and perhaps learn what to really do – ha! Yes the pickles are tasty. Glad you enjoyed the band 🙂
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Your garden produce is mouth watering, and the cosmos flowers so bright and cheerful. A fine ending to your summer
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Thank you and we are pretty pleased with it 🙂
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Wow, I love cosmos. Yours did very well from seed. I’m impressed that John Pickled some of your harvest. We are going to also add to our raised beds. We would like them higher so we don’t have to bend over so far a d there will be lots more soil, better for the plants. I will have to check out the Icelandic music. The show sounded amazing. 😊
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The cosmos took quite a while to bloom – I thought we were just going to have the foliage and no blooms! Yes for our next set of raised beds John is going to build them higher!
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Growing a garden must be very satisfying. Too bad the winter in Colorado is so cold, I think here in Sacramento it’s always possible to grow “something” although most people stop for the winter. I had not heard about your Icelandic band.
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I first experimented with gardening in Central Oregon which is “high desert” and a little challenging to grow veggies. I should have started when I lived in the Seattle area because you could just throw something at the ground and it would grow – it was so fertile there in that rainforest town! Thanks for stopping by 🙂
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