December 2025
Another year has almost passed here on our small homestead. It has been a year of successes and failures, surprises, and lots of learning. That’s how it will always be, since I love experimenting and pushing the limits of what and how much we can grow. I absolutely hate it when someone tells me what I can’t do—it usually makes me want to prove them wrong. We’re in grow zone 10b, so we’re able to grow food in our gardens all year round.
We didn’t reach the metric ton we achieved last year, but I’m okay with that, and I know why. We grew over 1,600 pounds and raised more meat than ever before, so we’re still in good shape.
Here are the two main reasons we didn’t hit our goal:
1. Rats ate all my corn. I had two 4’ x 8’ beds filled with beautiful corn until the rats found them. Next time, I’ll have to put a cage over them or maybe rub red pepper flakes on the ears.
2. I forgot to add potassium phosphate to my sweet potato beds, and then the irrigation broke. When I harvested the first bed, we only got 16 pounds. Last year, I got 200 pounds from that same bed. I decided to leave the second bed for another year.
Here are some highlights of the year:
1. We built a strong trellis for black pepper, long pepper, Yerba Mate, and tea (Camellia sinensis). They’re all thriving. The tea plant had lots of flowers this year. I also added mountain tea, Florida tea, purple basil, and bergamot to my collection of plants and herbs for brewing. Purple basil tea is a new favorite.
2. We added three new raised beds and placed them in the forest garden. The beds are for strawberries and cassava, with some onions thrown in. We planted 150 new strawberry plants. The strawberries are around the edges of the beds so the berries can hang over the sides, away from slugs and bugs. The cassava is in the middle, so they can provide shade during the hot season and are kept away from gophers and rats. The onions will also help repel wildlife. We have another 25 alpine strawberry plants coming, which will go into my wishing well planter. We now have seven different varieties of strawberries that ripen at different times of the year. We should end up with fresh strawberries 8 to 10 months of the year.
3. We also added a Fuerte avocado tree to complement our Hass avocado. Once it starts producing, we’ll have avocados all year round.
4. Since we have a few months without homegrown fruit, we planted two sapote trees to fill the gap. Sapote is a favorite for us all. Now we wait and see if they produce. I forgot to check whether the trees are male or females, or have been grafted to have both. Once I know, I may have to do some grafting or buy another tree.
5. I had the largest turmeric and ginger harvest yet.
6. We got plums for the first time.
7. My coffee plants are thriving, so I’m hoping for berries next year.
8. I had 40 people show up for tours this year and have been asked to teach the community how to preserve food. This will be possible now that Peter gave me the outdoor stove I’ve been pining for over the years. Now I can do my canning outside, away from a hot kitchen.
9. I finally figured out the best hibiscus for tea. I grew Florida cranberry (roselle) hibiscus and will grow more of it next year.
10. The easiest and best plant for chicken feed turned out to be pigeon peas. I had two plants this year and have harvested 20 pounds of peas so far, with lots more to come. As a bonus, the hummingbirds love them—there’s always a flock feeding from the flowers. I’m definitely planting more in spring, and I hope they behave as perennials here. Livestock feeds have gotten very expensive.
11. Because I found a bird’s nest with eggs in my collards this year, I decided not to harvest until it was empty. This resulted in them going to seed. I now have collard greens growing all over the backyard, in and between the beds. Free food for our chickens, ducks, and rabbits! I’m planning to start growing duckweed for the ducks, as they are picky eaters.
12. We got grasshoppers this year, which is a sign that the garden is very healthy with plants having high Brix levels. This is good news, but I’m not happy that they ate most of my parsley and now have devoured all the red cabbage seedlings I just transplanted. Catching them and feeding them to the chickens, will give both me and the chickens some exercise LOL.
As you can see, there are ups and downs, but that’s life. Nothing will ever be perfect, and that’s okay. It’s a balance, and something we can learn from. Two years ago, I was sure the gardens were done and that I’d only need to do maintenance. Well, I was wrong. A gardener’s job is never done. There will always be new challenges, things that don’t work out, or that Mother Nature disrupts. As the years pass, the trees and shrubs will grow bigger, and I might not have room for my strawberry/cassava beds—but that’s okay too. I’m sure I’ll find more space somewhere. We’ve already planted our first tree among the raised beds in the backyard, and we have a volunteer peach tree we’re also moving there.
Gardening has also brought us closer to our neighbors and community. Delivery drivers ask for tours and tips, and so do the nurses when I’m in treatment (LOL). The neighborhood kids frequently stop by to pick flowers, pet the animals, or get a snack from the trees or bushes. They know I don’t mind, as long as they don’t clean me out (LOL). I’m looking for places where I can install a fairy garden and a garden gnome village. A plan for next year is also to install a bamboo fence. I found a type of clumping bamboo that produces edible shoots in spring. They will provide much-needed shade for our rabbits.
Now I’ll go and pack up some freeze-dried foods for our daughter to take with her when she returns to college in Oregon on January third. She has now learned just how expensive food is in the grocery stores.
Happy New Year to everyone here. I hope you all have a blessed year in 2026.