14 lUStlOUt AUGUST 3, 200/ HOLLYWOOD VINTAGE at (he Oregon Grape Nursery the V* tkt rhinestone court and costume jewelry _____________ Rfrtr . ______ Aug. 3 - Freak Mountain Ramblers (hillbilly rock) Aug. 10 - Nancy King & Mary Kadderly (jazz) Aug. 17 - Vagabond Opera (cabaret gypsy jazz.) Aug. 21 - Dirty Martini ; (American music) alternative greeting cards vintage eyewear mens vintage clothing AL1. TICKETS - $14.00 Children under 10 free Outdoor seating • Wine & Beer BBQ/Menu available at the Footpath Café Tickets available the night of the show or phone 503-656-7199, Safeway Ticket Vest centers or 1-800-992-tixx/www.ticketwest.com / t W.7 a ; j, y/ Jt' Mp '¿iti 1 J S A N I > > 1 > ( ) > . A IH'M) 65 S Dollar St. West Linn, OR 97068 503-656-7199 www.oregongrapenursery.com ^1 When It comet to neighborhood home loans, I really know my way around the block. it As your local Countrywide® home loan expert, I not only have my own considerable experience to offer, I also have the technology, resources and innovative loan products from one of America's leading lenders to make your next home-buying experience fast, convenient and virtually hassle-free Backyard Bounty Plant your winter vegetable garden now F or as much as I wish that could predict the weather, I should stick to what I know— plants. In the past month I’ve said, “Oh, it’s not going to rain anymore” anti “It’s so hot out­ side, all my plants are dying.” Here it is, cold and rainy in the middle of summer. It’s been 10 years this month since I moved to Portland, and I still don’t know what’s going on up in the sky. So now that I’ve outed myself as a trans­ plant, don’t I at least get to ask if 10 years here qualifies me as a real Oregonian? When I first moved here and started to garden, 1 stuck to what I knew from back home on the farm: vegetables. To me, vegetables seemed so sim­ ple. Every fall, 1 covered the garden with manure from the bam. When the snow melted, I tilled the whole thing up and planted seeds. Here it’s much different, anil people are so serious about vegetable gardening. 1 never imagined that you could keep your vegetable garden producing almost year-round, but I soon found out you could. I think that people really like the idea of winter vegetable gardening, but there seems to be a little contusion about how to go about it. The secret to it is that all the planting for those delicious winter harvests needs to start happening now. If you wait until October or November, it's just going to be way too late for nearly all winter vegetables. 1 was talk­ ing to my handsome and single (gentlemen) room­ mate Rodney Bender, who works for Growing Gardens, on the subject. Bender suggests getting on it. August is the time to plant your Brassicas. Brassica is the fancy name for all the vegetables we know as broccoli, cauliflower, Brussels sprouts, cabbage, collards, kale and kohlrabi. Transplanting these types of vegetables out into your garden now gives them enough time in the garden to grow and harden off before the days get shorter and colder. You need to take advantage of some of the warm days of sum­ mer with winter vegetables because their growth will quickly decrease come November. The new transplants should get a helping of fertilizer at planting time to really give them a good kick in the pants. Bender also tells me that you can sow seeds for things like lettuce and other salad greens now, too, but as he says: “It’s a bit dicey. I would stagger plant- tit * Get Dirty with Dan BY DAN YOUNG ing times so that if one batch fails, the next might take off." It is always a good idea to follow his advice here. If you have ever tried to grow lettuce through the summer, you know what I’m talking about. The hot weather can make plants become bitter and go to seed before you can even get back from the beach. The entire month of August is the time to plant seeds for some of my favorite vegetables to grow: onions. Here again I fall back to how they look and not so much how they taste, although I do love them. All types of onion and shallot seed can be sown now for a harvest in May or June of the following year. If you’re as impatient as 1 am, you can still yank an immature one to use in winter stews. Later in the fall is the time to plant the onion’s most wonderful cousin, garlic. Planting garlic cloves individually in October gives you a lovely crop sometime in mid­ summer. The harvest time is always a hit different. 1 always gauge it by the way the green stalks look. When they turn brown and look like they are dying, it's time to harvest. I know that I can only scratch at the surface of growing a winter vegetable garden in one column, but there are more than plenty of resources out there if you want to really get into it. 1 have turned to the Territorial seed company catalog many times during my years here. The book Growing Vegetables West of the Cascades by Steve Solomon is also a great place to get much more involved in eating out of your hack yard all year round. To reach DlRTY D an , who will answer any and all of your gardening questions, simply e-mail dirtydthegardener@yahoo. com. No matter what your financial situation or home loan needs, call me today and let me open the door to your dream house. No one can do what Countrywide can. sm |F' Nathan Laurence Home Loan Consultant Countrywide * aj HOME LOANS Nathan_Laurence@countrywide com Office (503) 624-4701 Cell: (503) 593-8870 Fax: (503) 670-0393 Lake Oswego Office 6000 SW Meadows Road * 100 Lake Oswego. OR 97035 Countrywide Financial Corporation is America’s St homo loan lender* and a member ol the prestigious Stondard ft Peer's 500 and Fortuno 500 • Source As ranked for 2005 by Inside Mortgage Finance (Jan 27. 2006), Copyright 2006 (£} Equal Housing Lender © 2006 Countrywide Home Loans. Inc 4500 Park Granada. Calabasas. CA 91302 Trade/servicemarks are the property of Countrywide Financial Corporation and/or its subsidiaries Some products may not be available in Washington and Oregon For Washington and Oregon residents and properties only This is not a commitment to lend Restrictions apply All rights reserved 61035 August is the time to plant Brassicas.