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Thursday, July 30, 2020

Yarmouth County couple in their 90s harvest joy from vegetable gardening - TheChronicleHerald.ca

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BRENTON, N.S. —

Robert Cottreau climbs on his bright red lawn tractor and sets off for the garden, a few hundred feet away.

“These are my legs now,” he says with a laugh.

And why not? At the age of 92, Robert’s earned the ride. He’s saving his energy for the 25-foot by 75-foot garden that he and his 90-year-old bride Ethel planted this spring.

Earlier this year, their daughter Becky wrestled a giant diesel tractor into submission (using chains on the tires when stuck) to plow and harrow a piece of ground for herself and her parents to grow crops in. It was the first time her mom and dad had gardened in several years. Before that they had planted vegetables annually for decades.

Ethel Cottreau picks a pail of beans from a garden in her past. - Contributed
Ethel Cottreau picks a pail of beans from a garden in her past. - Contributed

Years ago, her father used to put in a gigantic garden that fed their family and half the community.

Robert and Ethel were quite surprised at the scarcity of seeds this year when the soil was ready to plant.

“Young people grew more this year than they ever have. We couldn’t (hardly) even buy seeds,” says Robert. “Everyone’s planting this year.”

With regard to planting times, the couple agree that beans, squash and cucumbers prefer warm weather and if you plant them before June you might get a frost. Some people prefer to plant by the waxing and waning of the moon.

Robert Cottreau preparing the large garden plot he used to plant each spring. - Contributed
Robert Cottreau preparing the large garden plot he used to plant each spring. - Contributed

“A lot of it is by guess and by God,” says Ethel.

Once the potatoes, beans, peas, beet greens, onions, cucumbers and squash were planted there was another challenge – one they’d coped with many times before.

From experience, they say, when it comes to damage from deer, a fence is the best prevention.

“We planted squash because they say that deer don’t like squash. But what they do is go and take a bite out of it and if they don’t like it they’ll move onto the next and say, ‘I’ll try this one,” says Ethel.

“They don’t eat it, they ruin it,” says Robert.

This time of year the couple is starting to reap the benefits of their many hours weeding and hoeing.

“We’ve had three or four messes already of new potatoes. Oh, they’re good,” says Ethel.

With potatoes you have to pick off the potato bugs on the leaves, she advises.

“We used to have a little can of kerosene and put the bugs in that and squish the eggs between our fingers.”

The number of potatoes that Robert Cottreau has harvested over the past 92 years would surely fill a transport truck. - Carla Allen
The number of potatoes that Robert Cottreau has harvested over the past 92 years would surely fill a transport truck. - Carla Allen

“Don’t forget to hill the potatoes up with a hoe so they don’t get sunburned,” adds Robert.

When the tops of the plants die down in the fall and dry up, it’s then time to dig the rest of the potatoes.

An older country home like theirs has the perfect place for storing the potato crop: a dirt basement. 

“The old folks had dirt basements with dirt floors and then wooden bins off the floor,” says Ethel.

Parsnips don’t have to be stored inside. They can stay in the ground all winter.

“It sweetens them up,” says Ethel.

Their daughter is delighted to see them able to enjoy the pastime (and an earlier  necessity) that’s been part of their life for close to 150 years in combined time.

“It was obvious that they were missing their garden and the pandemic gave us more time to focus on tackling bigger projects at home, so it was the perfect opportunity.

“I love to see them out in the garden! It's like a bridge between our family's past and the present, with them as the common thread running through the years,” says Becky.

She adds that both her parents are thriving from all of the healthy benefits that gardening brings.

Ethel says gardening makes her feel like she’s doing something important.

“And there’s something in it for us at the end of the season,” she says.

“As long as I can do it, it’s a good thing to do. It makes you feel good,” adds Robert.

Ethel Cottreau in one of the giant gardens she and her husband Robert used to plant in Brenton. - Contributed
Ethel Cottreau in one of the giant gardens she and her husband Robert used to plant in Brenton. - Contributed

Gardening gems from Robert & Ethel

  • First thing you should do is learn what’s a weed and what’s not.
  • Don’t plant turnips before June because there’s a fly that eats holes in the leaves. If you plant them later that won’t happen.
  • Rotate where potatoes are grown from year to year. Peas and the smaller veggies will benefit from nutrients left in the ground from potatoes. Plus, if you move potato site annually you’re less likely to get potato bugs.
  • Peas and onions hate each other. Don’t plant them together.
  • Never put the garden to bed with wet feet. You don’t water at night. The best time to water is early morning.
  • Don’t water the leaves on bean plants and don’t touch the leaves when they’re wet from rain because it makes them “rusty.”



July 31, 2020 at 02:20AM
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Yarmouth County couple in their 90s harvest joy from vegetable gardening - TheChronicleHerald.ca

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