Most things look surprisingly good considering we're not getting any rain. Of course, I've been watering the garden periodically, but even the cornfields look no worse for the wear. Yet. Many of the rose blooms, however, seemed to fry on their stems, and the second flush on some of the plants are at least a third smaller than the first blooms.
And my $10 'Canada Red' rhubarb wilted and put up new leaves twice and then gave up, even though I watered well and tried to shade it a bit. I should have tried more, I guess, but each time the new leaves came up, they looked great for a day or two. I'm extremely disappointed, and not happy about the money wasted.
Ah, well. I have been able to harvest some of the dozen other green-stemmed plants, but it's been limited due to the damage they sustained when we had freezing temps in April. I read a note from a St. Louis woman visiting Chicago remarking about the wonderful weather there, saying St. Louis had "the longest winter ever followed by blazing heat." I don't know if St. Louis is getting any rain, but this past week, we seem to be in a dry corridor with rain a few miles to the south and then a few miles to the north. Maybe we'll get a turn next. I hope.
The tatsoi has been lovely, and it's had far less insect feeding injury than in past years. I decided that if I'm going to grow it, I need to find a way to cook it or use it other than as an addition to tossed salads, so my first attempt was at simply steaming it with salt as I would spinach or beet greens. It tasted like other greens that I'm not fond of, like mustard greens. I'll need to find another preparation. It's so pretty, I hate to eliminate it from the ornamental vegetable garden.
I've pulled up the peas, such as they were, and will save them to plant next spring. I have eaten very few while I working in the garden, but pretty much, this is my entire year's harvest:
How sad is that? That April freeze robbed me of my peas.
The lima beans that I later planted in the pea row seem to be coming on ok.
The cabbages are not as riddled with feeding damage this year either. I don't know if the "longest winter ever" cut back on the worm population or if I managed to get the Dipel on them at the right time this year. Or maybe both.
'Early Jersey Wakefield' cabbage beginning to form a head
Aside from a few baby leaves off the red-veined sorrel, I haven't made any culinary use of the dock and sizu plot. I keep thinking I'll boil some sizu and use the liquid to make pink rice, something I read about somewhere.
One cucumber vine has made it to the top of the trellis, and I've placed a screen across the top to hold it up as it grows across.
Those leaf spots are barely noticeable now, and they were on everything. So far, I've harvested and eaten two cucumbers, and several more are looking promising.
The 'Savor' French Charentais melon plants are filling up their cage and spilling out. I'll be lucky if I even know when there's a ripe one in the middle of the cage, let alone be able to get it out. I decided to let them run out onto the ground at one side so I might at least be able to get one or two melons!
The growth habit of the zucchini plants are better suited to caging.
I've recently harvested four baby beauties like this:
I'm still hoping this row of globe type basil plants will meet together to form a little hedge. I originally hoped the row of purple basils inside them would make a full, taller hedge behind them. Not sure that's going to happen. For one thing, I probably needed to get more water on them.
'Bull's Blood' beets
'Bull's Blood' beets
This is the first time I've planted 'Bull's Blood', and whether it's just the weather this year, or the resistance of the plants, they're virtually free of the leaf spot that all my other beets had in previous years. I'll try them again next year and see if they do as well.
The okra is coming along. The outer row of 'Jing Orange' is catching up with the inner row of 'Red Burgundy'.
The insect and disease pressure this year has been mild so far. I imagine some of that can be attributed to the freezing cold winter and first two weeks in April.
But I did find this telltale sign of insect activity on the underside of a poppy leaf:
Squash bug eggs. I squashed 'em.
Somebody else was walking around on the poppies. Can you see the walking stick in this picture?:
I happily let him (or her) continue on. I know it's not fair that I let it keep eating when I wiped out the squash bugs, but walking sticks tend to be solitary, whereas squash bugs dine in large groups and can destroy plants very quickly. They also stink and are not cute.
Speaking of poppies: Amongst the seeds of last year's 'Hungarian Blue' and 'Lauren's Grape' purple poppies, there was one white poppy - a mutation whose seeds I collected to see whether they would produce plants and, if so, what color. The first buds looked like they were going to be purple, but they aborted. And today...
I'll collect seeds of this one, too, and plant them out next year to see if they keep producing a white poppy. I assume this is a mutation and not from an actual white poppy seed, because the plants I grew two years ago were all purple poppies. I collected and planted their seeds, and from that generation, a white poppy plant appeared. I suppose it could be that a parent somewhere back in the generational lineage was white, and this is a reversion to that type. I'm not a geneticist.
Also, I have enough to try to puzzle out with those marigolds that had one yellow and one red flower to start out (yellow first to bloom). Since then, they've continued producing only the red flowers. Two of those plants, however, are producing a form of the flower that neither of the parent plants had - a single row of red petals with a yellow center. This blended type is what I would have expected if anything out of the ordinary happened due to a cross between the two types. I still can't explain the one yellow flower they started with.
Pretty, isn't it?
I'm enjoying the toothache plant. I was expecting a more pronounced or more brightly colored flower head, but the foliage is very nice. I think this makes a very attractive ground cover, and, depending upon how it looks the rest of the year, and what happens in the spring, I'll try to keep it in mind if I ever need a cover for a sunny area. In fact, I have a couple of spots with varying degrees of shade that I might try it out in. Out in?
'Grande Amore' has put out its first flush of cherry red blooms. I like the pairing with this perovskia 'Little Spire'. (Actually, the perovskia looks even prettier with 'Acropolis' rose, but 'Acropolis' isn't blooming nicely yet.)
The second flush of blooms on 'Shazam!', while still plentiful, are much paler and a good deal smaller. The yellow underside of the petals isn't even noticeable. I've not seen it do that in the four years I've had it.
Now I have to find a place to plant it this fall where it can get some protection from the howling winter winds. I just don't know where that will be! I might simply pot it up to the next size and drop the whole pot into the ground next to the south wall of the house and then bring it back out to the patio in the spring. I wonder how long I could keep doing that.
Until next time, if you're looking for me, I'll be doing a rain dance.
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