June 29, 2020 0 comments By: m

The heat is on


With abundant sunshine and heat, the garden is in full swing now.

The 'Golden Muscat' grapes are looking good.  I'm excited to taste them in the fall.  This is the second year for the vines, which didn't produce anything last year.  This year they're growing so fast I've had to prune them back.


The caged melons are climbing upward now.  I'm REALLY excited for them to produce.  Hopefully, the marigolds all around them will mask the smell of the ripening fruit and interfere with raccoon feeding. 


'Red Swan' bush beans are producing abudant pods, and I've already harvested several batches.  Like red okra pods, they turn green when cooked.  They don't have any sweetness to them, though, and I doubt I'll grow them again, because they don't taste any better than grocery store beans.


'Red Swan' bush beans and 'Lincoln' peas

My idea of planting cabbages amongst the lettuce and carrots to "hide" them from cabbage pests was a total failure.  I don't know whether the decoy white cabbage moths I made did any good, because it wasn't cabbage worm that ate the plants.  I don't know what it was, but I suspect tiny grasshoppers for one.  They won't have been responsible for the holes in the middle of the leaves though, as they eat from the edges.



The cabbages I planted in the open spaces left in my tulip beds are faring much better.

'Omero' cabbage

'Primo Vantage'

'Marketmore' cucumbers are making their way up the trellis.


In fact, I found two extra early fruits that were very tasty.  One almost got too big before I found it.  I don't know why, but cucumbers for me are the hardest to harvest without overlooking some.


I want to try to pickle some this year.  Earlier attempts have been disappointing, but I found a "copycat" Vlasic dill recipe online that I want to try.  Especially since I planted some dill this year  in my cut flower plot.


Tomatoes have set lots of fruit (with the exception of my favorite variety - more on that in a bit), which is always exciting.

'Goddess Isis' cherry tomato

I'm trying two new (to me) varieties this year, because my favorite - 'Missouri Pink Love Apple' is such a sparse producer.  It's the best slicing tomato I've found for flavor, but it fruits quite sparsely, leaving nothing to can or make juice.  Also, 'Missouri Pink' is very particular about the temperature - too cold or too hot, and it won't set fruit.

I chose 'Valley Girl', a determinate variety (all ripening at essentially the same time)  for juice making and canning.  If they ripen at the same time, I can process them at one time.  They surprised me by being as smooth and pale colored as they are at this stage.

'Valley Girl'

The other new variety I chose is 'German Johnson'.  It's an indeterminate variety like 'Missouri Pink', so it should produce fruit over a longer period of time than 'Valley Girl', which is a better deal for fresh slicing. 'German Johnson' is advertised to do well in both colder and hotter temperatures.  Hopefully it will taste good, too.

It also has lots of fruit.

'German Johnson'

And this next one is the fabulous 'Missouri Pink Love Apple'.  I had to hunt just to find these couple of fruits.

'Missouri Pink Love Apple'

Red onions are sitting on top of the soil.  The whites and yellows are retaining their bulbs below the soil line.  I don't think I planted them at different depths, but it's possible, if unintentional.  At any rate, in previous years I've had trouble with onions rotting in wet soil.  Last year they were above ground in this manner as well, and they stored very well after harvesting.  So maybe having the bulb above the soil line is better in my garden.  I'll have a better understanding of that once I harvest all varieties.


The peas are spent, and the peppers I had planted amongst them and worried about getting enough sunlight seem to be doing okay.  I planted limas in place of the peas.


And they're now up and growing.


Over on the compost heap, 'Jarrahdale' pumpins (gray-skinned) and ground cherries are filling out around the Egyptian walking onions that grow wild there.


'Aunt Molly's' ground cherry

There are potatoes on the other side of the heap, most of which I harvested yesterday.  I didn't stab too many of them getting them out of the ground.

Potato flowers

Yellow and red potatoes

The perennial bed looks great this year.



And in the cut flower plot, the cactus zinnias are fantastic.


And now the bad part of late June gardening....the pests.  I've been spraying Japanese beetles for about a week now.  I failed to have a stock of Sevin - which I hate to use because of its toxicity - so I was using pyrethrin (also highly toxic to honey bees) and neem oil. Both killed the little b$%#@ds, but didn't provide any residual effect.  I was spraying twice a day.  


Yesterday I bought some Sevin, and the number of beetles was drastically reduced this morning.  In a few days I'll find out if that was just a fluke.

This is also the time of years that packs of raccoons come round to destroy anything in their path.



I trapped three and then decided to put everything out of sight overnight.  Before I did that, I put some garden cloth pins in the pots upside down so that the ends were all poking up out of the soil.


Unfortunately, that did not stop the raccoons.  So putting the potted plants out of sight at night has been all I can do if I don't want to keep trapping -- and I don't.  They also dug up every lupine seedling I transplanted into the garden.  Grrrrrrr!  Last year, I didn't have any more raccoons after the neighbors lit fireworks for several hours on the 4th.  I hope they do that again this year.

Have a great July 4th in quarantine!  Wear your mask when you go out.  I feel very luck to be far out in the country with a big garden in the time of a pandemic.  

Gold and orange cactus zinnias, 'Queen Lime' orange zinnia, verbena, 'Drumstick' allium

June 17, 2020 0 comments By: m

June garden

Early morning fog highlights the overnight work of 
spiders in the craspedia


The transplants from last month are finally settled in and growing.

Cabbage - 'Omero'

Cabbage - 'Primo Vantage'

Canteloupe - 'Escorial'

Cucumber - 'Marketmore'

Surprisingly, the lettuce has still been edible, but  the mixed red romaine and green loose head varieties from seed saved last year are now starting to bolt, so that's going to be the end of the first sowing.  

The 'Merveille des Quatre Saisons' variety is still doing fine, but I don't think it's quite as sweet as it was earlier.  This is the first time I've tried it.  It's very pretty.


The 'Red Swan' bush beans got their tops pruned off by either deer or rabbits at one end of the row, but the flowers weren't eaten, so the harvest won't be reduced.



This is the first year I've planted green beans.  Well, red in this case.  I thought they'd be prettier than green and easier to see when it comes time to pick them.  I'll find out soon how they taste.

The peas that I had such a time getting started have been quite prolific.  'Little Marvel' won't get another year because the pods are quite small, containing two or three peas each.  They taste fine, but not good enough to make it worth all that shelling.  'Lincoln', on the other hand, has a half dozen or so peas per pod and taste fine.  I'll probably plant them again.  Since I wasn't been able to get the sweetest variety - 'Improved Maestro' - this year, I'm assuming I won't be able to next year either.


The okra seems to be coming along slowly, but maybe I just don't remember from previous years.  Or maybe this variety - 'Carmine splendor' - actually is slower.  The jalapeño and basil transplants seem slow, too.  The basil transplants had really struggled through the cold, wet spring, so I expect they'll pick up now that the temps are heating up. On the other hand, this is the bed I mulched with composted tree trimmings as an experiment a couple years ago, so it's quite possible certain things don't do as well in it.  I've noticed that it doesn't get as many grass and weeds sprouting in it as the other beds do, so that's probably a clue.


Basil - 'Purple Ruffles'

Onion thinning has given me plenty of green onions.  


I decided to make a topiary piece out of the tarragon this year.  I didn't know if it would work since the stems are so limber, but it's actually done okay.  At least for this quasi-pyramidal shape.


This is what it has looked like for the past four years:


Over to the flowers....

I can't get enough of the corn poppies I decided to try this year.  This mix is called 'Pandora'.


 



Also loving these drumstick alliums.  Until they sent up the blooms, they were pretty unspectacular, and I thought I'd just tolerate them mixed in the perennial bed.  I'm really liking them now.



Let the summer bouquets begin.

'Poseidon' roses, Colorado mix yarrow

Stay safe.  Wear your masks.  Missouri's coronavirus cases are still rising.