December 26, 2021 0 comments By: m

Sixty degrees at Christmas?!?

This is the first time I've watered my Missouri garden at Christmas time.  I don't want what's still growing - which is a lot of things - to die by wilting (it was very dry all fall, and still is), because I'm afraid even the perennials won't come back if that happens.

I'm still harvesting cabbage, kale, kohlrabi, arugula, tatsoi, celery and broccoli.

The weather forecast for January looks more like normal, so I hope things can go ahead and shut down.

The maché (corn salad - Valeriana) I planted mid-July is still teeny.  Large enough to see now!  Surely it's not getting something it needs.  They wouldn't be offering seed as a food crop if it doesn't get any bigger than this.  Would they?



Happy holidays!

November 04, 2021 0 comments By: m

The last of the last

Several days of frosty nights below 30 have knocked out all the tender plants.  But some things are still producing, including cabbages, broccoli, and herbs.


broccoli and muscat grapes


And tatsoi.


Recently I planted wasabi radishes, which have sprouted, and garlic.  In plots that are now cleared of produce, I planted crimson clover for a cover crop.  If it works, I'll mow it off in early spring and let it lie on the ground to serve as a mulch that I'll just plant through and which will then break down and add nutrients to the soil.  I haven't tried that before, so I have no idea how well it will work - or if it will work at all.

Four more saffron crocus bloomed.  The flowers are about 3-4" long.


From which I harvested 12 more saffron stamens.


Even in commercial growing, they have to be harvested by hand.  You can see why saffron is expensive!

I got some nice poblano peppers and stuffed them.  Very yummy.


The maché is still unbelievably small.


The last of the roses are blooming, and the chrysanthemums are lovely.

'Our Lady of Guadalupe'

'Razzle Dazzle'

'Homecoming'

'Homecoming'

'Homecoming' and 'Cheerleader' mums,
'Night and Day' snapdragons, 'Scarlet Queen' penstemmon

Gomphrena


October 14, 2021 0 comments By: m

Mild weather mid-October

The temperature is holding in a beautiful pattern of 70s in the day and 40s at night,  tree leaves are still green, and the garden hasn't turned ugly yet.


I've harvested a couple green cabbages ('Primo Vantage') already, and the purple ones ('Omero') are getting close.

The broccoli finally has started making heads.


The fall peas did nothing after they came up and grew an inch or two.  Zip.  I don't see any dates in the Missouri planting time recommendations for fall peas, so maybe I'm just wasting time and material trying to grow them in the fall.  I have trouble in the spring keeping the deer and rabbits from eating my crops, but I'm loathe to give up.  I love fresh garden peas.  It may take a fence, and I'm not willing to put one up.

One of the free seed packets I got from Baker Creek was maché - or corn salad.  I've never planted it before, and if it grows this slowly, I won't be planting it again.  I wanted to try it, so I planted some seeds on the 29th of July.  This is how big they are now:


When I planted them, they were shaded quite a bit by plants on either side, and the weather was dry, so I thought that was holding them back.  I started watering them, and when I cleared out the basil and thinned the kale a couple weeks ago, it opened them up to more sun.   It's rained nicely a few times recently, but they just don't seem to be doing anything.

I was overloaded with the yellow pear cherry tomatoes, and so I pulled up several of the plants.  Check out the roots on these puppies:


Very healthy.  And so white!

There are still a few 'German Johnson' full-size tomatoes on the plants that I hope will ripen before frost.  If not, I'm going to try something I read recently: wrapping green tomatoes in newsprint until they ripen.  And I'll probably make some sweet corn and green tomato fritters, as well.

I picked the last of the green beans from the second planting, and the lettuce and arugula have bolted. 'Cardinal' basil is still harvestable, but the other varieties have all gone to seed.  The rhubarb never fully recovered from the spring flooding.  I hope it comes back better next spring.


The lemon grass plant - as has always been the case with lemon grass - has grown large and full.  I've made tea from the blades in the past, but this year, I think I'm going to actually harvest and freeze the stems for use in cooking.

Peppers are still going strong.  Hopefully the poblanos will get to turn red before frost, but if not, I'll go ahead and pick them green (which I've been using already) and dry them.  I've been picking the red jalapeños for several weeks and refrigerating them, so I can process them into jelly all at once.

Over in the flower beds, new this year are the football mums.  I've pinched side buds off to get the largest blooms possible, and they have not disappointed.

'Homecoming'

The little 'Profusion Apricot' zinnias (Mexican zinnia - Z. angustifolia x elegans) turned out to be a lovely surprise, and they bloomed from the first of July until just now, when I pulled out the remaining dying plants.


I've been battling the rose aphids for weeks!  Such a disappointing and frustrating deal.  I don't like to use chemicals, but for several weeks, I was spraying them with toxic Sevin, alternating with neem oil and sometimes pyrethrin.  They persisted, coming out by the scores with every bit of new growth so that they seemed to be a part of the plant.  I finally started cutting off the terminal ends, thereby destroying any blossom opportunity.  Eventually, I was both spraying and cutting off several inches of the stems.  

Maybe if I had cut them down to only a few inches early on, they would have come out better. But I had no idea it would be so hard to control the aphids. Aphids are normally pretty easy to knock out. Next year, I may have to get some systemic insecticide and keep them treated if I have as much trouble.  Sorry, bees.  So sorry.  The aphids haven't been bad in past years, so maybe (hopefully) this was just a fluke year.

A few buds have been able once again to make it to maturity.

'Neptune'

'Razzle Dazzle'

There probably won't be many posts going forward until next spring, but until next time, whenever that is, enjoy the nice autumn days.

'Cheerleader' chrysanthemum, purple verbena, and
carmine gomphrena (globe amaranth)

October 01, 2021 0 comments By: m

Fading into fall

But still beautiful.
Serena rose angelonia under a canopy of muscat grapes


lemon grass, 'Cardinal' basil and marigolds

'Cardinal' basil

mating monarchs

daisy gourds and 'Winter Luxury' pie pumpkins

I've been processing pie pumpkins by pressure cooking them for 30 minutes on a rack with a cup of water in my Instant Pot.  It works so beautifully.  The skins practically (and sometimes literally) fall off, and once I remove the seeds, an immersion blender makes puree quick, quick.


Most of it has gone in the freezer.  Some has gone into pies, and some into delicious soup.


The thai basil has flowered and is fading fast, and the arugula is pretty insect eaten, but I've still been harvesting green beans and tatsoi.


'Red Swan' bush beans and tatsoi

'Calima' and 'Red Swan' beans

Cabbages are still growing.

green - Primo Vantage; purple - 'Omero'


And the broccoli plants look good, although no sign of the heads yet.


The 'Red Russian' kale is rather out of control, but still healthy-looking.  I never did eat any.


The last of the melons and the tail end of the tomatoes have been harvested.


Late summer and fall flowers are blooming.

'Cherry Brandy' echinacea backed by salmon gomphrena (globe amaranth)


Yellow quill chrysanthemum

'Homecoming' chrysanthemum

purple verbena and pink gaura

pale purple coneflower backed by 'Apache Sunset' hyssop

'Razzle Dazzle'


Bonus:

Fasciation