Wildfires are raging from Canada to Hawaii, and much of the mainland is experiencing devastating weather events.
In mid-Missouri, it's about to get too hot to garden.
So this post is from more recent tolerable, and even mild, weather.
Aphids have appeared on new rose growth, so I've been trying to stay on top of them - unfortunately with Sevin, but the last couple of years I tried to use only neem oil and soap, unsuccessfully. This past week I've been in Chicagoland, so I don't know what I'll find when I get back, but the 'Mother of Pearl' I managed to propagate from a cutting (the mother of Mother of Pearl died over winter) was looking lovely when I left.
The whole of the garden was actually doing pretty well, considering all the crazy weather this season.
But not the cucumbers. They're barely hanging on.
I harvested less than half a dozen early on, and nothing since. I planted two varieties: 'Marketmore' and 'Beit Alpha'. Neither has taken off. They should have those wagon wheels hidden by now. That's two years in a row I haven't had a decent cucumber crop, and they're usually coming out of my ears.
I have three varieties of celery that are all performing well, so they obviously have no complaints about the weather.
This is the one I bought from a nursery that was labeled only "celery". It has the largest stalks of all the varieties.
This pink celery is one I grew from seed.
Besides the pink celery, I started a dark green variety as well. I don't know which seed produced this plant that has white stalks, because I didn't have any seeds that should have produced it.
This one 'Brunswick' cabbage plant has become a giant. The others of its kind are about half this size and more what I would have expected.
'Brunswick' and 'Ruby Perfection' (bottom-most) cabbage
'Cardinal' basil is happy enough. No problems there. But I never have any problems with basil.
Small Persian melon
The wire net bags kept the raccoons from eating them, though. So next year I plan to plant my favorite sweet variety 'Savor' in a space where they can sprawl on the ground and bag them this way.
I don't know if the damaged part is where raccoons tried to get at them or if they were the result of insects in the wet soil beneath the melons. Maybe both. Whatever it was, it didn't get through the rinds.
Fun stuff:
One day I noticed a group of ammophila wasps on the tarragon. I noticed them because I was trimming the plant (that's now quite large so I cut it in roughly the shape of a pyramid with hedge clippers). I didn't want to disturb them since they're a beneficial insect, preying on moth and sawfly caterpillars, so the plant didn't get a finished haircut. I don't know which particular ammophila these are, as there are over 200 different species.
I assume this is worm casting. It looks like it, but it would have been a very, very large worm if it is.
So...until next time (and hopefully the garden hasn't burnt up by the time I get back to it)...
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