March 17, 2021 0 comments By: m

The lost post

I see I set up images for a post last August and didn't get it finished. So, out of place, here it is without a lot of explanation.

Aztec zinnias

late tomato harvest ripening under cover - 'German Johnson' variety

too-late-planted cabbages (didn't get large enough to harvest)

perennial garden in full glory

I wish I could remember what this is:


It has pretty red stems, whatever it is.  It looks like zinnia leaves, but it might be a weed!

Monarch butterfly larva

ground cherries

I planted ground cherries thinking I'd make some jam from them, but it turns out they're like tomatoes, and once you boil them down, all you're left with is gajillions of seeds.



I don't know the name of this little black bee.  We'll call her Shirley.


Top: 'Yellow Butterflies' mullein;
Bottom: 'Cardinal' basil

The perennial garden was lovely...


It was the first time I planted tall verbena (Verbena bonariensis), and I absolutely love it.  Especially interplanted with the Russian sage (Perovskia).  It's not truly a perennial in this zone, but I hope it reseeds itself.  It may not, so I'm starting more seed indoors in March in case it doesn't.

dark purple = verbena; light purple = Russian sage

The old mimosa tree at the west end of the garden lost a couple of limbs in the winter storms, and  I think you can see why...


The August garden before a rain:

October 30, 2020 0 comments By: m

It's not over 'til it's over


I had a post all ready to call an end to the garden season.  We had a week in late October that was downright frigid, with freezing nighttime temps nearly every night, and with no sun at all during the days of  maximum 50's temps. We even had snow covering the ground for two days, and I didn't go outside, much less to the garden, which I figured was already toast by then.

Much to my surprise, when the weather came back up above freezing, only some raggedy remaining basil had been damaged!  The tomatoes looked fine, the peppers looked fine!  Bizarre, and pleasing.

This was the last, I figured just before the dip, of the roses:
And, these were the vegetables I gathered that were still edible the day before the first dip below freezing:
But, take a look at the tomato plants a week later, after the freezing temps, when I went back to the garden:
And the peppers:
Unreal.

These were the tomatoes I had harvested in the couple of weeks before the dip.  They were much nicer than any I'd been getting earlier in the season, which often had large cracks and some feeding damage.  These look like I sprayed them with pesticides, which I didn't:



I had planted arugula, which I expected would be okay, and it was.  Just hardly any bigger than the week before:
The lettuce I had planted kept growing, which wasn't a surprise.
Even the little cucumber plants, which I knew at the time I planted the seeds were a long shot, didn't die.
This little Cherokee Spirit echinacea didn't even bat an eye:Unsurprising, though, are the cabbages.  They can take a good deal of cold, and they look great:


'Primo Vantage'

'Omero'

My latest attempt to get a red-stemmed rhubarb, 'Kangarhu', is in.  Fingers crossed that the stems will be red when they're harvestable next spring.


This was my immediately previous purchase, which did have red stems when I bought it last spring, and is what has happened to each and every other of the several varieties I've tried.  So disappointing.  They taste just as good as red-stemmed rhubarb, but aren't as pretty in a pie.


The roses had a bad year, but they did have one beautiful surge the first of October when it wasn't so humid.


'South Africa'

'Poseidon'

'Shazam!'

'Neptune'


Happy Halloween!  Wear your masks.  You know what I'm talking about.  The Covid-19 pandemic is about to meet the regular flu season. 

And VOTE!  

UPDATE:  Later that same day...

NOW it's over.  The temperature dipped to 29 overnight.  What a shame, after all that last week, and the hope that tomatoes would still be harvestable for a little while longer (the rest of this week is supposed to be warm and sunny with night temps in the upper 40s and low 50s).  

Alas, it's not to be.  The fruit that's there is thawed from frozen, and turned to mush.  The leaves are the same and won't recover.

The little cucumbers are dead as doornails.  Some of the peppers may yet struggle on, but it was the tomatoes I was looking forward to.

But there's yet a happy note: the saffron crocus I planted are coming up!
UPDATE:  I set up a post to be published in August with pictures, but forgot to finish it, so here it is, out of place.
September 09, 2020 0 comments By: m

Going into Autumn

'Blue Spire' perovskia in the perennial garden
backed by Black-eyed Susans (Rudbeckia hirta)

July was so hot and wet that only the most rugged plants managed to grow and produce, which excluded most vegetables.  The roses were plagued by petal blight due to the humidity, with the exception of a couple of weeks in late August.  

The garden spiders were at their peak, however.  Everywhere I turned in the wildflower garden and perennial bed there were big fat yellow and black spiders - Argiope aurantia - on big fat webs.



One vegetable that thrived throughout the whole ordeal was the okra.  This year, I planted a variety new to me - 'Carmine Splendor'.  I'll be saving seed from it to plant the next time I plant okra to see if it does as well in future years as it has done this year.  It's another red variety, which I like because of its ornamental value.  Others I planted didn't start producing pods until they were 3 feet tall or so.  This one began producing at about 2 feet and is now 5 feet tall and still very prolific.

(At least that's how I remember it.)

I love the blooms.


Nothing in the cucurbit family (melons, cucumbers) made it past the end of July.  I got two very small melons off about 18 plants!  My experiment to plant them with a perimeter of marigolds to discourage raccoons will have to be repeated next year.  The marigolds themselves did fairly well, but they, like the roses, suffered from petal blight.

Off the two vines I had growing on the compost pile, I got one pumpkin that quickly rotted.  This is what they looked like at the end of July:


It was just too wet.  I did get a few cucumbers before the vines gave up, but I had to pull them all up a good two weeks before I would have expected them to die out.  I recently planted some more seed, and they're up.  If the weather cooperates, I might get a few small ones before it gets too cold.

Tomatoes started out gangbusters (except for the favorite 'Missouri Pink Love Apple' which had the lowest production ever), but by the first week of August, they all looked to be on their way out.

late July harvest

In fact, I pulled up five of the nine plants and left the remaining four that seemed to still have a few green tomatoes on them.  They resumed growth the last week of August, and they're now starting to have some ripening tomatoes.  This week the temperature took a dive to the upper 60s and low 70s.  Hopefully we'll see more tomato ripening weather before the late October frosts that will put an end to them.

I had a new tomato pest this year: tomato fruitworm.


They eat deep holes in the tomato fruits, which makes these pests more objectionable than even the hornworms that eat the foliage.  Fortunately, they're killed by the same safe Bt pesticide, so if I would only be vigilant in spraying, I could save the frustration of finding a beautiful tomato spoiled by drilled holes.

The cabbages held their own but didn't get very big.  Every year I tell myself not to plant cabbages in the spring, but so far, I haven't remembered not to.  I promise, next year I'll only plant a fall crop.


Those ground cherries that I tried for the first time were actually tasty little things, but they didn't lend  themselves to making jam.  They were like tiny tomato sacks of oodles of seeds and hardly any pulp.  I was expecting something less tomato-like.  I don't know why.  The taste would have suited jam well, as they had a bit of a mango flavor, but the consistency did not.

'Aunt Molly's' ground cherry

I planted lima beans in place of the spring peas, and they now have some pods.


Harvest now consists of peppers, okra, small cabbage, and basil.

Ripe jalapeños destined to become jelly

The cabbage varieties were new for me - 'Primo Vantage' and 'Omero'. Both were mild and juicy.  I'll be planting them again.

'Primo Vantage' (top) and 'Omero'

'Omero'

I don't know why my red raspberries didn't produce any fruit, but I have a feeling it's because I pruned them back too hard.  I'll leave them this winter to see if they produce next year.

The 'Fall Gold' berries did produce,  however, and they were as delicious as I remembered.  These little guys taste like they've been laced with honey.

'Fall Gold' raspberry

Last year, their first, I got one or two at a time, but this year, I got small handfuls every two or three days for a while.  Of course I crammed them all in my mouth at once.  Glorious flavor.



As I said, the roses have been plagued with petal blight which spoils them for cutting and bringing in.  Their blooms have been nice and big, but the petal edges brown and rotten-looking.

That is, with the exception of a couple weeks recently when the rains held off and the sun was hot.  At that point, they went crazy with beautiful disease-free blooms.

'Poseidon' (lavender), 'South Africa' (butter yellow), and 'Shazam!' (peachy pink)

'Grande Amore', which is supposed to be a 4-5' tall bush but generally gets to nearly 7' high, made its usual spurt a little later than normal this year.  It's reaching for the stars at about 8 feet at the moment.


'Domina'

The silly cat has managed to sprint up the grapevine trellis and hide out in the top.




Stay safe.  Stay home as much as you can.  Wear your mask in public. We'll get through this Covid-19 pandemic sooner if everyone will just do their part.  I feel very fortunate to live in a space where I can garden, especially during this trying time.  

Cactus zinnias