Thursday, June 4, 2026

Cukes and Zukes

 The pickling cucumber seeds I sowed on May 20th had some poor germination.  I resowed them and they came up well.  This is the end of my old seeds and next year I will start with fresh seeds.  I am hoping for some rain on Saturday, and if we get it I will go out and transplant them so they have better transition day.


I potted up my summer squash, two varieties (Dunja and Clarimore) in each pot.  One will grow left and the other right.  I will keep these in smaller pots until I plant them out when the peas come out.  From the 4" pot they will be bumped up to gallon pots.


The Coleus that I accidentally broke off on May 20th has put out beautiful roots.  I potted it in soil today.  I will leave it under a grow light for a few days before hardening it off to be planted out.



I also filled in gaps in the sweet corn seeds.  Again - older seed.  

Wednesday, June 3, 2026

Pole Beans

 The last few years I have had a battle getting beans sprouted and growing.  Everything from the seeds disappearing completely (mice?) to the growth points above the cotyledons being chewed off before the leaves get very big.


Gardening is, in large part, an engineering challenge.  I finally decided that if the mice weren't stealing the seeds, then the little brown locusts were munching on the leaves as soon as they opened up.  So I brainstormed a better way to exclude these pests.  I threw a floating row cover over the whole thing and pinned down the edges, hoping that there were no little critters being trapped inside with my beans.


Underneath the chicken wire cloches that hold the row cover in place are rings from a croquet set to elevate the material up off of the bean sprouts.  These rings fit under the cloches just perfectly.  The cloches hold the fabric down and lengths of conduit seal the edges.


It worked pretty well.  Despite being difficult to water through, it seems to have excluded most of the pests.  I plant two thirds green Seychelles, and one third yellow Monte Gusto because the Monte Gusto out produce the Seychelles by a lot!  I plant in two stages, from the outside to the inside of the bed.  That way when the older bean stalks are done producing I can start pulling the row out from the ends towards the middle.


In about a week I will sow the middle of the row and protect that section the same way.


Friday, May 29, 2026

Gggrrrrr......

 When you look out the window in the morning and the flowers are no longer in a neat and orderly row.  


 I deal with this in one spot or another every year.
The plants should be OK, but the coons will be back for another look.


They always want to make sure.


I'm just glad they haven't done this to the main Dahlia beds (yet).  Or the combination planters.
Or the tomato plants.  I'll sprinkle some Repels-All to see if that helps, but coons will eat any nasty thing so stinky stuff isn't much of a deterrent.

Thursday, May 28, 2026

Status Report

 Yesterday I planted my single and 2025 Bee's Choice dahlia tubers.  I still have a tray of Bee's Choice from seed in 4" pots that I am planning to plant after peas like I did last year (in July)


The first planting of peas is not yet blooming.  I'm going to have to bump the Dahlias up to larger pots.


The cucumbers, summer squash and sunflowers are on the move.  My pickling cuke seeds were old.  I've reseeded what has not germinated.  I'll give that a shot before I reorder seeds.


In the beds, Cantaloupe seeds are up.


Sweet Corn seeds are starting


Tomatoes are planted and happy in their new home.


Peppers are also happy and starting to produce already.


The Sweet Potatoes are transplanted.


I am just doing one grow bag this year, to maintain my stock.


The Panola pansies are going gangbusters in the everbearing end of the Strawberry bed.  The Strawberry plants are also doing very well and the berries will start ripening soon.  Whatever weeds are still hiding in that riot are sure not bothering me.


I also have pole beans planted but since I am still trying to find a solution an ongoing pest problem with that crop, I will elaborate later when they start to come up.

Sunday, May 24, 2026

Evaluating my Tomato and Pepper Plants

 Tomorrow, Memorial Day, is going to be Tomato and Pepper planting day.  The cold frame is full and needs to be emptied.  I will start delivering plants to family and friends who are expecting them and get my own in the ground.


Remember April 26th when I transplanted tomatoes from cells to pots and found that a lot of my odd colored varieties had been smothered by my Barlow and Amish Brandywine type varieties?  Well they had 4 weeks to get it in gear and they did fine. The Dwarf Plants survived, except for the cherry variety that did not survive transplant.  I replaced that one with a purchased Sun Sugar plant.


Below I placed the pots in the same order as the photo above.  The ones that survived are healthy and a nice plantable size.  The rest are MONSTERS.  I've trimmed the lower leaves in preparation for planting them very deeply.


Most of them show heavy scarring on the stem that I believe is from fungus gnats.  I tried a gnat killer that you water into the soil, but it didn't make a dent.  I caught hundreds on yellow sticky traps.


The ornamental pepper plants are blooming and putting out peppers


I planted the Bell Peppers and Hot Peppers and protected them with frost cloth.


The containers for the ornamentals are filled, and the supports for the tomato plants are driven.  All I have to do is plant.

I put shredded bark mulch in the raspberry/blackberry bed.


When I was weeding the grapevine bed I noticed that the white grape is sending out shoots from the root level.  The first two leaf nodes on the stem still have live looking sprouts, but the main growth is lower.  Because this vine appeared to be self rooted and not grafted, root level sprouts should be fine.  But I will try to keep both levels of vine growing to be sure.  I sent an inquiry to the company to try to verify.  Maybe I should just dig around and take a better look at the roots....


My Dahlias tubers are breaking the soil.


I have been working on annual containers.  This tall white planter contains the Proven Winner's Recipe of the Year Pixie Powder.    It is purely coincidental that I chose the Recipe of the Year.  I've had my eye on this combination for a couple of years because I love flowers in the peach color palette.  It may account for the plants being more readily available though.  Usually by the time I go looking for them, they are sold out.


When I saw these peach colored Esmay Begonias at the local Amish Greenhouse, I snapped them right up.  I didn't really know what I was going to do with them, so now I wish I had grabbed a couple more, but they will fill out.  Their mature width is supposed to be 22".  I'll try to over winter these.  I'm going to use my handful of leftover Profusion Apricot Zinnia plants along the edge of the neighboring landscape bed.





Friday, May 22, 2026

Garage Sale Score

 We like to do a little garage saleing this time of year.  The other day I picked up a like new Big Lots $15 planter (price tag still on it) for 50 cents and a free aluminum scoop, but today I hit the jackpot.  We ran over to a nearby sale a few roads away and I scored two sets of brand new in the package grow through grids from Gardener's Supply.  Only, these were a few years old... pre-Tariff.  There were four, actually of the large 24" size and a full set of three the 18"so she had obviously purchased three sets and only actually used two rings.  The best part about it was the pre-Tariff thing.  They are the old, heavier gauge wire from China, not the new flimsy version from India.

New flimsy version on the Left, Old sturdier on the Right

I already had left a review on Gardener's expressing my disappointment on the flimsy thing.  These grids are an essential tool for me.  I have accumulated dozens over the years.  Not only do I use them as stem supports for my taller perennials, but I place them as a roof over Hosta plants to support the bird netting I use to keep the deer from munching on my Hosta.  They keep the netting off the leaves so the leaves don't get mooshed down and caught in the net.  It also gives me something to clip the net too..  Finding older, heavier sets was amazing!

I did get some of the 18" this spring, but decided to make do with what I had on the 24" rings because they have gotten so darn expensive.  If I ordered one set of each right now, with tax and shipping, it would have totaled $95.  Just one 24" ring alone, without tax and shipping would be $10 if you broke up the set.  And that is what I paid for the whole lot.  $10.

Stop and Smell the Roses

 This time of year, in my bustle to get annuals and vegetables in the ground, it would be easy to overlook some of the more subtle spring perennials that I have spent just as much effort on in years past. So here are a few bright spots I have captured while running around the past few days.


my "Spring Garden" with Columbine (Clementine Red)  and Wood Hyacinths

Heuchera or "Coral Bells"

Brunnera Queen of Hearts

Geum Pretticoats Peach

Viburnum shrub in front of the Porch

Storm Cloud Amsonia