Friday, June 11, 2021

Things that are going right and things that are going wrong - the early version

I usually wait until the end of the season before I do my "Garden of Good and Evil" recap, but since I'm retired I have time to putter almost every day and obsess over the things that are giving me trouble.  The garden is growing great.  About 95% great.  Maybe 98%

The Tater Patch is growing by leaps and bounds

But the dreaded Flea Beetles found it. 
They are getting Neem every night for a bedtime snack
 
The Sweet Alyssum ground cover in the Bush Bean Bed is Beautiful.

Except this one 

The Penelope Peas went from blooming to pods in record time

The Grow Bag potatoes are even better than the tater patch
And the flea beetles haven't found them (yet)

No matter how careful I am seeding and watering carrots I always get huge bare spots
I just keep seeding until my space is full.

The Lima Beans are taking off and beginning to bud

There are some patches where the lima cotyledons came up but the growing point seemed damaged beyond saving.  I just ignored it and finally they are sending out leaves

Sweet Corn

The Cauliflowers are straining against their insect mesh.  
They didn't really do that last year.  They need to start flowering!

I always think I will not have cucumbers.
But then I always end up with too many cucumbers.
Again - I just keep seeding until I run out of seeds
I've been killing half a dozen cucumber beetles a day.  This is the first time in several years I've had more than one.  Seriously, I usually find ONE.

The cucumber beetles are also on the Cue Ball zucchini
But the zucchini hasn't noticed

Hmm... what do do with this big extra pot?
Spend too much $$ on a big bag of soil and plant old cantaloupe seed.

The tomato plants are doing awesome and almost ready to flower

This is my herb garden.
I always have more herbs tucked here and there but here I have
rosemary, sage and red and green basil.
Also calendula, snapdragons and four dahlia plants I didn't know what to do with
because somehow I have a gazillion orange Noordwijks Glorie dahlias and I'm tired of
them but don't want to throw any out.  So I booted them out of the Dahlia bed.

Remember over the winter I did herb cuttings?
The sage was awful leggy, but the rosemary did well.
The yellow arrows point to my parent plants that I overwintered
The three red arrows show the successful rosemary babies
The blue arrow shows one that decided to die this week. 
I do have another one elsewhere I might move

Instead of keeping my few leggy sages,
I was happy to find colored sage at the nursery and bought two of each.

I have a real thing for bicolored and tricolored sage but they are super hard to find.  I found FLATS of them and snapped them up so quick.... mid- April.  The nursery staff was sure I would kill them that early because our night time temps were so low but the cold frame did the trick.  I even brought them in a few nights.  I love my sage.


The End

Wednesday, June 9, 2021

Strawberry Season


 Today was the first heavy picking of strawberries.  This is the second year for these plants and they are doing great.  I put a small bowl out on the counter so we can snack on them without forgetting the whole batch in the fridge.  My favorite use for strawberries in in a fresh garden salad.  Fortunately it also happens to be lettuce season!  Once we've eaten our fill of fresh berries I will try them in the dehydrator and store them for cereal topping.

Monday, June 7, 2021

Ninety Degrees

 The weather forecast had been calling for several days this week to be in the 90s.  The past two days the 90s had dropped to mid-80s.  Well, the forecasters forgot to copy Mother Nature and she hit us with 90 today anyway.  Its been up there for a few hours.  I chose to clean the house where it is only 78.  I think we may want to switch on the central air at this point.


When it gets this hot you want to make sure everything that needs water is well watered in the morning before the heat hits.  These tomato containers have been maintaining well.  I planted them on May 23rd (two weeks ago) and filled the water reservoirs at that point.  Since then we have had half an inch of rain (4 days ago) and I have not added any water.  I kept sticking my finger in there to check.


My husband decided I needed a moisture meter.  This thing is really slick.  The day it came I had been digging around in my soil anyway so I knew what was damp and what was dry.  I went around testing it and found it to be accurate.  It is designed to put in house plants but it works perfectly for these containers.  As you push it deeper or withdraw it the reading adjusts so you can tell just how deep your moisture actually is.

Garden Overview

The neglected peony

It is a good year for apples.  I have bagged 50 on one tree and 110 on the other
I'm out of bags!

This is what I have to do to save my ripe strawberries from the chipmunks,
I saw one of the little buggers casing the joint this morning

This Salvia was a centerpiece in our deck planters last summer

Daddy Mix Petunias

This daisy was planted in 2019
Last year it never even hinted at blooming.
This year it is going to be beautiful
This Heuchera was transplanted this spring


5 little pear-lings still on the tree

Bag potatoes

Lima Beans

Penenlope Peas

Early sweet corn. This grows visibly each day

Pole Beans and Nasturtium

Jade Bush Beans and Alyssum

Cantaloupes as an afterthought

Tater Patch Potatoes

Patio Choice cherry tomato

Dahlia Bed
This is the fourth year for these dahlia tubers
Zinnia on the edges



Saturday, June 5, 2021

OOOooo... We're Bloomin' Now!

 Today was full of surprises.  As soon as the sun began to fade a bit the Peonies just started popping right open.

Callie's Memory Itoh Peony

Like... Wow.  It's huge.

Sorbet Peonies
Caesar's Brother Siberian Iris


Viburnum

Penelope Peas

Red Cabbage

And the strawberries are coloring up.  This one was green yesterday

Tuesday, June 1, 2021

Critter Control

 When it comes to protecting your garden from wildlife, an ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure.  We live about a mile from the city limits on a half mile dead end out in the country and we have all sorts of critters.  Mainly deer, sometimes racoons, occasionally a bear.  Most recently we have acquired a Fisher.  Our friend who bow hunts here caught him on camera running through our backyard in broad daylight.  We also have fours kinds of squirrels, rabbits and chipmunks, but in recent years the red fox and now the fisher have put a dent in the rabbit and squirrel population.

Still, even if we don't have heavy pressure from a particular pest, we like to prepare for the off chance we do.  Several years of bow hunting has reduced our backyard deer count from four to eight twice a day to an occasional weekly visit.  But even a weekly visit can nip off the first bloom of a peony you have been waiting three years for.  Its better to be prepared. 


This year I did something I've been wanting to do for awhile.  I installed two game cameras that are trained on opposite corners of the garden and are active from 8:00 pm to 6:00 am.  So far we have only captured brief glimpses of racoons and an undecipherable, up close nose snuffle from either the fisher or a coon.  But that's good.  I don't want my sidewalks to continue to be a deer highway as they once were.  

We also installed something my husband has been thinking about for a few years.  Now that I am growing sweet corn every year, it is important to guard against racoons.  They did come into the garden twice last year and ate about a dozen ears of corn.  We did away with those five coons, but of course, there are always more and the only solution for racoons is electric to keep them from climbing the fence panels.


We already had the electric fencer, and power run out to the garden.  I installed a timer that has a second outlet.  On the second outlet we put a 25 watt red bulb so we can verify from the house when the fence is hot.  I don't have the fence plugged in right now, but when the sweet corn is almost ripe, the fencer will run from 8:00 pm to 6:00 am.


The trick to this electric fence is that anything climbing the panels needs to be grounded when it touches the wire.  Each of the fence panels is connected together with a "jumper" wire and the whole system is grounded by two 8 foot ground rods driven in at each end of the run.  As the fence steps down the grade, the electric wire also steps down.  There are hot wires at two heights.  We used this system when we had chickens, but we only ran one wire around the top.  My husband actually heard the racoon grab that hot wire as he was sleeping with the windows open.  That raccoon made quite a racket when it bit his widdle handses.  Which was strangely satisfying.


Not all of my garden activities are guarded by a secure fence. There are plenty of pots out in the open. Raccoons explore with their hands.  They can't resist fresh soil. They think there must be something good you've buried there and they have to have a feel. In the past I've had the curious little buggers sift through my newly planted carrot seeds. So much for carefully scattering the seeds. A few years ago I came up with the idea of setting grow-thru grids on top of the soil. You can see here someone has reached in, but when they found the fun interrupted by a grid they gave up.


Any newly planted flowers are fair game for deer.  They always have to come take a closer look at whatever is new out there.  People on-line will often scoff at my 5 foot garden fence and claim that hungry deer can jump an eight foot high chain link fence.  I'm sure they can.  But I don't have hungry deer.  I have Snoopy McSnoopington deer.  All they have to do is bump into something unexpected and they move on.  Grow-thru grids temporarily placed over a new planting is sufficient.


If you have a permanent planting bed outside the fenced area it is probably worthwhile to make some sort of secure cage.  This hardware cloth cage has been protecting the strawberries from deer, rabbits and the bear for many years now.  Unfortunately it isn't any use against chipmunks.  They hit that wire and go through it like cheese through a grater re-materializing on the other side.  It would be fascinating if it weren't so annoying.  When the strawberries begin to ripen I have to pin a floating row cover over it with clothespins which blocks their view and access to the luscious berries.  If they were smarter they would chew through the cloth.  Thankfully they are not smart.


And the final weapon in my arsenal is repellent spray.  I've used a couple different brands over the years.  The one I've settled on is Bonide's Repels-All which I buy by the gallon in concentrate.  I used to put it in a regular spray bottle but this year I went a bit bigger with the 1.5 gallon garden sprayer.  This is just the ticket.  Instead of a laborious Squirt, Squirt, Squirt I can spray a good quantity in the time it takes me to walk past.  I spray my entire landscape after each good rain.  It takes only fifteen minutes with the big sprayer.  One gallon will cover all of my perennials thoroughly five or six times.  That means less time mixing and less time squirting.  I still have the spray bottle on the porch for touch ups.

So that is a synopsis of my multi layered critter control program.  Every time I plant something I have to think about who or what is going to eat it or dig it up then figure out how to prevent it.  And it is much easier to prevent it before the critter finds a yummy treat as a reward.  I have to make sure I take the yummy off it right away.  It is easier to train a deer not to eat something in the first place than to dissuade her after she has developed a taste for it.