Sunday, June 30, 2013

Pests and Problems

Work work work.

I had begun noticing strangely bare branches poking up all over my tomato plants earlier this week. It looked like something had gotten into the yard and was helping themselves to the leaves!






















I really had no idea what was going on until... I saw this guy.  
I pulled 14 of them out of my tomatoes. All but two were on a single plant!

 I will be Dusting my tomato plants pronto, as soon as the breeze dies down. We're having regular afternoon thunderstorms right now, which means the Dust will get washed away, but frankly... after finding 14 of them, I'll Dust every afternoon if I need to, til the infestation is curbed.

Further problems include strange white marks on the leaves of my tomatoes, peas, and squash, all in about the same area of the garden: right smack in the middle. I have no idea what's causing the burn-like spots... Any ideas?

I'll be going armed this weekend: fertilizer, bug spray, Seven Dust, rose spray, and clippers. I'd enjoy having some idea what I'm up against with these strange white scald marks. Hmmm.




Saturday, June 29, 2013

Lily ID # 3

The last lily in my garden has bloomed!


In the shade, the yellow in these lilies becomes much lighter. The fragrance is distinctly different than the other lilies, and frankly, this one is absolutely my favorite! I think it is named "Gold Band".

Lily ID # 2.5

I think I misidentified the last lily. I didn't realize I had two different dark pink lilies until I cut several and brought them into the house together. Then I got to looking more closely, and I realized one was a stargazer, and one was not.

The one on the left is the Stargazer, while the one on the right is currently unknown... Perhaps it is "Black Tie"? Any ideas?

Zucchini Bread

What to do with all that harvest? I've brought in over 6 lbs of squash and zucchini, so I decided to bake some bread.

I love baking bread, I love zucchini... so what better than Zucchini bread?


I'm thinking about posting more on what I make with the fruits (or vegetables) of my labor. I love BLTs, sauces, and stews with tomatoes, and I often make bruschetta for my pasta. Sound fun?

Friday, June 28, 2013

New Daylily



So, my neighbor has a clump of day lilies growing at the fence corner, and it has spread through the fence. Dad cuts the emerging bulbs down with the weed eater, but this week he left them standing so I headed out with a shovel and collected two for myself!

I've no idea what the name of the day lily is, but it's got three layers of petals and a very lovely dark orange stripe on a lighter orange flower.

With this addition, I now have four varieties of day lilies.

I've been reading a lot about hybridizing your own day lilies by cross pollinating the ones you have in your yard and collecting the seeds.

Once my lilies get situated and a year or two more growth on them, I think I may give it a try!

I now have a good selection of size, shape, and bloom times.

Any idea what this orange one is named?







Thursday, June 27, 2013

Garden Update for the End of June

Growing Strong like the Tyrells.


Beefsteak tomatoes on the vine.
Squash and Zucchini plants, getting huge!

Crowder pea vines. Some pods have as many as 20 peas.
I've picked about 6.0 lbs of squash and zucchini from my four plants, and I've almost gathered a pound of cherry tomatoes from a single cherry tomato plant.

It seems like the more bounty I gather in from the garden, the more problems I encounter. I've gotten the mildew under control in the squash/zucs, but now half my yellow pear tomato decided to die. I've got black spot on the roses, and my strawberry plants, which have been under a net and really haven't been getting close attention, are full of ants and aphids.

I cut out the dead parts of the yellow pear and gathered the green tomatoes for frying. And while I haven't sprayed the roses yet, I did get the strawberries uncovered, watered, cleaned for dead leaves and branches, and sprayed for bugs. 

Work work work.

Wednesday, June 26, 2013

Lily ID # 2

The second lily to bloom in my garden was the Stargazer!


The flowers are much smaller than the Corsos, at perhaps 6 inches. But they smell much stronger, and the color is vivid.

I've got 4 Corsos and now 3 Stargazers; of my 12 pack, two aren't blooming this year and 7 are identified. That leaves three more lilies. I'm disappointed that the variety pack ultimately seems to have so little variety, but you get what you pay for. Maybe I can add some more specimens later. I particularly want a white and  a white/yellow lily.

Tuesday, June 25, 2013

Lily ID # 1.5

So I noticed that some of the Corso lilies had 7 or 9 petals. They were appearing on the same stems as your typical 6 petal lilies. I noticed that the ones with 7 petals looked malformed, but interestingly, the ones with 9 looked nearly double. All six petals that one would typically see were present, but in the center, mixed in with the stamens were three extra petals.

I wonder what causes flowers with 6, 7, and 9 petals to appear on the same plant... 



Thursday, June 20, 2013

A Sale in the Garden Center

Means I get more plants...

So. I noticed that the store had marked packaged bulbs down to half off. Feeling that my frugality had been vindicated by the sale, I picked up a pack of iris bulbs (Miss Saigon) and a pack of day lily bulbs (El Desperado).

When I got to the register, the packs rang up at $1.00 each.

(For the sake of transparency, none of the images above are my own. Google image search, ftw.)

So after landing that kind of deal, I went back to the store. And I bought an Amaryllis, some calla lilies, more day lilies (I've been wanting those for two years), some mixed Freesia, and a pack of Dahlias.

I look like a crazy plant lady:














What I see in my head? The pics above. What I see under my carport...

Now I eagerly search the dirt every morning and every evening. A gardener's patience must be boundless.

Tuesday, June 18, 2013

Lily Type #1 - ID: Corso

The first lily has bloomed!


Date: 6/18/2013
Size: 8.5-9 inches wide
Name: Believed to be Corso; inner petals have raised, dark pink/red spots and are smooth edged; outer petals are ruffled. Light pink petals with yellow centers and a green throat.

Harvesting

Totally just putting this here to brag.

First three tomatoes of the season. I generally pick them under ripe and allow them to ripen the rest of the way in my window.

I absolutely love seeing them in my window, and besides, I've already waited so long watching them grow that I jump at the chance to pick them.

I've also harvested 4lbs of squash and zucchini from my four plants so far this season.

Happy harvests to all.

Monday, June 17, 2013

Discoveries after the Rain

Some good, some bad.

Oriental Lily starting to open!
First bloom visible on Bell Pepper.
First strawberry runner reaching out.
Yellow pear tomato stem broken from wind.

Friday, June 14, 2013

Making Airplanes

I'm coming up to my first year anniversary (ha!) of having my grannie's Airplane plant. I got it late in the year last year, wintered it with surprising success, and now it's making little airplanes like crazy. The test case I did back on April 20th of this year looks great; it's making huge new leaves.

Time to do more.

I had recently saved a plant tray along with its pots from the trash at work, and I decided this would be the perfect use.



I think they're adorably cute in their little planting tray... In 2 months or so I'll worry about finding a home for them all.

Early June Update

In the Garden - 

I harvested the carrots before I left on vacation. 7 carrots. 6 oz. You cannot imagine the depths of my satisfaction and delight.

The peas are blooming, delicately purple flowers springing open on the many vines. And the tomatoes are getting taller and taller. 




 Among the Flowers - 






And a few shots of home - 






Thursday, June 13, 2013

Rearranging the Garden

After ruminating on one of the problems that came to light recently (namely, being unable to reach the peas with water), I decided to do some emergency rearranging in the garden.

 As you can see above, the peas are in two rows to the left of my two bins of squash. The idea was to put the shorter items to the right side of the garden and the tall items to the left, so that as the sun rises and sets each side will get plenty of sun and not block the shorter things.

Good idea right?

Well, until the peas got big and the tomatoes (not pictured, but to the left) got big and I cant reach anything. Hm. Plus the squash are branching through the fence and gate, and they're getting stepped on.



 It took some work since the peas were vining everywhere already, but I hauled them and the squash out into the yard. Then I set the peas in a row along the side of the house and positioned the squash in front. Now, nothing is being blocked and the squash have twice the room to spread.

On the left, the yellow crookneck is looking terribly pitiful. I had to cut out some branches showing bad signs of powdery mildew (more leaves have it, but I could only remove so much) and I had to cut a huge branch that had grown through the fence and wouldn't come out again. 

And I thought I had done well. 

Until I tried to water the next day. Hm. I still couldn't get to the peas for the squash. My main concern right now is watering. But then I remembered I have a long arm sprayer thing dad bought last year, and I think that will just about do the trick. 

Don't ask me how I'm actually going to pick. I haven't figured that out yet.

Monday, June 10, 2013

Reflections, Realizations, and Bad Ideas

I returned last night from a 4 day vacation to the coast. Although I had someone very nice who was willing to water things for me, I came back and stood at my garden's gate, and I feel as if just that quickly I have lost the battle that is my garden.

Haul out the white flag.

Now that I've slept on it, I still feel like there is a lot of work to catch back up, and after time away I see some problems that I failed to identify until now.

In no particular order.

Problems:


- What in the world was I thinking with the peas? I set the pots up in rows just like you'd plant rows of peas. The tomato cage idea on the peas is working, although not as well as I had anticipated. My peas still don't seem to have enough room to 'go' anywhere. But the main problem is the row placement. I cannot reach the pots in the back! It's almost impossible to get enough water back there because of the tomatoes on one side and the squash on the other.

- Speaking of squash: those monsters are taking over my garden! The storage box idea is working great, but... give an inch, they take a mile. Instead of growing along the soil in the pot, they're... they're growing through the gate. And into the flower bench. And although I had pollinated 2 zucs before leaving on vacation, none set, and since I wasn't here to pollinate all this time, I can see half a dozen squash and zucs that probably didn't get pollinated by the bugs. Lazy bugs. So now I'll have an extended period of time without squash and zucchinis while the plants reset. Ultimately, however, I don't have enough room. Not in this arrangement. Maybe I need to back off to one plant each?

- The lavender needs a bigger pot. The more I look at it, the more I realize that poor thing is slowly dying from lack of water due to constriction in its current pot. I don't have one bigger on hand, which means a trip to the store if I want to keep it a live. Which I do.

- I have *got* to think of a better solution than those wimpy cages from the store for my tomatoes. While I was gone on vacation, they decided they'd grown vertically for long enough, and they tipped over into each other. So when I came back, I couldn't tell where one tomato began and another ended. I got outside and drove some stakes into the ground to hold the cages up, and I sorted the branches, so that will hold them for a little while.

- ... I may not be planting another Bell Pepper. That thing is just sitting there. It *is* getting visibly larger but good LORD could it grow any slower?

- My Roma tomato is still suffering blossom end rot. Ngh. 

- Back to squash. I think they're getting mold.

Ideas:

- Maybe I can do some emergency rearranging to save the hassle and confinement of the peas and squash. If I straightened the peas out to run along the wall of the house and set the squash in front. Sure, I'd be reaching over the squash to water the peas, but both would have ample sun and I could definitely reach them with the hose rather than with a hand pail.

Successes:

- The tubs for the squash: working great.
- The cages on the peas: not so bad.
- The bird netting on the strawberries: excellent! Sister brought in a huge handful of strawberries just yesterday, and they were delicious.
- My gnat solution is perfection personified.
- The barrel lilies are getting huge!
- I actually grew carrots!

Tis all for now.

Monday, June 3, 2013

First Harvests and First Problems

First Squash and Zucchini 

 Look look! Behold, the first yellow crookneck (without much of a crook neck) and zucchini. The zuc was about 13 oz, and the squash was about 5. I could have left the squash out in the garden for a while longer, but... I wanted to eat it. So there.

I've got two more zuc's and three more squash on the vine, just waiting.

Since I'll be going on vacation on Wednesday, I'll probably pick anything that looks big enough to eat and take it along. I would rather enjoy it small than come back to find the bugs had gotten it.

The squash and zuc's aren't *officially* my first harvests - I've gotten several handfuls of strawberries so far, but they ARE the first produce from the stuff I planted from seed this year.

But along with the first harvest comes the first set of problems.



Before you, you see the bane of every garden - Blossom End Rot. I have it.

Blossom End Rot on Roma tomatoes.
 Of all my tomatoes, the Roma was the smallest and was showing the most flowers. I suppose it's decided to be the first with this year's set of problems. I went ahead and cut off three branches of young fruit. My thinking was - why let it stay on the plant when it's not going to turn out good anyway? I cut them up, tossed 'em in flour, and had fried green tomato bits. They didn't qualify as bites, but they were good!

I see some more starting on my yellow tomatoes, but all of my other bushes remain BER free. I will design a program of retaliation and prevention and see if I can't head it off at the pass, so to speak.

And I'll make lemonade from lemons and enjoy the green tomatoes.

Other news in the garden concerns mutant squash and zuc plants. Check out the below:






















I've ended up with male flowers fused together (as many as three) and now I've got a male flower with two stamens, and on the right you can see two female flowers fused together. Neither was successfully pollinated, so I'll not have the amusing experience of getting to eat any mutant vegetables, but it was still cool to find.