- Birds and everything else will pluck out newly sprouted sunflower seeds and peas - must rig up some protection for them. At least a dozen sunflower sprouts and 100 pea sprouts were donated to the local wildlife.
- Garlic beds dug up a month or more in advance worked out very well - nice, soft, easy to plant beds. Ones not made up early are not nearly as easy to plant out. Now I am looking at planting some directly in unprepared beds, and that will be even worse, probably inhibiting good bulbing up in the spring.
- Sunflower seed heads need to be well protected or the wildlings will eat them all - even before they are mature. Chickies got very few this year, and there are none for the wild things for the winter. Sunflower leaves,however, made excellent chicken greens all summer long. And after the sunflower seeds had been consumed by the wild things, I pulled the stalks out and the chickens had a riotous good time eating up the leaves and pecking at the seed head itself.
- Collards grew very well under the shade of the large, yellow squash leaves. Next year, need to grow more. The chickies really like collards, and I added some to our salads.
- Spinach was a great success. I only half-hearted saved seeds. Some of the ones I saved did sprout when planted in the fall, but I don't know if Matador is open pollinated, so I didn't really work at it. Chickies and Granddaughter indulged in much spring spinach.
- No matter how many edible pod peas that I grow, there is never enough! I like to eat them right off the vine. The chickies like the peas, the pods (from ones that have grown too old to eat more than the peas themselves), and the leaves.
- Peas sown in September will probably not ripen before the first hard frost - still, at least they will make some nice greens for the chickens.
- Bi-colored corn was stunted as usual, but flood watering them produced a significantly higher number of ears of corn this year. Pollination was spotty, so most ears were missing kernels here and there - not pretty, but still very sweet and yummy. I ate several raw, right off the stalk - and happy chickies got to peck at the resulting cob. The bright red stalks and leaves of this variety is beautiful - need to look up what type I planted so that I can order that type of seed again.
- Yellow squash was a great success in bed no. 3. The ones in the ground, however, were eaten the moment they sprung forth from the earth.
- My garden blessed me with any wild things in the garden this year. I saw my first and only humming bird while sitting quietly in the garden before work one summer day. Lizards lapped water from the herbs in bed no. 1 all through the summer. Pigeons nested in the chicken coop (although Old Biddy kept destroying their nests, so they did not raise a brood). Chipmunks and mice raided the garden from time to time, and red tailed hawks (or so I believe them to be), soared overhead. Rabbits, luckily, are well-fenced out!
Showing posts with label Collards. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Collards. Show all posts
Sunday, September 26, 2010
September Garden Status
The last sunflower is blooming, along with oregano, sweet marjoram, yellow squash and desert mallow.
Well, some days I actually feel like I had a real garden this year with an actual harvest. A review of some of the crops:
Sunday, August 1, 2010
Autumn is here
It's the beginning of August and although the daytime temperatures are still in the mid- to high- 90's (*F), the nights are dipping into the 50's and low 60's - signifying the beginning of autumn.
Sunflowers are in full bloom - ones blooming at the beginning of July still holding their petals, but showing signs that the heads are now filling with seed. 4 or 5 buds are still tracking the sun across the sky, but most have now made a commitment to point east in preparation for unfolding their petals. 4 young seedlings, barely 3 inches tall, battle time and the elements - will they bloom before the end of the season?
Collards have germinated in bed number 3. They are limping along in the heat, but they will grow through light frosts, so hopefully they will begin to flourish as the days cool.
Okra in the ground has been plucked, presumably by the birds. Three survive in bed number three, however. They are supposed to only take 60 days or less to harvest. They are all still small - stunted, I am guessing, by the harsh desert sun and wind. But if we are lucky, there are still 40 - 60 more frost free days and I may hope to at least see them bloom.
Three delicata squash on the original vine - and the vine is just now starting to take off, with leaf and flower buds soaking up the sun.
The unknown squash in bed three has female buds that show them to be yellow crook neck. They haven't been fertilized yet, so I can't say that we will get a harvest - but the ants are working hard, crawling all over them and spreading yellow-orange pollen all around. Yellow squash planted in the ground barely survives.
I ordered garlic for this fall's planting. This year's planting includes 2 lbs of German Red and 5 lbs of Siberian - both hard necks that enjoy a cold winter. I also ordered 1 lb of the softneck, Inchelium Red. That should yield close to 70 hardnecks and a similar number of softnecks - although the softnecks might not survive if we have as brutal a winter as last year. Normally I order from The Garlic Store, but they indicate they will not be shipping until October. As it looks like winter will be arriving early this year, I ordered from a place that will ship in mid-August: 2 Sister's Garlic. They did not have the top sized Siberian, but the medium sized will have more cloves per pound, so it may be that my harvest is actually bigger that way.
Speaking of garlic, the composted chicken poo is just about ready to dig into the sand. It will sit a few weeks, and then it should be ready for planting out the garlic. I still haven't decided exactly where to plant, but I better figure it out soon.
Planted out crook neck squash seeds that got rained on - placed them among the corn. One has germinated so far. I also placed some in bed number two, but I haven't seen any there, yet.
Busy week in the garden. Wish I had more time to hang out there. Work and school have taken their toll on my free time.
Sunflowers are in full bloom - ones blooming at the beginning of July still holding their petals, but showing signs that the heads are now filling with seed. 4 or 5 buds are still tracking the sun across the sky, but most have now made a commitment to point east in preparation for unfolding their petals. 4 young seedlings, barely 3 inches tall, battle time and the elements - will they bloom before the end of the season?
Collards have germinated in bed number 3. They are limping along in the heat, but they will grow through light frosts, so hopefully they will begin to flourish as the days cool.
Okra in the ground has been plucked, presumably by the birds. Three survive in bed number three, however. They are supposed to only take 60 days or less to harvest. They are all still small - stunted, I am guessing, by the harsh desert sun and wind. But if we are lucky, there are still 40 - 60 more frost free days and I may hope to at least see them bloom.
Three delicata squash on the original vine - and the vine is just now starting to take off, with leaf and flower buds soaking up the sun.
The unknown squash in bed three has female buds that show them to be yellow crook neck. They haven't been fertilized yet, so I can't say that we will get a harvest - but the ants are working hard, crawling all over them and spreading yellow-orange pollen all around. Yellow squash planted in the ground barely survives.
I ordered garlic for this fall's planting. This year's planting includes 2 lbs of German Red and 5 lbs of Siberian - both hard necks that enjoy a cold winter. I also ordered 1 lb of the softneck, Inchelium Red. That should yield close to 70 hardnecks and a similar number of softnecks - although the softnecks might not survive if we have as brutal a winter as last year. Normally I order from The Garlic Store, but they indicate they will not be shipping until October. As it looks like winter will be arriving early this year, I ordered from a place that will ship in mid-August: 2 Sister's Garlic. They did not have the top sized Siberian, but the medium sized will have more cloves per pound, so it may be that my harvest is actually bigger that way.
Speaking of garlic, the composted chicken poo is just about ready to dig into the sand. It will sit a few weeks, and then it should be ready for planting out the garlic. I still haven't decided exactly where to plant, but I better figure it out soon.
Planted out crook neck squash seeds that got rained on - placed them among the corn. One has germinated so far. I also placed some in bed number two, but I haven't seen any there, yet.
Busy week in the garden. Wish I had more time to hang out there. Work and school have taken their toll on my free time.
Labels:
Autumn,
Bugs and Insects,
Collards,
Corn,
General Status,
Greens,
Harvest,
School,
Sunflowers,
Work,
Yellow Squash
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