Showing posts with label Strawberry. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Strawberry. Show all posts

Wednesday, May 30, 2012

Good Morning!

Not sure why I woke up at 4:30 a.m., but glad I did. Lovely 50*F morning in the garden this morning. Golden sunlight. Unfortunately, I think I have dropped my phone one too many times, and the pictures are now a little out of focus. Still, a little sepia tone can fix a lot of issues. View of the chicken coop through the branches of my little Royal Gala apple tree from Stark Bros. I have no illusions that I will actually get to eat these - summer winds are sure to tear them from the branches when they are about golf ball size.
Today's garden activities and comments
  • ate 6 strawberries
  • took some semi-blurry pictures
  • watered everything
  • weather predicted to be in high 80*s today
  • did my morning exercise in the garden
  • inhaled fresh, cool, not dusty! air
  • listened to neighborhood roosters crow
  • yellow clover is over 2 ft tall
  • beans in beds 2 and 3 doing well
  • one iris blooms
Ok, now time to get ready for work. Maybe I'll take the top off of the Jeep. Starting out to be an excellent day.

Monday, August 1, 2011

Current Status

Current state of the garden:
  • Sunflowers - 10 in bloom in the main sunflower location  - one "Mammoth" has a central disk about 8" across; however, most have central disks closer to 5 and 6 inches.  Both of the ones in Raised Bed 2 are blooming, as are two of the volunteers (from bird seed) near the nectarine tree.  About 10 more main buds.  Good soil, good water means that many of them look like they will have smaller "side buds" that will bloom later one.  Need to protect the ripening heads from birds and other creatures.
  • Corn - first set is beginning to tassel.  Second set is growing strong, as well as the bush beans planted in between them.  The sunflowers planted between them, of course, have been devoured by some wildling.  I am thinking of planting more corn next weekend - a losing bet to get ripening ears of corn out of them; however, I am sure the chickens will enjoy tearing it up at the end of the season when they are let loose in the garden to eat and till things under.
  • Bush beans - in full swing.  They will probably be done with their crop in a few weeks.  Then time to till them under.
  • Dow Gawk (Asparagus or Yard Long Beans) - the ones in the corn are starting to flower; the new ones planted against the fence along the South are barely surviving.  The ones by the dead apple tree keep getting eaten up.
  • Blackeye Peas and Purple Hull Peas - are both beginning to bloom and set tiny bean pods.  The blooms are lavender and turn brownish after pollination. A few more weeks and we will have "shelly peas."  One nice thing about them is that they hold the bean pods high above the plant, so they are easy to see.
  • Cukes - They are producing the first of their flowers and fruits; however, I think the heat and water stress are causing them to ripen small and fast.  The 3 inch ones I plucked today were prickly and bitter.  But the chickens like 'em!
  • Blue Bedder Salvia (Ornamental Sage) - Has so far survived critter depredations and has its first buds.  It is a perennial, so maybe I will get lucky and see them again next year.  I have 3 small plants that have survived so far.
  • CA Poppies - 3 plants are barely surviving, and one is actually thriving and blooming.  One bloom is done, one is open, and 3 more will be ready later this week.  The plant is small, and the blooms are small, but perhaps next year's seed will sprout sooner and be stronger by this time of year.
  • Morning Glories - in all locations, MGs and Moon Flowers are suffering from being too tasty.  They are prolific and vigorous, so the plants aren't dead, yet - but they don't actually get a chance to thrive.  A casualty of laziness and a disinclination to use synthetic chemicals.  I heard about a fermented solution of garlic and hot peppers that is supposed to keep critters away.  I might try some next year.
  • Raspberry - lives and looks healthy - but not flower buds yet, so no fruit.  But it lives, so that is a grand improvement over its several predecessors.
  • Strawberries - The runners from three hen-pecked plants have re-filled bed two, and I have foolish hopes that next year I will have strawberries to eat.
  • Silver Thyme - done blooming, and now going to seed.
  • Rosemary - finished blooming a while ago, but still sending up new shoots.  This is the longest into Summer that it has ever done so.  I wonder if it is because of our relatively cool weather, or if it is just because it is big and old enough to do so now, or some combination thereof.
  • Oregano - some that I let go to flower looks lovely; the rest looks tired.  Much of it is getting woody.  I think it may be time to give it a sharp trimming so it will grow mostly on tender new stems next year.
  • Melissa (Lemon Balm) - Looks sad and brown around the edges as it always does this time of year.
  • Day Lilly - the one in sun has bloomed several times this season; the other two, not.  I should move the other two now so that they have time to become established before winter.  I am actually quite surprised that they came back this year - they were looking quite poorly at the end of last season.
  • Desert Mallow - my original weed in Raised Bed One from several years ago is in great decline.  I think she is done.  The good news is, I sprinkled seed in Raised Bed Three last year, and one of her progeny has taken root there and is looking quite vigorous.  Perhaps at the end of this season, it will be time to rip out the original plant.
  • Unknown summer squashes - probably yellow straight neck, yellow crook neck, a patty-pan and some more zukes.  Laziness means that I will be surprised when they produce.  They should be ready to bloom in about 4 more weeks - in time to get some good squash before frost.  They are, of course, planted too close together.  I cannot seem to bring myself to either plant further apart or to thin.
Ducky enjoying the kiddie wading pool.  They really are waterproof.

    Monday, July 12, 2010

    Spinach

    I grew spinach for the first time this year. I planted "Matador" in the berry bed. Only three strawberry plants survived our winter this year, but three is enough to send 15 - 20 runners by summer, so I figured I fill the empty spaces with fast growing spinach.

    Baby Matador Spinach

    I am convinced that if children were introduced to spinach from their grandma's garden at an early age, then they would both love eating spinach and have a better foundation with which to face the world.


    I am not quite at the point where I will be saving seeds, but I am heading that way. Observing this season's spinach bolting is the first step in that process. And who knows, maybe the chickens won't get all the bolting spinach and blooms, and I'll save a few seeds "just to see what happens."

    Thursday, June 12, 2008

    June, June, June!


    Lots of activity in the last few weeks. And more, much more to come! Can't believe we are already in the middle of June.

    • Peas

      • Been eating peas from bed 2 for several weeks
      • Peas in bed 1 and around the tree are starting to flower

    • Strawberries

      • Eating one or two sweet strawberries a day starting this week
      • Picked 18 yummy little strawberries today (they are mostly just a little bigger than my thumb nail, but oooh, sooo sweet!)
      • Runners are running everywhere - may never have to buy new plants again!
      • Some plants have leaves nearly as big as my hand

    • Bearded Irises

      • The Irises are officially done blooming
      • Have moved 9 out of bed 1 and planted around the garden - they may not bloom next year, but probably the following year they will be fabulous.

    • Beans

      • Over 80 Yellow Pencil Pod Bush Beans are up
      • About 50 Royal Burgundy Bush Beans are up
      • A few Kentucky Wonder Pole Beans are starting to come up
      • Sowed about a dozen more Kentucky Wonder Pole Beans today
      • Sowed two dozen Dow Gawk "Yard Long" Beans (90 days to maturaty - I'm surely pushing the season)

    • Other Stuff

      • Sowed some "Eight Ball" round zucchini today
      • Harvested some garlic that did poorly over the winter - bulbs are mature, but small
      • Really need to plant out all those things that take 90 days or more to mature
      • 8 Heavenly Blue Morning Glories are up
      • Zero Moon Flowers have germinated
      • Corn due to germinate late next week

    Saturday, May 31, 2008

    Can't wait!

    The summer harvesting season is almost upon us. I have been eating one or two peas here and there for the last few weeks, but now the pease are blooming in earnest and hopefully we'll have enough for some stir fry soon - assuming I don't eat them all while watering the garden or pulling weeds!

    Came home from business travel to find the first of the strawberries blushing red. I was wondering when to get my bird netting... I think the answer is now!

    Here's a little view of the south side of the garden looking East.



      Happenings
    • 32 sunflowers growing so far
    • 4 Royal Purple bush beans breaking ground
    • Peas blooming - continuing to eat a few here and there
    • First strawberries ripening up
    • Bearded Irises still blooming like crazy
    • Tomatoes have survived hail and transplanting
    • Garlic scapes doing their thing
    • Harvested some lemon balm to freshen up my garbage disposal
    • Oregano going crazy
    • Basils outside looking good (hopefully they'll go crazy once the warm weather gets here)

    Wednesday, May 21, 2008

    Garden is starting to take off!

    I am certainly paying for staying out at sunset to take photos of the garden - the biting bugs had a field day feasting upon me!
    Tiny strawberries are popping up everywhere. Several dozen so far - most smaller than my pinky fingernail. But still, they are strawberries, and they promise all sorts of sweet delights!I have both June bearing and ever bearing strawberry plants, but, alas, due to poor planning and poor labeling, I have no idea which are which. I am assuming the ones going crazy with the flowers right now are the June bearing, being that it is almost June...
    The first peas are now blooming, so hopefully we will also soon be crunching on the first sweet, tender sugar snap peas. They don't last long when spring goes from 25 at night and days in the 50's to days in the 90's - inside of a week. Even the vines that have not attained full size should start going crazy trying to make peas before they die of heat exhaustion.
    Probably I should have put more tomatoes in the ground last week, but with being sick and preparing to cross the mountains, I just didn't have it in me. I was, of course, quite pleased to find that the one tomato plant that I did put out survived fine and greened up well. So I am thinking that setting out tomatoes is going to be high on the list of things to do this week.

    And, of course, the Oregano is trying to grow everywhere! I think I am actually glad that some of my transplants died while I was gone - as the ones that survived are doing almost too well. I guess I will be drying Oregano for winter use this year! All this from two scrawny little seedlings that almost didn't survive last summer.
    Some accomplishments today:
    • Deep watered established trees and all the non-tree plants (did not water the not-yet-established trees as it was very windy today - and I was concerned that with 50MPH winds, that watering them would loosen them up and let them be toppled over)
    • Enjoyed the bearded irises
    • Transplanted 1 tomato and 5 basil plants
    • Planted a pack of Royal Burgundy bush beans
    • Pulled some weeds - they are making a nice mulch around my rescue apple tree
    • Pulled a few dozen porcupine quills out of one of my dogs, Max - he wasn't pleased, but he's much happier now.

    Still haven't decided what to do with the black widdow who is living in one of my apple trees. I know where she is, so I am careful, but I am concerned for my grand daughter. I have an afinity for anything that gobbles up bugs in the garden, though, and her web is full of (nicely dead) bugs. Maybe I can relocate her to the far corners of the property? For the moment, though, I am letting her be...

    Saturday, May 10, 2008

    Strawberry Blossoms




    I could wish for acres and acres of strawberries, but, alas, I know I could never care for that many strawberry plants - and the mice and birds would probably get most of them. So one raised bed for a few treats is all I have. But the flowers are pretty and hopefully we will get a small but sweet harvest sometime in June.

    Sunday, May 4, 2008

    Some actual garden plants

    In re-reading my blog here, I realize it looks like all that is growing in the garden are wild plants and/or weeds. But such is not really the case.

    Strawberries are blooming... not the best photo, but you get the idea.


    Lemon balm is looking much better now that there hasn't been a hard frost for a few weeks. There's still one little frost burnt area, but the leaves are now full sized and much healthier looking. It seems to like the shade it gets from hiding behind a bearded iris. (You can see greek oregano creaping in from the right. If I'm not careful, oregano will need to be added to the "weeds" list!)


    Sunflowers are also doing nicely. I sowed some "Mammoth" and some "sunseed" a few weeks ago (well before the last hard frost) and they are up. This is one of the "Mammoth" ones along the North fence. Hopefully, the main sowing will happen over the course of the next few weeks. So far, there are 23 up out of the ground. I hope to have a hundred or so - with the blooms spread out across the summer. Wouldn't that be a site along the North 70 something feet of my garden fence?


    I don't have time to post more photos today, but the garlic and sugar snap peas are also doing well. I'm concerned that the peas came up a bit late, though, and will be ready to flower in the scortching days at the end of June, or even during July!

    Saturday, April 19, 2008

    Blustery Spring Day & Early April Photos

    Nectarine blossom, April 6th, 2008...

    The nectarine tree officially burst into bloom on April 6th! First of the orchard trees to bloom this year. The two more mature apple trees were only 13 days behind the nectarine, though - opening their first buds today. (Unfortunately, there were 40 MPH winds, so I was not able to photograph them, although I spend a goodly amount of time standing in the sand-blasting wind just gazing at them.) The two younger trees do not look like they have flower buds on them - only leaf buds. Ditto for the sweet cherry. All the trees in the orchard look happy, though, with bright green leaves and/or leaf buds.

    More nectarine bud photos from April 6th...





    In spite of 40 MPH winds and sand-blasting, I hung out in the garden for several hours during the late morning. Had a peaceful, therapeutic time. Even got some garden "chores" done.



    Lemon Balm in Bed No. 1

      Raised Bed No. 1
    • Watered
    • Transplanted some oregano from the original patch to another location in the same bed - pulled it away from some bearded irises that it was trying to invade - and couldn't just "throw it away!"
    • Speaking of bearded irises, they survived the winter just fine and most have leaves more than 6 inches high now.
    • A dozen sugar snap peas have broken ground
    • Earlier in the week I discovered 2 more lemon balm clumps hiding in the tomato debris from last year - bringing the total to 3 clumps! They don't really have a pleasant lemon smell or flavor - kind of have turpentine undertones - but anything that will survive the desert and our winters is totally welcomed!
    • Earlier in the week also discovered a small patch of sweet marjoram. Looks and smells very similar to the oregano, but the leaves are not fuzzy and the smell is not nearly so pungent. Another survivor from last year - that's 3 herbs I've found that will over winter here (Sweet Marjoram, Lemon Balm, Oregano)
    • Desert Mallow has 3 very tiny leaves at the base of last year's dead wood - so I shall say it is officially awake

    Closeup of new strawberry growth, 4 April 2008...

      Raised Bed No. 2
    • Watered
    • Strawberries look healthy and undaunted by whirling winds
    • A few stray garlic are up - not as robust as the main crops - these were small cloves planted more for decoration and because I cannot stand to throw any plant away that might possibly grow
    • Crocus leaves are still up and healthy looking, although the few crocus that bloomed in this bed are long gone
    • more than 25 sugar snap peas are up and have their first true leave - planted some more to fill in the gaps where nothing seems to have germinated

    Happy Garlic, 6 April 2008...

      Raised Bed No. 3 & In Ground Garlic Bed
    • Watered both
    • Both are devoted just to garlic - mostly hard necks
    • The garlic in the south west corner of the in-ground garlic has "split" and has two stems - I don't think it will form a good bulb - I heard that water stress or cold stress can cause this. The others appear to be fine.

    Obviously, I should probably be posting more regularly as a lot is going on right now - like the weeds are very happy and such...sunflower seeds planted a little over a week ago have germinated... I planted more sunflower seeds this afternoon... and, well, I'd rather BE in the garden than write about it...



    Ok, a few more weed photos and that's it for tonight...

    The flowers for this one are particularly difficult for me to get in focus... not sure why, but this is the best one so far...(4/6/08)

    It comes in yellow, too...(4/6/08)

    Ok, that's it for tonight. Good night.