Looks like i was a slight bit more pessimistic than necessary about those Adirondack potatoes... yesterday i noticed a pair of sprouts:
i also found a chunk of potato that had been unearthed by the cats, it had a sprout and some hairy roots on it. I replanted it near the two above shoots. This morning, while doing some more planting and weeding, i found a third potato plant just poking its way up. This makes 3, maybe 4 plants. I can live with that.
We are expecting as many as 6 days of steady rain right now, so this morning, before the rain began, i managed to get the rest of the seeds in. I had to skip out on the beets (beetroot) because i decided late spring might be too late and though i bought bolt-resistant types, i just don't want that going on.
So... what i planted was a row of Golden Butter wax bush beans, a row of Royal Burgundy bush beans, a third of a row of the leftover bush bean seeds my dad gave me (Tender-long i think), a third of a row of Minowase daikon radish and the rest was the ornamental sunflower mix (Fantasia).
I threw in a handful of Pinetree's radish mix into the further end of the potato row- where the cats tore it up so bad... i figure if the radish do grow they won't hurt the potatoes by the time they can be pulled.
Oh and the goji are getting full of berries:
Provider bush beans all up and weeded:
Full garden shot:
All planted. Now all i have to do is keep up with the weeds, the bugs and hopefully i'll keep blights away!
Friday, June 7, 2013
Thursday, June 6, 2013
Its been a while...
I just haven't had the time, i guess. Not so much busy, but i need time to gather my thoughts before i can write things down. I'm still not quite gathered, but i have taken a number of photos and have uploaded them to Photobucket so i can post them here. They uploaded a bit randomly, so i'll sort through them and just describe as i go.
First up is one of three galls i found on my Stanley prune plum.
Here is a second one
the third was up too high to take a photo.
I went to Stark Brothers' facebook page and asked them for advice. I don't know if these are fungal, bacterial or insect galls and i don't know what to do about them. I have not gotten a reply yet, a 48 hour wait is not unusual.
On the upside though, it looks like i might get some fruit this year if all goes well:
The Autumn Olive bloomed profusely this year, a nice sweet scent
The lilacs bloomed nicely too... they have gone by now.
The Sparkle strawberries are blooming too
I got the black plastic down and the tomatoes, squash, melons, eggplant, peppers, basil, shiso, tea hibiscus, cukes and broccoli planted last Tuesday.
I wasn't planning on putting the broccoli on plastic, it might button or bolt, but we'll see. Everything but the melons seem to be doing fine. It took about 5 days before the striped cucumber beetles found my plants, but when they did, they went right after the melons. I used sevin dust which is the only thing that i have found that works on them.
The uncovered second row has Provider bush beans in it, they just started coming up about Monday. I had planted them last Wednesday i think. I planted them just before 2 days of rain so i didn't have to water or anything.
Golden Butter wax and Royal Burgundy bush beans will be going in later today or early tomorrow depending on when more rain is expected. I also have about 25 seeds of Tender Green bush beans my dad had left over from his small planting at their house.
I still have not planted any daikon radish or beets, or the ornamental sunflowers. I need to get the sunflowers in soon, but i'm going to look around and see if the beets and daikon radish may be better as a fall crop at this point.
I don't think any of those Adirondack potatoes are coming up. They were planted 3 weeks ago this Monday and i don't see one sprout. This is a real bummer. I think the combination of the seed potato pieces being so rotted and then the row they were planted in appears to be a favorite of the feral cats... the whole row is torn up from their digging and rolling, the 'taters never had a chance. I'll try again next year and buy twice as much seed. If they rot again, i will give up.
As far as the plastic on the rows goes... i have had some trouble with the plastic staying down in the wind. I used ground staples, but the garden soil is so soft they can only hold so well. I'm also using bricks. The ends are the hardest to keep down, they have blown off a few times and i have had to re-set it. This has damaged some leaves on a couple sweet pepper plants, but not much else.
Looks like another good year for grapes:
Blueberries look good too:
Two of them are doing great, the other two that took it rough over the winter are recovering. One has a small cluster, but the other has none.
I think that is all for now.
First up is one of three galls i found on my Stanley prune plum.
Here is a second one
the third was up too high to take a photo.
I went to Stark Brothers' facebook page and asked them for advice. I don't know if these are fungal, bacterial or insect galls and i don't know what to do about them. I have not gotten a reply yet, a 48 hour wait is not unusual.
On the upside though, it looks like i might get some fruit this year if all goes well:
The Autumn Olive bloomed profusely this year, a nice sweet scent
The lilacs bloomed nicely too... they have gone by now.
The Sparkle strawberries are blooming too
I got the black plastic down and the tomatoes, squash, melons, eggplant, peppers, basil, shiso, tea hibiscus, cukes and broccoli planted last Tuesday.
I wasn't planning on putting the broccoli on plastic, it might button or bolt, but we'll see. Everything but the melons seem to be doing fine. It took about 5 days before the striped cucumber beetles found my plants, but when they did, they went right after the melons. I used sevin dust which is the only thing that i have found that works on them.
The uncovered second row has Provider bush beans in it, they just started coming up about Monday. I had planted them last Wednesday i think. I planted them just before 2 days of rain so i didn't have to water or anything.
Golden Butter wax and Royal Burgundy bush beans will be going in later today or early tomorrow depending on when more rain is expected. I also have about 25 seeds of Tender Green bush beans my dad had left over from his small planting at their house.
I still have not planted any daikon radish or beets, or the ornamental sunflowers. I need to get the sunflowers in soon, but i'm going to look around and see if the beets and daikon radish may be better as a fall crop at this point.
I don't think any of those Adirondack potatoes are coming up. They were planted 3 weeks ago this Monday and i don't see one sprout. This is a real bummer. I think the combination of the seed potato pieces being so rotted and then the row they were planted in appears to be a favorite of the feral cats... the whole row is torn up from their digging and rolling, the 'taters never had a chance. I'll try again next year and buy twice as much seed. If they rot again, i will give up.
As far as the plastic on the rows goes... i have had some trouble with the plastic staying down in the wind. I used ground staples, but the garden soil is so soft they can only hold so well. I'm also using bricks. The ends are the hardest to keep down, they have blown off a few times and i have had to re-set it. This has damaged some leaves on a couple sweet pepper plants, but not much else.
Looks like another good year for grapes:
Blueberries look good too:
Two of them are doing great, the other two that took it rough over the winter are recovering. One has a small cluster, but the other has none.
I think that is all for now.
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