Showing posts with label flowers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label flowers. Show all posts

Wednesday, June 17, 2015

State of the Vegetable Garden: June, 2015

I am remiss. I promised quite some time ago to share pictures of the garden and I have drug my feet and procrastinated with the best. I swear, I'm not a procrastinator in real life!

The vegetable garden is in full swing! I took this as an opportunity to experiment with my panoramic setting on my phone camera (someone explain to me why I have not used this feature before?), so you can see the full vegetable garden in all it's glory (even if some of it is currently in shadow from the maple tree).


You can sorta, kinda, see the raised beds further out in the yard. Please excuse the weed-ridden sunken patio. The hubs and I have plans for that area, but we need time (and funds for materials) before we can do anything about it.

So, details...if we move in closer (much closer), you can see that the blueberry bush is fruiting! I've gotten a few wonderfully ripe berries off of it so far, but I think the birds are mostly beating me to the punch. Guess I need to hang some shiny things to scare them off.


I dug up a large crop of my Egyptian Walking Onions a week or so ago which I am, in short sessions, chopping and freezing. These onions are not kidding around. They are VERY strong and they make my eyes burn and tear like you wouldn't believe. Last year's crop mostly filled a one-gallon freezer bag, and lasted us all year. I took a few of the above-ground bulbs this plant uses to spread and planted them in pots. I will find a new spot for them later, but in the meantime, they have lovely white flowers!


The hubs and I picked this wonderfully fragrant cinnamon basil up at our neighborhood farmer's market. It has lovely purple-ish stems and purple flowers. It's going gang busters, and I need to pinch it back so it doesn't go to seed!


The rosemary and sage seem to like their spots. There are multiple plants of each of these, and I recently had to (viciously) cut back the sage as it was making a bid for world domination, but I waited for it to finish its show of purple flowers first!


The asiatic lilies were here when we moved in, but they are now tucked between the sage and lavender, which is also in bloom. You can also see the borage blooming behind it in the in-ground garden.


These tiny portacula (also known as moss roses) are on their third or fourth round of blooms. These are some of my favorites this year, but I kind of wish I had planted them closer together! Live and learn...


The dill I purposefully planted two years ago continues to re-seed itself. It smells heavenly!


Please excuse my finger that made its way into the following picture. Since so many of my seedlings got fried this year, the hubs and I bought several pepper plants from the farmers market. There are five varieties this year, so we should be set for peppers for quite a while! I planted most of them in pots to save room in the raised beds.


The in-ground garden is having a great first year! Maybe it's the virgin soil, or the compost nd organic fertilizer I dug in, but nearly everything I planted here is huge and growing fast! Case and point, I had intended the middle path to be easily walkable, but I definitely have to turn sideways to avoid breaking off errant tomato branches.


The swiss chard is looking lovely, and one of my projects for the day is to make chard chips from these lovelies!


A better picture of the borage. I have never planted this before, but bees love it, and the tiny flowers taste like cucumbers! I also hear that you can eat the leaves if you get them when they are small, but they get spiny and tough when they get large.


I have had to steak, tie, trellis, etc. all of the tomato plants. They are HUGE and have tons of green tomatoes on them right now. You can see them peeking through the leaves, and I've got one or two that are almost ripe!


Another experiment this year is pumpkins. I planted Jack-be-little pumpkins. They are small sugar pumpkins that are ideal for small-space gardening, and can even be grown in a large container and trellised! I planted one to grow on the ground like traditional pumpkins, and a few more to be trellised. I wanted to see if one way worked better than the other, so I'll keep you posted on what I find!


Moving on to the raised beds, the squash is blooming! I only planted two of these so we wouldn't get overwhelmed by squash as the summer goes along. As much as I love yellow squash, I don't need five tons of it!


I ran out of appropriately sized pots before I ran out of peppers, so some of them ended up in raised beds after I dug out the onions. Supposedly, this is a less than ideal rotation, but I had to have a place to put them, so hopefully they'll turn out okay. One of them is currently sporting a banana pepper, so I'll take that as a good sign!


The second bed is planted with nothing but beans. I plant bush habit green beans every year because they always give a good harvest, and freeze well, but I also planted some speckled lima beans my mom gave me seeds for. The seeds are gorgeous...red with black speckles. I can't wait to see what they taste like!


The third bed is planted with purple beans and another trial this year: okra. I love making vegetable gumbo (it was one of my grandmother's best loved recipes), so I'm hoping for a good crop to go with my tomatoes so I can make a big pot or two!


The last bed is planted with turnips, which you can see peeking up above the soil, more peppers, and what is looking to be failed malabar spinach. You can see in the close-up picture how tiny those seedlings are, and I planted them in March!! What a disappointment. I probably should cut my losses and find something else to plant there, but I kind of want to see what happens with them. Supposedly, this variety will grow through the summer, but I will need to give it some kind of trellis to grow on.



So there you have it. One very long post, but a good idea of what is going on in the veggie garden. I have a couple of to-do's which should get done in the next week or two, but other than pulling weeds and keeping things watered, the garden is mostly self-sufficient, which is great. How is your garden doing?

Thursday, January 1, 2015

Tentative Garden Schedule

Happy New Year! I mentioned a few days ago that I was working on a schedule of garden tasks so I will be more likely to achieve said goals. I am nothing if not goal and deadline oriented.

Anyway, what follows is a TENTATIVE schedule of garden to-do's. Many of these (particularly the ones that involve some kind of construction or soil work) are weather dependent, but this at least gives some sort of structure to what might otherwise seem like an overwhelming task of getting the garden started for the year.

December 30:
*Construction - attach lattice to fence for trellis

January 1:
Plan  garden layout
Cutoff top of one barrel. Drill holes in sides and bottom to use as compost bin

January 2:
*Seed starting - lettuce, basil, perilla
Wash pots with bleach and water first

January 4:
Cut top out of other barrel, install spigot and figure out how to attach screen or landscape fabric over top to keep out leaves and bugs. Store in shed till warmer weather.

January 17-18:
*Seed starting - verbena, celery

February 7-8:
*Seed starting - scarlet poppy, jalapeƱo, bell peppers

February 21-22:
*Seed starting - tomatoes, cauliflower, Iceland poppy

March 7-8:
Till in-ground garden. Make sure to add compost and organic fertilizer!

March 9:
Amend soil in raised beds with compost and organic fertilizer 

March 11:
Attach gutter to back of shed with a downspout that will pour into the rain barrel.
Level ground under downspout and set up rain barrel on concrete blocks.

March 14-15:
*Seed starting - squash, 
*Direct sow - peas, turnips, spinach, Cleome, zinnia, cosmos, portacula, hyssop

March 28-29:
*Direct sow - Swiss chard, mustard greens, carrots,

April 4-5:
*Seed starting - 
*Direct Sow - bachelor's button, borage, beets

April 18-19:
*Direct sow- sunflower, hollyhocks, marigolds

May 2-3:
*Direct sow - pumpkin, cucumber

May 16-17:
*Direct sow - beans

Saturday, May 25, 2013

State of the Vegetable Garden, May 2013

Whew! I know I haven't written about gardening lately, but that doesn't mean I haven't been toiling away! So here's a post to catch you all up. Warning: it's long!

The seeds I had leftover from last year, and the ones that I ordered have all been started, and I've got some of the seedlings planted in the garden boxes. Sadly, not all of them yet though!

Just in the past couple days, the garden has seen great improvement! I spent a good bit of the day planting herbs (sage and basil) in pots to put around the retaining wall

The rhubarb was already there, but I have plans to make strawberry rhubarb pie next weekend!

And my ever-helpful buddy Patrick came over to help me build another garden box, so now I have three, and we have plans to build another one on Monday! We were going to build both yesterday, but ran out of light by the time we got the first one finished.

Oh! and may I introduce my newest garden helper? Meet Betsy Lou.

She is a sweet, young (only a year and a half) rescue. I have been fostering dogs for an East Nashville rescue called East C.A.N. and was fostering Betsy for them, but the hubs and I talked, and we decided she's home :-) Seger loves having a little sister (even if she is MUCH bigger than him...she's 70 lbs!!) and the two of them spend lots of time in the backyard running and playing.

Ok....back to gardening....I harvested my first crop of peas yesterday. Those are going gangbusters. They've actually grown taller than the trellis.

 You can see where I've planted some lettuce. It's not very big yet, and it looks like it maybe got dog smashed....*sigh*

These are the lemon tree tomatoes (not all of them....there are more planted elsewhere, and still to be planted!). 

These (to the left) are trionfo violetto beans. Even their stalks are purple! I can't wait to see what they look like as they get a little bigger.

These (to the right) are a variety of onion sent home with me by Patrick. I guess they grow onions at the top of the plant as well as growing them as a root. My mom says they might be Egyptian walking onions....anyone know for sure?

Bonus shot of the garden box layout. I think the fourth one is going to end up on the far end of the line. Eventually I'd like to have a total of eight, but we'll see what happens!

The blueberry bush has gotten a lot bigger, and is already putting on berries. Hopefully I'll have a good crop this year.


In the retaining wall bed, I planted various herbs and flowers that are coming up. There's dill....

....and sage....

...and nasturtiums....

....and I think these might be asiatic lilies. Not sure yet. I kept pulling them last year because I thought they were weeds, but I'm pretty sure someone actually put these here on purpose haha.

 The tea rose is putting on buds. The ones in front have already finished their first round of blooms and are getting ready for a second. Doesn't this one look like it's ready to burst open?

Oh, and I keep waiting and waiting for the garlic to be ready to pull. I thought it was supposed to be ready in the spring, but I also know you aren't supposed to pull it till the leaves die, so I guess I'll keep waiting....

I dug up this spot just this morning to plant the faerie watermelon, and a few sunflowers. I have a lot more digging to do to plant all those sunflower seeds though!

 My lemon balm has come back with a vengeance! I'm seeing more cocktails in my future....maybe a jelly? Anyone have any ideas??

This mint was, I think, accidentally passed along to me by my voice teacher and his wife. They gave me a bunch of flowers to put in my flower beds out front, but I'm not sure if this was supposed to be in there or not! It looks a little sad right now....probably because it's a clump of dirt sitting on dry leaves (need to fix that), but knowing how hardy mint is, I think it'll be alright until I can get my hands on some more potting soil.

Oh, and here are the first of my container tomatoes. I need to prop it up with something....hmmmm....

Kudos to you if you seriously just read all that. How is your garden looking? Did you plant anything super neato/unusual this year?

Friday, February 1, 2013

Seed Order 2013

Since doing my seed inventory last week, I decided I could fill in some holes to round out my garden this year. Here's the run-down of what I ordered.

  1. Caballero Pepper - I've been wanting to try some chiles, and this is a variety of poblano.
  2. Ancho 101 Pepper - more chilis...maybe I went a little overboard? This one is supposed to be sweeter.
  3.  Watermelon (faerie hybrid) - This is a yellow-skinned, small watermelon meant for smaller gardens....hopefully that will hold true and I won't have a yard full of watermelon vines!!
  4. Tomato (Lemon tree) - from the pictures, these actually do look like lemons. Supposedly they have a lemony flavor as well.
  5. Tomato (Maskotka hybrid) - This one is a cherry tomato that is supposed to grow well in containers. These will go on the back deck.
  6. Dwarf White Sugar Peas - a bush habit pea similar to the ones I grew last year
  7. Pole Beans (Tionfo Violetto) - these guys are purple! I'm really interested to see how they taste.
  8. Cayenne Pepper - because my husband REALLY likes spicy food.
  9. Beet (Touchstone Gold hybrid) - a yellow beet.
  10. Echinacea (Purpurea, Pow Wow Wildberry) - These I will sow in the next week or so (indoors) and hopefully will have some coneflowers in my near future!
  11. Sage
  12. Lavender (Munstead) - This one is an experiment. I've heard that lavender is difficult to grow from seed, so we'll see how this goes.
  13. Feverfew - this herb is supposed to have medicinal properties regarding pain relief and fever reducing. It is also supposed to drive pests away when planted around roses. Guess where these are getting planted?
  14. Zinnia mix - I didn't plant these last year, but two years ago, the flower beds were nearly taken over by the 6 foot tall zinnias! I had cut flowers all summer long, and the more I cut, the more they grew.
  15. Marigold (Tiger Eye)
What are you planning to plant this year?

Monday, January 28, 2013

A Pre-Order Seed Inventory

With the January arrival of seed catalogs, I've been hard at work planning this year's garden! I have ordered some seeds, but I wanted to make sure to use what I already had on hand to keep costs down, but also just to not be wasteful. So...without further ado, here is my list of what I already have on hand.

  1. Sunflowers - I've got a 1/4 lb of these suckers....I'm thinking of just digging a (shallow) trench along the back fence, tossing them in the ground and seeing what happens. That said, I've still got a LOT of sunflower seeds....anyone in Nashville need some???
  2. Lettuce (Summer Mix) - this is a cut-and-come again loose leaf variety that I've had good luck with in the past, but have some left over from last year.
  3. Tomato (Costoluto Genovese) - leftover from last year. I was a little disappointed in the yields, but I also didn't get them in the ground until July, so that MAY have had something to do with it.
  4. Basil (Mrs. Burns lemon) - I was unsuccessful in getting these to sprout last year, but I may try again, just because I have the seeds. I can always buy a started basil plant if it's unsuccessful.
  5. Jalapeno - again, leftover from last year. These didn't get as big as my monster jalapeno two years ago, but they still had decent yields, despite the fact that these also didn't make it into the ground until July.
  6. Red leaved Perilla - leftover from last year, though I have to admit, I never actually used any of it in my cooking!
  7. Dill
  8. Green Bean (Blue Lake 274, bush type and Bush Blue Lake 156)
  9. Broccoli (Packman Hybrid) - at last check, this was actually still producing!
  10. Turnip (White Lady hybrid)
  11. Onion (Parade) - this is a green onion that was just starting to sprout in the garden when it got dog-trampled....boo.
  12. Columbines - I had meant to plant these last year, but then we bought a house and moved, so they are now in my refrigerator chilling since I neglected to plant them in the fall (fail)
  13. Cleome - these are pass-along seeds from my voice teacher's wife.
  14. Nasturtium 
  15. Hibiscus, red and white - these seeds were saved from some growing along Nashville's greenway
  16. Mustard Greens - never managed to get these planted in the fall....again....fail.
  17. I also think I have some yellow squash seeds around somewhere....There were lots of things that just got tossed in boxes during the move....I'm still finding things!
  18. Caroline Reaper - THESE are special. My mother is friends with a man named Eddie Currie, who breeds hot peppers in SC. He owns Pucker Butt Pepper Company (you can check them out here). Eddie now holds the Guinness World Record for the hottest pepper in the world, and this lucky girl has some seeds! My hubby loves spicy food, and these are supposed to have a nice fruity flavor to go with the heat. I'm really excited to get these babies growing!

Monday, October 1, 2012

More Fall Plantings

The rest of my fall planting order has arrived! Woo hoo! Here's what I've got:

Moon River Peony
California Hard Neck Garlic
Naturalizing Daffodils
Apricot Beauty Tulips

With that, and the fall season, comes some to-do's:
  1. Find spots for and plant my new goodies!
  2. Plant bulbs given to me by my voice teacher and his wife (I have a giant tray full of bulbs! Mostly daffodil...they think)
  3. Plant more green onions, lettuce and mustard greens
  4. Clean out pots. I have some iris and daylilies in containers from the apartment that I have been waiting to plant in the ground. Others are just past their prime and are looking scraggly or need to be brought inside before it gets too cold.
  5. Stir compost and add leaves as they fall and are raked up
What does your fall clean-up/to-do list look like?

Thursday, August 23, 2012

Re-Establishing Flower beds

It's been a little chaotic around here the past couple weeks, but in between the chaos (and the heat....and the mosquitoes that try to eat my face every time I step out the door), I have been hard at work trying to re-establish the flower beds in front of the house. So far, I've got one down (thankfully, the larger of the two), one to go.

If you will recall, the left flower bed looked something like this when we moved in (after I added some gifted plants)

Giant mass of weeds. Yikes. I have to admit, I was really dreading pulling all of them, so I started looking for other ways to get rid of them.

I read somewhere that you could use newspaper as a temporary, cheaper, biodegradable weed cloth under mulch, so I decided to give it a try.

I did pull the worst of the weeds, just so it was easier to lay the newspaper down, and laid down a couple layers of newspaper, soaking them with water as I went so they didn't fly off in any unexpected breezes. Once I got a reasonable-sized area covered, I used pine bark mulch (the cheap stuff....not Scotts brand or anything...that would have gotten expensive in a hurry!!) to cover the newspaper so my neighbors wouldn't talk bad about me haha.

Here's an in-process picture.


When I ran out of newspaper, I decided to take a break. That break turned into a two-week break. Oops. That was about the time the mosquitoes got really bad and started trying to eat us every time we stepped out the door.


This morning I resolved to get back on it. I tried to go to Kroger (which is supposed to open round the clock) to by more newspaper, but they were closed for some reason or another, so on to Home Depot I went for more mulch and to see if they had some kind of paper that might be serviceable. Man, am I glad. Here's what I found.
I'm hoping this stuff will actually work better than newspaper, since it's thicker. Plus, I can use the leftovers on other projects instead of just tossing/recycling whatever is left.

Scissors and giant roll of paper in hand, I got down to business, again, soaking the paper as I went to avoid shifting.

This paper went much faster than newspaper since I didn't have to put down multiple layers or deal with flimsiness.

Then, I mulched, and stood back to admire my handiwork.


The plants that are already here should grow together some. I also have an order in for things like tulip and daffodil bulbs...and a peony!

So now that I've gotten to show off a little, now comes the part where I hang my head in shame and promise to fix this....like tomorrow...

Again. Yikes. Oh, and see E.T. peeking out the basement window? That would be my husband's sense of humor at work.

Any major gardening projects you've been tackling? Any you are dreading/putting off?