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missed
Monday, September 1st, 2008

This is a bit out of order, but:

We found out why you should not plant carrots in pots. Even if your winter is lasting forever. We pulled them up around August 1st. One or two were too tough to eat. The others tasted fine (I didn’t notice any difference between the various colors), but were small and contorted. The leaves on on all were lush and happy. Too bad that’s not the part you eat.

The yellow squash, after we moved the plant to less intense spot and got better at watering the correct amount, gave us several large, creamy squashes. This is from Aug 18.

Since then it has finished flowering, and mildew has started to attack the leaves.

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Harvest
Sunday, August 31st, 2008

With a warm week in mid July, two in August, and several pleasant days in between, we seem to be reaching the end of this year’s abbreviated summer.

The blackberries are mostly over now, but mid August we picked enough from across the street to make a cobbler.

Our garlic plants were flattened by wind storms and the encroaching squash, making the tops no longer usable. Underneath, all had developed bulbs a bit smaller than the average grocery store ones, with a bit stronger aroma and flavor.

The squash was similarly pushing over the red onions. Dear god they grew slow. Since planting in mid April (around 130 days), the largest got to about 2 inches in diameter. Only their outer layer is red. (And what a pretty color!) Their insides are all white. We’re using the onion tops as well. In place of the onions, garlic and where the cauliflower used to be (which we gave up on at least a month ago because it was full of bugs that refused to be washed off and tasted no better than cauliflower purchased from the store), Mike planted carrots, lettuce and spinach.

Several of our first tomatoes have had blossom end rot. The top halves are untouched and super tasty. We are getting tomatoes from the Early Girl and Yellow Pear. The volunteer Plum Romas are very green still.

We used our tomatoes, garlic and thyme to make roasted tomatoes yesterday.

Mike picked our first corn today. And then we made pesto with our basil and garlic.

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fruit
Sunday, July 20th, 2008

All of the tomatoes have green fruit on them now. Even the volunteer tomato, which we’ve staked up and kept watering.

While it always perks back up, the yellow squash was wilting pretty badly during the during some of our warmer days, and I think that ended up damaging the first round of squash.

We have one pepper. All of the other flowers keep falling off. Here they say that peppers won’t set fruit below 65 degrees (!) so we’ve started pulling the plants in at night. It’s been getting into the mid 70’s lately, with a few days in the lower 80’s and a few colder than 70. Our lows have been around 55.

Our replanted spinach and lettuce don’t like the heat. The spinach has started bolting already, and they aren’t more than 2 inches tall.

And we have a couple of wee little baby watermelons:

We tied the leaves around the cauliflower heads a week or two ago with yarn, but they’ve now outgrown their hats.

We’ve seen several northern flickers lately. There were 5 on the telephone pole this afternoon.

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knotweed
Monday, July 7th, 2008

On Mom’s last visit, she identified our pretty but horribly invasive and persistent japanese weed as knotweed. I’ve just pulled up all of it that was up against the garden plot. I’m not stating this as an accomplishment, as there’s plenty left just two feet away (and we even saw it up at Olallie State Park this weekend), but just to see how long it takes for it to regrow up past the railroad ties again. Two weeks?

They need neither dirt nor water (they store it in their segmented stems) and chopping them off at ground level doesn’t faze them in the least.  I’ve dug down 8 inches or so to remove all their roots in our garden area and still they come back.

I also pulled off two green caterpillars from the smaller cauliflowers. I didn’t notice any slugs this morning. One of the larger cauliflowers is starting to grow florets.

Unrelated but current garden pictures:

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flip flop
Sunday, June 29th, 2008

With yesterday’s high of 84 and today’s forecasted high of 90, which for once looks entirely likely, vigilant watering is the new name of the game.

The cauliflower at the far edge of the plot near the driveway has pretty much totally given up. Not its fault. We knew the dirt in that area is still really poor, but we’d run out of space. The wilted cauliflower has not recovered, but it’s not dead yet, either. Most of the smaller cauliflowers are pretty bug eaten, but the original ones are doing ok. I think they like it a bit cooler than this.

The carrots seem to be doing well, and we have flowers on all of the tomatoes. On this one, a spider is waiting for a smallish pollinator to become lunch.

We’ve decided that we were successful in selecting the yellow squash to go in a container since it’s started blooming before sending a bunch of vines out, and we have a guess on which un-hill is the pumpkins and which is the butternut.

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morning frenzy
Friday, June 20th, 2008

This early, early morning, after Mike showed me a pair of mating earth worms (apparently they ooze for each other), I found and squished nine slugs lazily munching in our garden.  It’s not exactly fulfilling to see their green insides which used to be our corn or squash.  These guys hide during the day, and indeed the largest slug I’ve ever dealt with startled me from my parsley plant when I was picking some sprigs for a midnight dinner.

I don’t think it’s a slug’s fault, but one of our original cauliflower plants has wilted horribly.  It started just doing that during the day, but didn’t seem to be related to water.  We think something got to its roots.

There are a few new spinach and lettuce seedlings coming up.  And the yellow pear in the ground has its first blooms starting.  This round of tomato plants looks much better than our first lanky ones did.

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