Sunday, May 30, 2010

Busy!

No updates for the last several days, because I've been busy! And it seems as though my garden's been just as rambunctious as me. Pictures galore, see for yourself!


So I have, at the moment, 4 Better/Big Boy (I forgot which, whoops!), 1 July, 2 heirloom, and 6 cherry tomato plants. For the math challenged, that's 13 tomato plants. THIRTEEN. I'm going to have to learn how to can tomatoes, for sure.

Three of them already have bunches of blooms on them already, so I'm sure I'll have a few to show off come July.

The biggest ones are a foot and a half to two feet high, about up to my knees. Thank you summer-come-early! It's been 80s several days the past week or so.
The lettuce is edible! I thinned it out a little (yes, this picture is of THINNED lettuce) and made a couple salads, and had some on a hamburger. It's a 'Buttercrunch' variety, and it's got a real good flavor. Way better than the stuff I'm used to from the grocery. I think I've been converted.

[Remember, this is what it looked like just a couple weeks ago...









 ...so wow.]


Cucumbers are finally growing! I won't jinx myself, but the seedings are coming up, and the transplants have taken. The really warm weather helped, I'm sure, but just to make sure I have some BT coming in the mail. Turns out it was some fly larvae chewing out the cuke and bean stems from underground. Eww.

I'll put the trellis in later, once they've gotten a little bigger. This picture (as are all here) was taken yesterday, and even now their second set of leaves have started to come on. Sweet!


Garlic, Peas, and more pictures... I'm getting lazy, so I'll let them do the talking. One note though, I went to the farmer's market, and saw some peppers. I had ripped up two of my pepper plants, cause they looked wimpy/sickly, and wanted replacements. A small thing of six cost $1.50 (!!! I should do more shopping at the tail end of the season). So... I planted the extra four around my other plants. I now have a total of 11 pepper plants. Four Cali Sweet, One chocolate, Six (the newbs) Purple Sweet. Yeah... I hope I can can peppers too.


And, because I feel like it, a tally:

Tomatoes: 13
Peppers: 11
Onions: 19
Garlic: 5
Cucumbers: 10 (more TK)
Glads: 10 (more TK)
Lettuce: lots!
Peas & Beans: 12ish

Totals: Priceless

( /dork =] )


Saturday, May 15, 2010

Show & Tell

I got LOTS of awesome things done in the garden today!

First, the cherry tomatoes. I have SIX of them. Yes, that's probably too many, but oh well! Tomatoes are cool.

Today, I took two of the biggest ones and put them into big containers. The taller of the two I protected, taking some bamboo stakes I had previously purchased (to keep the tree shelters flying away, for my in-garden tomatoes) and wrapped cellophane around them. It was just windy and I didn't want to look over and see the poor thing horribly mutilated. I'll removed it once the plant is a bit stronger. The other one seems just fine, likely because it's got some protection from the lip of its container.




Next up are two tomato plants I bought yesterday.

"But wait!" you ask. "Don't you already have FIVE tomato plants planted?"

Yes, indeed I do. Didn't I mention tomato plants are awesome?

These, however, are EXTRA amazing. They're heirloom plants, which is to say, they are grown from old fashioned seeds, kept and bred generation after generation, to differing ends. (Saving and planting seeds from hybrids doesn't work like that; it's like beating a dead horse. The seeds are sterile.)

The closer plant is a Cherokee Purple, which will, hopefully, turn out purple and crazy-shaped fruit. The farther plant is a Green Zebra, which will be a lighter green with darker green stripes running through it. I'm still not sure how I'm going to tell if the fruit is ripe or not. I suppose I'll know once I try eating one!

Also, doesn't that lettuce look lovely? There's one in the bottom corner that didn't want to line up with his friends, apparently.


The peas are also coming along nicely. Nothing grand happening here, I just thought the picture came out nice.

In the corner there, at the top of the picture, is where I just came in from sowing some cucumber seeds. My first try was transplants, which died. Second try, a transplant, also failed. Seeds that I sowed nearly simultaneously, my third attempt, dried up. A handful of seeds that I tried a week later, rotted from too much wet (and chilly) weather, so my fourth attempt also ended badly.

I am nothing if not persistent.

This time I sprouted seeds inside, in a wet paper towel. They took less than 24 hours to germinate (22 hours, if you're counting), so I know that these seeds want to grow, if I can just get them the right conditions. I planted about 8 seeds of lemon cucumber and 8 of normal cucumber, each in their own row so I'll know which is which. Water, warmth, and a quick prayer and hopefully they'll survive. My sleeves are almost out of tricks, after all.

Speaking of failure, several of my onions rotted in the soil (curses! spoiled again!). So, on venturing to the garden centre down the road, I was pleasantly surprised to see onion sets on sale! Way too many than I'll use, but a nice deal nonetheless. And I scored the last bag! I always hear a little evil laugh in my head when that happens: Mwahaha! The onions! They are all mine! *Rubs hands together deviously*

So I planted 8-10 of them. I have 4 that have come up really well, plus 2 that are just starting to come along. So I should have a dozen, at the very least.

Also tried to plant garlic. I had some in my cupboard, and I saw in Crockett's Victory Garden (thanks for the book, Dad!) he says you can just buy garlic from the market and plant the cloves. So... hey, why not, right? I planted 5. Worst case is they'll rot. Or sit there and do nothing. I've got a whole bulb left for fending off vampires, so I should be set.

Let's end with some pictures of my strawberries, shall we? I'll let them speak for themselves.

Sunday, May 9, 2010

Lettuce & Peas & Farmer's Marketing

So not too much to report on in the garden: the tomatoes are inching up toward the tops of the tree shelters; the cucumbers are still unhappy with the weather; the peppers are still present and accounted for; beans haven't sprung up yet. I was pleasantly surprised to see one of my glad bulbs poking up through the soil though! They were terribly dry---almost presumed dead---when I tossed 'em in.

Both the lettuce and the peas have taken off, despite really crazy weather (read: wind gusts of 50+ mph, fire warnings from dry air, hot & humid 80s over the past week or so). Overall, the nights have been cool though, and they're both cool-weather crops, so I suppose this isn't a HUGE shocker. Still, it's fun to see something really growing in there!

Lettuce as of May 1st, versus what it looks like today, May 9th:



And peas! They grew as much if not more than the lettuce in the past week.


I'll probably still get some different kinds of lettuce from the farmer's market, since I've got just the one variety in there. In fact, the farmer's market in Madison just started this past Friday! (Heheh, I am pretty smooth with those segways, eh?) I got a few things---bread, cheese, pesto, pie, jam---but no lettuce, since I already had some from the grocery store. Amazingly, there were some strawberry plants there with already ripe berries on them! HOW DID THEY DO THAT!? Haha, mine are still pretty dinky. They're getting there though...


In other news, the wild blackberry bushes are starting to fill out! I am definitely getting a bit of netting to ward of all these pesky birds once I start seeing berries. The little birdies look cute, but never let that fool you...look away and a swarm of the devious little buggers will descend on those bushes in no time.

Oh, and the last post? Yeah, did most of that last weekend. 'Cept checking on the water sitch. It's rained every couple days, so I haven't had to worry about it. I'm sure that'll change come summertime.

Also: I am not looking forward to the frost warning tonight and tomorrow. :C

Saturday, May 1, 2010

Plans

Things I must do this weekend:

Paint the trellises I made last weekend

Remove dead tomato plant (killed by gale-force winds...!)

Direct-sow some cucumber seeds (I don't think the ones I have in are going to make it; combination transplanting shock and poor weather)

Transplant lettuce (I think they'll do better outside)

Leave cuke outside to harden off (planted one about a week ago, and now it's already getting big for its container!) 

Go to the nursery and purchase:
    1 new tomato plant, maybe 2 if they have neat varieties
    more fencing to keep the cat out
    possibly something for next to the gladiolas; broccoli, carrots, melon? Only if something catches my eye...

Things I might have to do this weekend:

Build or assemble a rain water barrel. The hose (that I assume is used to water the grass) has no external on/off switch. Rather, it leads directly into the side of the building, into the back of our laundry facilities (remember, I DO live in an apartment). Unfortunately, that room has been locked recently. It hadn't been before... too bad I never went exploring earlier. I'm pretty sure it's just storage space. Therefore I may not have convenient access to a water supply. I'm making trips with the watering can for now.

Trip to the hardware store. If I do have access to the water supply, I'll only need to purchase an on/off switch for the end of the hose. Of course, unless I catch the building supervisor to ask her about it (she's really nice, but I think someone has her on fast-forward) I will continue with the ol' watering can technique until next weekend.

Happy May!