Monday, August 18, 2008

Late Summer Blahs

It happens this time every year ... the excitement has worn off, just about everything's bloomed and I can't even bring myself to keep up with the watering ... the Late Summer Blahs!
You fellow gardeners must know what I mean. Every spring, you can't wait to see the perennials breaking thru the surface, going to the nursery to pick out this season's crop of annuals, waiting for those first tomatoes, why even watering is an absolute pleasure in the beginning ...

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I love to walk along my garden path each morning, peruse it at lunchtime and then go over it once more before twilight. But lately, I can't be bothered to do much else than make sure the waterfall's running properly, the fish have been fed and the glut of new tomatoes have been harvested. Remember just a couple of weeks ago I was complaining about the lack of red tomatoes ... I knew what was coming. Now I'm up to my ears in tomatoes, peppers and cucumbers.
And yes, although I couldn't wait for that first fresh taste ... now I'm trying to unload them on anybody I can. But it's hard because everyone's veggies are coming at the same time ... I couldn't even be bothered this weekend to chop up and freeze my peppers. I'll get to it ... sometime.
It doesn't help that my petunias and impatiens look beaten. Yes, after blogging about petunias needing lots of fertilizer, I bought Miracle Grow extra blooming formula and applied it immediately. Then I went on vacation, hoping that I would come back to refreshed, stellar blooming annuals. Not the case. I cut them back, but they still managed to get stringy. Yes, they're blooming, but not like they were in mid-July.
Same with those annual geraniums that I proudly planted in May. They were supposed to bloom all season long. Didn't happen. They're healthy for the most part (I lost a few). They've grown bigger than I thought, but the whole point was to have constant blooms. I'd have to give them a "thumbs down" at this point.
And although I was initially excited by all the salvias coming up thru the garden path on they're own, now they just look cluttered and it's getting difficult to walk thru. I have some major garden cleaning to do, but I'm just not up to it yet. I have another vacation coming up (remember I said I'd warn you), so it'll just have to wait till I get back.
Oh well, in just a few short months, I'll be missing it all again, and waiting for another spring. And soon the Blahs will pass and I'll be getting excited about fall planting ... it's just a few weeks away!

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I haven't forgotten ... I'll get to the Stargazer Lillies and Hibiscus this week.

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Monday, July 28, 2008

Veggie Tales

In between storms this weekend, I did manage to spend some time gardening. And I'm pleased to say -- AGAIN -- that my Planting Season 2008 is finally over. Yes, I know I've said it before, but this time... I MEAN IT!

After a particularly big blow-out of weather yesterday afternoon, I got out there, moved a couple of hostas and planted the rest of the "clearance" items I bought at Lowe's last week. It's done. It's over. I feel a little like Frodo after he threw the ring into the fires of Mount Doom ...

Now, on to more pressing matters ... the vegetable garden. So far, this season is holding a lot of promise, but that's about it. I mean, I have lots and lots of green tomatoes on the vine, but I've only harvested 3 red ones. My cherry tomatoes are finally turning and I'm up to about a dozen picked so far.

You might remember back in June (June 4, to be exact) I planted two tomato and four pepper plants in Earthboxes, shown here.
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According to www.earthbox.com: "The patented EarthBox was developed by commercial farmers and proven in the lab and on the farm. Our maintenance-free, award-winning, high-tech growing system controls soil conditions, eliminates guesswork and more than doubles the yield of a conventional garden-with less fertilizer, less water and virtually no effort."
The EarthBox is a resin planter box. Inside is a plastic screen and a small bag of accessories. Remove the fill tube from the accessory bag and press it thru the support. After packing the two rear corner cutouts in the screen with moist potting mix, you must pour water thru the fill tube until it runs out the overflow hole. This is the way you'll water your plants after planting.

The EarthBox promises that if you follow their instructions, you'll have the best yield ever! Well, here's how my plants look now.
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They certainly are growing, but so far, the yield hasn't been the best ever. But like I said above, both tomato plants are bursting with green veggies. I'm sure that they'll all turn red at the same time -- like they seem to do every year. If you grow tomatoes at home, you know what I mean. It's like we wait and wait and wait for those fresh tomatoes, only to be overcome with them all at once!

Yes, despite my best efforts, I still end up throwing away spoiled tomatoes. And don't even get me started on the cherry tomatoes. I know one year we stopped counting at 200 because it was getting ridiculous!

Anyway, soon we'll be making fresh bruschetta, and nothing beats a fresh Lebanon, tomato and mayo sandwich on sourdough toast. In the meantime, we can take solace in the abundance of cucumbers! We did so well with this vegetable last year that we planted six vines this year.

I chose a new spot for the cucumber vines -- the new "cutting" garden that I constructed this past spring. I thought the vines would look nice creeping up the side of the shed behind the various wildflowers and "cutting" flowers that I was hoping would come up from the seeds I scattered. Anyway, check it out -- before and after -- not too shabby, huh? More on the cutting garden on another day ...Photobucket
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Back to the veggies -- anyone having any luck with green peppers yet? Here's our peppers when they were planted in the EarthBox on June 4. A nice neat little row of green seedlings.
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They sure have grown well (the peppers are the box on the right in the above photo with the tomato plants), but, like the tomatoes, while they have a lot of little peppers on them (one plant has a dozen), nothing is getting real big. I took one off over the weekend just to see if it was ready, and it was OK, but I would like to see them get bigger. Especially the orange-gold ones that I haven't tried before.
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So, the jury's still out on the effectiveness of the EarthBoxes. The plants are doing very well, but I'm still waiting for the "best yield ever!"

Coming up tomorrow, the wonderful zucchini. We're having a great season with these. But what happens when you're sick of making bread -- I'll share some recipes that my family's enjoying this year.

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