June garden, April weather

Tomatoes lower left and upper right, basil, eggplant & beans lower right, squash and beans upper left. Leek flowers in background and nasturtiums here and there.

After a long, cool, wintry spring, we may be about to jump headfirst into summer. The forecast says the temp will finally reach 90 today, weeks later than our normal first 90 of the year.

Except for some powdery mildew on my roses and crepe myrtle, the cool, wet spring doesn’t really seem to have done any harm. In fact, I think my tomatoes are better for having a chance to get settled in and growing well before that first blast of summer heat. They couldn’t look healthier, and the two cherry varieties (sungold and sugar smack) have reached the seventh rung on the tomato cages, about 36 inches. They were about 12 inches high when I did the last blog update, 17 days ago!

Every tomato plant has set little tomatoes, and the sungold has several of those long clusters that make me so happy. Normally, I would have found one or two ripe sungolds by this time, but it looks like that’s still a few weeks away.

Everything else is growing just as well. I pulled out the peas and planted an assortment of other pole beans on that long trellis. The other trellis is all Blue Lake pole beans, so on the new one, I planted 1/4 each Spanish Musica, rattlesnake, purple pole and French gold. If nothing else, it should be colorful!

Elsewhere in the garden, things are looking good. The raised planter on the side of the house (pictured in my header) is overflowing with color, dominated by the snapdragons I planted for winter color last fall. They just sat there looking uncomfortable until about a month ago, and now they’re blooming their heads off. It will interesting to see how long they last in the summer heat. My back fence is completely covered with white star jasmine blossoms that perfume the whole garden, house, and probably the neighbors’ as well now that it’s finally warmed up. That’s only fair, considering the cold suppressed the citrus blossom smell almost entirely this spring.

About a year ago, I joined a yahoo group of mostly women gardeners here in East Sac. Tomorrow we’re having a private tour of one anothers’ gardens. I’m looking forward to seeing the rest of them and showing off my own.

Jasmine keeps growing over this sun and a matching moon plaque. Occasionally I remember them and prune away enough to expose them again.

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Summer garden progress

The peas should probably be classified as winter/spring garden plants, but this year’s cool weather has allowed them to linger on and on and on. I love sugar snap peas, but I’m beginning to tire of them! Also, I think I probably should have shopped more carefully for the seeds I used. I bought a package of “Suzie Irwin’s Squirrel’s Choice Sugar Snap Pole Peas” at my garden center, and I seem to have an assortment of the sugar snaps I expected mixed with snow peas and regular garden peas. I won’t buy that brand again.

When I take the peas out in a few weeks, I’ll plant a second crop of pole beans. I NEVER get tired of green beans.

I planted tomatoes May 1, when they looked like this:

I measure the growth of my tomato plants by the squares in the cages, which are about five inches. When they were planted, they just barely reached the first five inch mark, but now they’ve more than doubled in height. Two and a half weeks later, the same plant looks like this.

(That’s Fat Lizzie doing her head-down badger walk in the background.)

I planted six California Wonder pepper plants, three gold and three red, about a week ago. The plants were small, but they seem to be off to a good start.

My Blue Lake pole beans are just getting their second set of leaves after a cruel attack by snails (Sluggo to the rescue), and my lemon cucumber and green and yellow pattypan squash seeds just sprouted in the past couple of days.

I also planted three eggplants, even though I’m not all that fond of eggplant, because they are such beautiful plants. I do like ratatouille (well disguised eggplant) and I can always leave them on the neighbors’ porches.

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Planting tomatoes

I order my tomato plants from a company only 80 miles or so away. I don’t start them from seed because I don’t really have a place indoors to do it, and because I have room for only one or two of each of five or six varieties.

I used to buy them at local nurseries, but one too many times I got tomatoes that obviously weren’t the variety labeled. I don’t know if it’s the fault of the nursery, or the wholesaler, or careless customers, but it made me crazy.

Anyway, Natural Gardening Company has a wonderful selection of varieties and strong, healthy plants. They arrive at my house just one day after they’re shipped, in beautiful condition.

This year I planted 4 Carmellos, 2 Sungold, 2 Sugar Snack, 2 Big Beef, 1 Pruden’s Purple, and 1 Persimmon. I planted them two to a cage on April 29, almost three weeks later than normal, because of our cold rainy spring. In my experience, it works better to wait than to set plants out too early — they really don’t like the cold.

I know most people would tell me that it’s a terrible mistake to plant them two to a cage, but I tried it several years ago with one cage and had wonderful results, so I’ve been doing it successfully ever since. I also don’t prune suckers from my plants. With Sacramento’s hot sun, I think the extra leaves help protect the fruits from sunburn.

I usually get my first ripe tomatoes (a few sungolds or other cherry size) by June 1. This year I think I’ll be lucky to have any by mid-June.

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The summer garden. Finally.

Purple cabbage - so beautiful to look at that it earned its keep without ever producing even a tiny head of cabbage

Over the last couple of days, I’ve removed most of the remaining plants from last fall’s garden. The potatoes are all scrubbed and distributed in my refrigerator and those of a few neighbors. The sugar snap peas I planted in February are still in the ground with zillions of pods just starting to fatten up, and I’m waiting for two small patches of leeks to flower, so I can refresh my dried leeks and lavender arrangement. Everything else (except a short row of shallots) is gone, and the beds have been prepped for planting.

My vegetable garden, all ready for planting summer vegetables

It’s late. I normally plant my tomatoes on or near April 10, after I’m sure the soil is warm. This year it has been so cold that all I did on April 10 was email Natural Gardening and ask them to delay shipment two weeks on my tomatoes, peppers, and basil.

One and a half boxes will be devoted to six big cages of tomatoes (top right and lower left), peppers and basil will share the box at top left where the peas are growing now, the first crop of green beans will grow on my new bean fence in the box at lower left, and somewhere in the spaces left I will have pattypan squash and lemon cucumbers.

It’s cold, rainy and windy today, but the 10 day forecast shows nothing but sunshine after a few showers tomorrow morning. So now I’m just waiting for the UPS truck to deliver my plants and the rain to stop.

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Potato Surprise

Sometimes it seems like gardening success happens in spite of what you do. I guess it’s only right, a little payback for all those “I don’t know what went wrong” experiences.

Last September, when I was shopping for vegetable plants for my winter garden, a nursery employee mentioned that they would be getting in gourmet seed potatoes “in a few weeks.” I’d never grown potatoes, so I set aside one of my raised beds for potatoes and went back in a few weeks. At the nursery they told me it would be a “few weeks.”

This went on, with me going to the nursery every two weeks, until late November, when they admitted they didn’t know whether the potatoes would be in before spring.

In desperation, I bought some organic Yukon Golds at Whole Foods and decided to plant them. My mom, who has lots of potato-growing experience from Montana and as a child in Wyoming, was very skeptical, but she helped me dig the right-sized and correctly spaced holes. We planted them, and I began to watch for something to start growing.

Newly planted potatoes

Nothing in November. Nothing in December. Nothing in January. Clearly they had rotted away with all the rainy weather and I’d just have to plan on planting something else in the box for an early spring crop — maybe potatoes if they ever arrived at the nursery.

Suddenly, at the beginning of February, I saw little green leaves emerging, and within a few weeks, every single potato was growing happily.

The plants looked great, and before long Mom was helping me hill them up, at least as well as I could manage in the raised bed.

Potatoes by late March

We watched for blooms, which Mom said would signal that new potatoes were being formed underground. When nothing happened I googled around and found reassuring words that potatoes didn’t always bloom, so maybe there was hope yet.

Finally, earlier this week, I just couldn’t stand not knowing another minute (a recurring problem I have with root crops). I pulled one plant and dug out about a dozen potatoes, most about the size of an egg, a few larger. They were delicious!

So this morning, I pulled another. Voila! That’s a standard-sized dinner plate. They weighed a little over 2 pounds.

Newest of the new potatoes

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My gardening rules

Volunteer lamb's ears and alyssum

These are a few rules I’ve adopted after 24 years of working on the same small urban garden. None of these are rocket science, or anything new, but they are things I only really grasped after making the same mistakes time and again.

NO invasives allowed! I’ve fallen for so many over the years, only to have to fight them off for a few years once I’d decided they were trouble, trouble, trouble. I’m sure what turns out to be a pest varies depending on where you are, but a few I’ve brought home and come to hate are red valerian, Mexican evening primrose, several ornamental grasses, especially wild oats and pink ribbon grass, and worst of all, ornamental strawberries. These are all charming plants that soon became a nuisance in my garden.

Ornamental strawberry went wild in my yard! Mom and I managed to get most of it out this spring.

On the other hand, I love other plants that could be called invasive: tiny blue forget-me-nots, alyssum, lamb’s ears, and Mexican feather grass, which has has such fashion sense, knowing just where to sprout to do its feathery accent thing.

Don’t buy plants on a whim without knowing where they’ll fit. I try to follow this one, I really do, but sometimes I just can’t resist bringing something beautiful home and then searching for a place to put it.

Don’t scrimp. Bargain plants are rarely bargains. I buy healthy plants at nurseries where I know they are properly cared for. This is a rule that I never break anymore.

Experiment, but don’t hesitate to change course when it isn’t working. I can’t even count the number of times I’ve tried things that turned out to be really bad ideas. The best (worst) example is the flagstone paving I had installed with big gaps to grow lots of pretty groundcovers. Even with weedcloth under it all, the gaps were soon full of weeds. My followup experiment for this one is working better. Now those gaps are filled with a mosaic of pebbles and colorful tiles.

Pebble mosaic

It took a long time to fill all the gaps between flagstones, but it was worth it!

Yes to mulch, no to chemicals.

Compost, but don’t compost weeds. Beware of buying compost that might contain weed seeds. I’m still paying the price for that load of composted rabbit poop I bought 12 years ago.

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My back yard

When I was in my 20s, my boyfriend and I moved from one house to another at least once a year. There was always a reason — a job change, our rental being sold, or we’d spotted something we liked better. The decision to move usually seemed to be made right after I’d just planted a bunch of daffodil bulbs, bareroot rosebushes, a vegetable garden or something else that wouldn’t pay off until we were gone.

I remember always thinking that one thing I wanted out of life was to have 10 years in the same garden, so I would have time to make it perfect and see the results of my efforts.

Hah! I’ve lived in this house for 24 years, and one thing I understand now that I didn’t then is that a garden is NEVER finished, never perfect. I felt like it was almost complete in 2003, when the photo at the top was taken. I’d quit working full time the previous year and worked obsessively for a full year to make it ready to be included in a local garden tour.

[nggallery id=5]Click a photo to start the slide show of garden photos from 2003

 

After the tour, I was completely burned out and did practically nothing to maintain or improve it for at least a year.

What a mess! But that year of doing nothing and watching the results probably taught me more about gardening than anything I’ve ever done. I saw what thrived (weeds, weeds, weeds) and what didn’t do well without a lot of fussing. Those gaps in the flagstones turned out to be the perfect environment for weeds, and an invitation to spend my summers on my knees on the rocks (weeding, weeding, weeding). The cottage garden in the front of the house with all the disease-prone roses and (spreading) grasses looked like crap without daily grooming, weeding and deadheading.

Much has changed in my garden since then, although much remains the same. I’ve established a few rules for myself, although I’m often not very good at obeying my own rules.

Tomorrow, “My Gardening Rules…”

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Grounded, IMBY or something else?

I haven’t really posted since before our Blue Ridge Parkway trip last fall, which I can confidently report was our “best (and only) trip ever” on the Blue Ridge Parkway. (Actually, it was lovely, but the second 100 miles looks very much like the first 100. The third 100 miles is indistinguishable from the second. The 4th 100 miles is the best, but by then you’re on day 4 and busy visualizing a day OUT of the car.)

It was also our last long trip ever, at least anything involving a long flight, because of my husband’s lung disease. Even with his portable oxygen concentrator set at its highest setting, he doesn’t get enough oxygen at flying altitude to be safe if he should have to get up and move around, go to the bathroom for instance.

This is a long explanation for why I’ve spent six months not blogging and trying to think of a new blog title, since I think I’ve already blogged about our Best Trip Ever (a tie between Paris 2008 and Loire/Dordogne/Provence 2007). I kind of like “Grounded,” since it refers both to no more flying and to gardening. I’ve also been thinking of IMBY (In my back yard), since that’s where I’m spending a lot of time. I’m not satisfied with either, but I was never all that thrilled with Best Trip Ever either.

Any suggestions?

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Alive again

What happens if you neglect your blog for a month or two? Especially if you take no notice of your web host’s email notifying you of a PHP upgrade?

The blog DISAPPEARS, that’s what! I took a random look at my google analytics last night and discovered I flatlined on Nov. 23. I checked the blog and it was gone. During the night, it occurred to me to check emails from my webhost. Sure enough, a PHP upgrade notice for Nov. 23.

At least my web host is responsive. I submitted a support ticket at 4 am and by 6, they’d found and fixed a database corruption. I don’t really know if that was caused by the php upgrade, and don’t really care, as long as I don’t have to start from scratch setting up the blog.

I may even go back to bed. It’s still only 6 am!

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Leaf peeping along the Blue Ridge Parkway

The last time we were more than a day’s drive from home was Paris in March of 2008, so we’re WAY overdue!

We’re flying to Washington, DC, next week. We’ll spend four nights at the Hotel Monaco in old town Alexandria, then pick up a car and take several days to drive through Shenandoah National Park, the Blue Ridge Parkway, Great Smokey Mountains, and on to fly home from Nashville. As a bonus, we get to stop and visit friends in Knoxville!

I’m hoping for cool crisp days, spectacular scenery, and breathtaking fall color.

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