Vegetable garden, summer edition

Took all the old lettuce out last couple of weeks- since they were spaced pretty closely to begin with and the stalks continued to grow stout while I was harvesting outer leaves, they eventually ended up too crowded to grow new leaves. The stalks also grew tall, but the leaves were short and not as good. The new seedlings just got their second set of leaves. This time no spinach, it just bolted early, and the lettuce is spaced out a little.  

Have been getting great nasturtium flowers for vitamin C, plus great peppery flavor. I had six sites in the planter bed, so I took most of them out before we go out of town for a while, also to let the adjacent carrots and onions get some sun, leaving two plants. They are very floriferous. I always eat a bouquet full of flowers. When I cleaned out the planters, I made a great salad  of all the nasturtium flowers and buds I’d taken out, a fat carrot, two small onions and some olive oil vinaigrette. Yum.

Sowed broccoli seeds
where the nasturtiums were, 4 sites, all along the west side. Broccoli is supposed to be sown in mid summer. Right now in my garden there are two different rows sowings of carrots and two of onions, each type with some ripe or ripening vegetables. The carrots are larger than last year, much fatter. The green onions are new for me, but so far I have been using the thinned out ones and they are very tasty. The 5 green beans plants now have several sets of leaves each, and are about 6″ tall, still not yet sending aerials to the trellis. Also two cucumbers about 3″ tall, a “bush” variety that I’m hopioto train on the trellis, I accidentally bought the wrong variety. 

The tomatoes had an iffy start, what with leaf curl and all, but no spots or brown discoloration. It turns out to be due to overwatering one of them. The wart like spots on the Sweet Cassidy miniature tomato stem looked like some kind of fungus,  but it is due to root initials or starts. They recommended mounding some dirt n them and they will form roots to make the plant stronger, which they did. It finally took off, and is now three feet tall with dozens of flower buds forming, more all the time, and growing quickly. It is an indeterminate plant, so we got three plastic rods to place inside the existing cage and extend it higher for more growth. It took a long time before it showed flowers, which the indeterminate do….they grow first. I gave them flowering fertilizer, but it still took a while. Several hot sunny days helped. The determinant plant, Oregon Spring, started flowering almost right away. 

Video Tour of the Back Yard!! 

We increased our upload bandwidth to 30 (30/30) yesterday for my work connection, and it’s letting me upload larger files. Next entry will be the older video tours from earlier in the season, if it lets me, since they show different flowers (also, those tours of the front and back yard are narrated, for better or worse. I’ll have to do another in the late summer or even soon, since the foliage is getting so lush, giving it a different look

Other pix of plants in bloom: Golden Columbine, Penstemon, White Brodiaea, Mock Orange, etc. Also, a bouquet of our wild flowers for guests.

Take a video tour of the front yard!

Take a few minutes to see the front yard /rock garden, much of which was recently revised (the actual ‘garden’ is in the back. The backyard video will have to be downloaded separately, WordPress is not allowing it right now). 

Dave put in the stone path lining and retaining wall features over the winter, and also recontoured the hill, leveled the terrace, and put a nice capstone on the existing concrete retaining wall so it blends in. A big swath of the rock garden area was dug out about 1 1/2 feet deep, then filled with smaller gravel, peat, soil and larger gravel, to make it a true rock garden habitat so some of the more challenging desert plants could thrive. This area gets all day sun, which is why we wanted to level a terrace for vegetable garden boxes there. You can see four lighter colored petrified wood structures in the rock garden – those are take from the garage of our house at Lopez, the original builder obtained them in the 1960’s, and they are embedded in the gravel area. Many of the plants put around it are small right now, but next year they’ll be more color there: lavender monardellas, yellow desert daisies, orange Indian paintbrush, Lewisia tweedyi, yellow gaillardias and balsam root, pink hookers onions, bluebells, dark purple Setosa iris and pink pussy toes as well as a few others…..

A few pix of the current garden, still getting salads every few days. Now with onions and carrots, and a few nasturtium flowers for color! 

Dave erected a temporary “fence”, made of two green support rods and stiff green plastic honeycomb netting. He fashioned wire hooks on the rods and sewed the three sides of the netting along the bottom with green plastic coated wire. Each panel can be unhooked and lowered separately to access the plants, but preventing the deer from getting in. They might poke their heads a little into it, but the netting could be sharp against their faces, and all they’d get is nasturtiums and onions, which they don’t like. The lettuce and hopefully the green beans and cucumbers will be relatively safe from the deer. The tomatoes aren’t protected, yet.

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