I've been such a slacker with posting, but now that the semester is over (and summer = freedom) I will have much more time to dedicate to writing about my failures at all things gardening.
Mostly tomatoes.
Admittedly, I may have gotten carried away with the tomato repertoire. I planted several varieties, including:
Kelloggs Breakfast
Pink Brandywine
Green Grape
A Grappoli D'Inverno
Roma
Yellow Pear
Sundrop
Brown Cherry
White Cherry
Pink Striped Cherry
Early Girl
Aunt Ruby's German Green
Clearly, I overestimated my ability to care for and/or house this many varieties (don't even get me started on the peppers... that's for another day.) But more than the basic needs of water/food/sunlight/soil, I neglected three very important threats to gardeners everywhere: fungus, disease and BUGS.
Remember those
6 out of the 8 tomato plants in my tomato bed have stopped growing, 2 are bald stalks with a few sad leaves, and only 1 looks decently healthy. Between my super reliable research (read: not) via Google, I
In other news from only slightly more successful areas of the garden, my container plants are doing better than the ones in the bed. I've been collecting container plants like clinical hoarders collect toothpaste caps and empty raisin boxes (Is that a thing? It is now.) The gnat population has exponentially grown in recent months since they apparently like to co-populate in the loamy soil... which is SUPER awesome. I digress...
Here are some photos, because photos.
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| After pruning all of my peppers back TWICE, I'm beginning to just now get some fruit. These are purple jalepenos, and I admit that I grew these only for fun. I'll find something to do with them. |
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| I've already had one harvest off of this guy. He is a sweet banana pepper plant and I pickled the first harvest (more on that in a bit.) |
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| This is the Early Girl tomato plant that I purchased as a plant start in February(ish.) I've picked 5 ripe tomatoes off of it so far, and they were perfect. PER. FECT. |
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| I placed him on the edge of the garden bed while I looked for more, and this carpenter ant made quick work of him. Well done, my ant friend. I'm sorry for trying to poison you a few weeks ago. |
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| While the leaves look dreadful, I have about a dozen fruit on the Roma plant at the moment. I hope they ripen before they quit on me. |
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| The borage is liking the tomato bed, however. It's gotten humongous, but has failed in the "attracting pollinators" department. It's sure pushing its luck... |
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| More tomato plant ailments... They aren't doing so hot. |
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| Whyyyyyy? Why do you hate me? |
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| What is left of my sad pathetic spaghetti squash container. The Vine borers did a number on this guy, and while I cut several out, the damage is hard to reverse. |
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| Sad, sick tomato bed. Except the flowers. The marigolds and borage are doing fantastically. I hope they're enjoying the $100 in soil amendments. |
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| Not the largest crop, but the kale is STILL ALIVE. That's one in the win column for me. |
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| My happy place. I wish I could take down the tacky plastic fencing, but Miss Millie doesn't understand that the garden beds are not for digging. |
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| Mornings in the garden are my favorite time of day. I usually like to get out here within an hour of the sun rise. As you can see, that didn't happen today. |
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| We have a pomegranate tree sapling as of a few months ago. Did I mention it already? I wonder how long it will be until our first harvest. One year? Two? |
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| Speaking of Millie- here is the sweet girl. This is her face when she thinks I'm going to make her go inside. Millie is the sweetest dog I've ever met... and I've met a ton. |
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| Just to show size. The Kelloggs breakfast tomato plant isn't thriving, but I'm hoping those fruits at least ripen up soon. |
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| More Roma tomatoes... |
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| Sweet potato slips that I started over 2 months ago. It's about time to snip them and root them in new water. |
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| And, like I said earlier, I pickled! The cucumbers were too large to pickle whole, so I opted for spears instead. I used the recipe my Mom's husband's family uses (and has used for generations.) They're of Polish ancestry so they make pickling an annual tradition. All of the family gets together and they create an assembly line. They make about 90 quarts of dill pickles and it lasts the families the whole year. I beg my mother to bring me a jar or two each time she visits (which she so graciously grants) and they don't last more than a few days in my house. I hope these turn out half as good as the Pilecki family pickles. Just a few more weeks until I pop one of these open! (Pictured in rear: pickled okra with banana pepper.)
There are many other plants in the garden (and on the patio) that I have not photographed lately, but I assure you that they're nothing to look at. If you want to see photos of recent mini harvests, go check out my Instagram (OhKayleeBlog)
I promise to update more often.. as long as I'm not busy organizing caterpillar sacrifice rituals to the garden gods.
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