Sunday, March 30, 2008

Larkspur, Cornflower, and Poppies Started in Elegant Back of Garage Cutting Garden

IMG_0915

It's time to sow seeds in my garden like a sailor on shore leave with just days to live. But, when exactly? The backs of seed packets are vague and often offer little guidance, so below is a bit more guidance gleaned from the internet.

With afternoon temperatures near 48, a new garden bed behind the garage was prepared. Gone are a bunch of hostas that were mere placeholders last season until a better idea was hatched. That idea now is a cutting garden. Larkspur, poppies, and cornflower were sown today as soil temperatures were around 38, but, at that temperature, germination could still be weeks away.

Cleome
When: After last frost when ground is warm, although one site from Virginia Tech suggested late fall or early spring.
That's Neat: Needs oscillating temperatures of at least ten degrees. Germination is best with 80 degree days and 70 degree nights. Light is necessary for germination.
Sources: Garden Guide, Floridata, Plant Files, Virginia Tech, How Stuff Works, Goldsmith Seeds

Bachelor Button / Cornflower
When: 1 to 2 weeks before last frost.
Sources: Dave's Garden, Garden Guide, Virginia Tech Weed ID Guide

Corn Poppy "American Legion" Papaver rhoeas
When: As soon as soil can be worked.
Light: Full sun to partial shade.
Sources: Ovm-Seed, Dave's Garden, Taunton, Gardening Tips, Suite 101, Texas A & M, Michigan State,Iowa State, Purdue University (fantastic guide to all sorts of flowers), UC Riverside

Celosia Cristata / Celosia argentea "Pampas Plume"
When: Outdoors, when soil temp is about 60 F and all risk of frost has passed.
Sources: Texas A & M, Purdue University, U. of Md., Yankee Harvest, UVM

Larkspur Consolida ajacis
When: As soon as soil can be worked.
Light: Sun to partial shade
That's interesting: Poisonous if ingested, yet the genus, consolida, is a reference to its medicinal ability to heal wounds.
Sources: Garden Guide, U. Maryland, Texas A & M, U. Maryland, Colorado St., Brooklyn Botanic, Calendula and Concrete, Gardener's Network

Zinnia Zinnia elegans
When: After the danger of frost has passed and soil sufficiently warmed.
Sources: Virginia Tech, University of Kentucky, Iowa State, U. Wisconsin, U. Florida

Nasturtium Trapaeolum majus
When: After all danger of frost has passed.
That's neat: An aphid magnet, it's a good decoy to plant in vegetable gardens. Fully edible with a taste akin to watercress.
Sources: U. Kentucky, U. Wisconsin, Garden Guide, Texas A&M

General Sources
Seeds of Change, Seed Database from Hort Net

Saturday, March 29, 2008

Useful Freeze Outlook Maps

Frost on Thyme
Ignoring the snow flurries, frozen lakes, and little dogs swaddled in ridiculous sweaters, northern gardeners have been known to push the boundaries of spring. For those eager folks, here's a useful map from Intellicast that identifies areas subject to freezing and frosty temperatures.

Sunday, March 23, 2008

Super Sugar Snap Peas Planted (GDD 6)


Super Sugar Snap Peas, originally uploaded by tpl108.

The soil in the raised bed warmed to 40 degrees, prompting me to plant the first crop of the season - Burpee's Super Sugar Snap Peas. Having great success with plain sugar snaps last year, a full 8' row of peas were planted. Following Jim Crockett's advice -- if you're stingy with your peas, they'll be stingy with you -- seeds were liberally spread. Wise words. Wise man.

Righting last year's improper citing of the raised bed, the bed was moved 30 feet east a bit south to take better advantage of the sun. During the height of summer last year, the bed received as few as four hours of direct sunlight, which lead to less-than-impressive yields.

Also, a quick soil test showed that my soil is slightly alcaline and depleted of nutrients.

Sources: Deirdre's Garden Diary, Growing and Caring for Peas, Capital District Community Gardens

Tuesday, March 11, 2008

Creating a Trellis for Raised Bed

Skip Jute. Choose Mason's Twine.

Your trellis will only be as good as the string that holds it together. Skip twine, jute, or anything made of natural fibers. They'll quickly rot and will have to be replaced quickly. Mason's twine, 50-lbs test, and made of some sort of polypropylene works very well. The same twine strung last year and subjected to the heat of summer and the cold of winter has shown few signs of deterioration.

Place Eye Hooks at 6 to 9 Inch Intervals Across Top, Bottom, and Sides
This allows all sorts of flexibility when it comes to creating designs, be it diagonal, vertical, horizontal, or perhaps a trendy European basketweave or houndstooth. My first go 'round was at 12 inch intervals. This was a bit too far for the peas for their liking as it took some coaxing to get them to grab hold of the string.

Anchor Your Line with Two Half-Hitches

Say what? This should help. See picture.

String Your Line Through the Eye Hooks
Working side to side and then top to bottom, string the line through the hooks. Double up the line and make an extra pass on the lower levels. They'll be the first levels of support, so give yourself a bit of insurance. Line is cheap. Your time isn't.

Create a Cleat to Tie Off Your Line & Adjust Tension
Anyone who's spent time around a boat knows how to tie a cleat knot. (Video and instructions here.) This allows you to place tension on the lines as needed and quickly and securely tie off your line. To create the cleat, drive two nails about an inch apart into the wood -- one at an angle down and the other at an angle up. See the picture for details. Alternatively, they sell cleats in hardware stores that are meant to be used with blinds.

Tip: Peas Cling Most to Horizontal Supports, Pole Beans Cling to Vertical Supports
Consequently, provide more vertical support for beans and closer horizontal supports for peas.

Saturday, March 08, 2008

Crocus Blooms (GDD 6)

Crocus Blossom

The first bloom of the 2008 season. Last year, the first crocus bloom didn't appear until March 21st.

Tuesday, March 04, 2008

Daffodils Emerge (GDD 6)

Poking a few centimeters above the soggy soil, the first tulip shoots emerged today. Way back in September, dozens of bulbs were planted in beds across the front of the house. Not suprisingly, the first bulbs to show are planted closest to the house and in the sunniest bed. Compared to last year, these tulips emerged about 10 days earlier and 11 growing degree days sooner.


Daffodils Emerge in Early March, originally uploaded by tpl108.

Saturday, March 01, 2008

Hi, I'd Like to Buy Some Flood Insurance . . .


Charles River - Hemlock Gorge Dam, originally uploaded by tpl108.

February's record-setting rainfall firmly pushed eastern Massachusetts out of a mild drought that had persisted since the end of last summer. In all, about eight inches of precipitation fell over the past month. This should help my rhododendrons, which were ravaged by cold and dry conditions last winter.

Monday, February 18, 2008

2008 Season Opens as First Shoots Signal Coming Spring (GDD 6)

New growth appeared on the garlic chives, reminding us that despite the snow and frigid temperatures, spring is on its way. With shoots about an inch long, it appears that the chives emerged from dormancy a week ago if not longer. This plant is always the first to break its hibernation. Planted in 2005 and divided several times, this plant re-awoke in mid-February in 2006 and in the first week of March of 2007. Although it'll be some time before any chives find their way into the kitchen, it looks like a good time to start making plans for a new season.

Thursday, January 17, 2008

Winter Poor Time for Gardening; Plants Grow Unsatisfactorily


Snow, originally uploaded by tpl108.

Not much growing around here these days. Sleep tight, sweet raised garden bed. Your time will come soon enough.

Sunday, January 06, 2008

2007: The Gardening Year that Was

Tomato Plants
The year that was on the Grange.

THE STATS
Last frost: May 7
First frost: October 29
Length of "frost free" growing season: 175 days (5 months, 22 days)
Effective growing season: late April through late September
First Mow: May 3
Last Mow: November 25

BEST & WORST
Best vegetable: Sugar snap peas. One of the first plants into the garden, its fast growth and abundant output made this the one crop that we never grew tired of.
Most disappointing vegetable: Beets. Despite numerous plantings and an NSA supercomputer, our beets were ping-pong ball sized at best and quite bitter.
Best surprise vegetable: Beet leaves. Excellent in salads (much like myself), beets will heretofore be grown solely for its leaves.
Hardiest vegetable: Swiss chard, var. Bright Lights. Kept growing through mid-November. Unfortunately, there were few takers for this leafy beauty. While wonderful when quickly sauteed, a decent serving required a whopping amount of leaves.
Best-tasting tomato: Brandywine, by a mile. Jumping on the heirloom vegetable bandwagon, Low-output and cracking were noticeable downsides.
Most-prolific tomato: Yellow-Pear and Better Boy. Yellow-Pears looked good from a far but were far from good. They may appear gourmet, but they taste is rather ho-hum. Better Boys, however, tasted great and produced a good number of fruit, solidifying their spot in next year's garden.
Most-disappointing tomato: Sungold. While supremely tasty, its low output was a big drawback.

Best flower: Peony. Even though the blooms lasted for a brief week, the huge blossoms were coveted by many a passerby. Hands off, fools. I'm watching you.
Best value flower: Walmart-specials, Cleome and Salvia. Purchased for maybe $2 each, these puppies kept blooming from mid-summer through the early-November. Three-cheers for the category-killer putting the little guy out of business!
Let's-hope-they-do-better-next-year flower: Echinacea. Transplanted in late-May, the Echinacea bloomed sporadically and despite their advertised drought-tolerance were the only casualty from the unusally dry August and September.
Worst planting arrangement: A soldierly rank-and-file approach gave my tulips all the charm of an invading German army.
Pack-your-things-and-get-frank-out-of-here flower: Astilbe. Prominently featured at the front of my south-facing border, its late and somewhat unimpressive blooms monopolized valuable garden space. They'll be transplanted to a shadier location (think: solitary stranger loitering near jungle gym).

Best-garden project: Lawn renovation. There's something extremely rewarding about taking a hardscrabble, weed-infested portion of the back yard and transforming it into turf. Turf-type tall fescues and perennial rye grasses are in my stable of friends.

Wednesday, January 02, 2008

Winter


Backyard, originally uploaded by tpl108.

Spring (and my garden) never seemed so far away. There's been a near constant snow cover here since the first week of December that has prevented me from amending the soil with fresh compost. However, with some balmy 40-degree weather in the forecast for this weekend, I'm looking forward to hauling a few hundred pounds of compost out back.

Monday, October 08, 2007

Early October Update

A week into October, the harvest keeps on trucking. Here's a tiny Better Boy surrounded by two dozen or so Yellow Pear tomatoes and one or two Sungolds.

The past several weeks have been an extension of summer with high temperatures and very little rain. Boston experienced its second sunniest September in recorded history, and yet we can still fault the weather as we struggle with a mini-drought.

The pepper plant recently set two good-sized peppers while the fall crop of snap peas struggles with the heat. The Kentucky Wonder green beans recent closed up shop, apparently having given up on waiting for me to water. The summer squash, with one last gasp, set fruit this past week.

After weeks of permissive neglect, the garden is moving back to center stage as the threat of frost looms heavy in forthcoming weeks of October. Last year, frost hit on October 15th.

Like a parent who's realized that he's spent a few too many hours in the office while little Rickey spent his time with an increasingly-impatient day care staff, I hope to atone for my weeks of inattention. (We were hoping to make you a strong and independent garden! Is that really such a crime? Who knew you needed water everyday or every third day for that matter? If I'm guilty of anything, it's loving you too much.)

But fear not, Champ. It's nothing but pony rides, moon pies, and blood meal from here on out -- at least for the next week or two until the frost silently swoops down from a clear cold night and squeezes the life out of you. But, in the meantime, have another Cherry Coke. You deserve it!

Sunday, September 30, 2007

Brandywine Tomato


Brandywine Tomato, originally uploaded by tpl108.

Thursday, September 27, 2007

Late-Summer/Early-Fall Salvia


Salvia, originally uploaded by tpl108.

Monday, September 24, 2007

Summer's Last Hurrah


Duck Inn, originally uploaded by tpl108.

It hasn't rained more than an inch or so over the past seven weeks and temperatures are supposed to soar into the 90s this week. My fall pea harvest is surely going to be a disappointment, but my pepper harvest, if not spectacular, should be decent. This recent bout of warm weather has goaded the plant into setting several new peppers. It'll be a mad dash to the first frost, which should be coming any week now. We'll see if we just might be able to sneak a few peppers in under the wire before the season closes.

Pictured: Aquinnah, Martha's Vineyard. No, this isn't my garden. I only wish it were.

Monday, September 17, 2007

Late-Summer Sunrise


Late-Summer Sunrise, originally uploaded by tpl108.

Hunnewell Forest, Natick, Mass. Autumn is on its way.

One Day's Harvest


Harvest, originally uploaded by tpl108.

Fall now leans heavily upon summer, with noticeably chilly night and cooler days. It hasn't stopped the harvest however. Here's a mixture of Brandywines, Yellow Pears, Sun Golds and Better Boys, along with some Swiss Chard.

The garden is now down right haggard. The plants have made their stand against several months of wind, rain, and now drought. Having brought forth a wealth of food, they look a little worse for wear.

Tuesday, September 11, 2007

It's Been a While . . . About that . . .


St. Peter's Church, originally uploaded by tpl108.

Nothing kills a blog faster than a vacation. Spend a week without an internet connection, and suddenly you start wondering why you're running a low-rent blog about fruits and vegetables in the first place.

Then, toss in a new job and suddenly your little hobby starts feeling like work and you feel like calling in sick.

Since we've last spoke, my tomatoes have come in, but one squash plant died. You're riveted. Dying for more. You asked for it. I also replanted a huge chunk of my back yard. Okay, now you're hooked again.

Friday, August 10, 2007

Bee in Squash Flower


Bee in Squash Flower, originally uploaded by tpl108.

To my subscribers, (all three of you)

Updates coming soon. Lack of internet connection and stint in French Foreign Legion negatively affected the Backyard Granger.

In the meantime, enjoy this picture of a bee pollinating a squash flower.