Thursday, July 26, 2012

I know how to make it rain!

….water plants really good and hang clothes out to dry!!!  

If that’s what it takes – I’m THERE!

Ta DA!!

Back to Waupaca today to a class to make Jam… and it was BLUEBERRY jam!  I brought the carrots and tomato jars from yesterday home along with the blueberry jam which is half gone already!!!!
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Pears… getting big!

The tree hasn’t died after falling over!! 

 

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Wonder why my fingers look pink..  they weren’t!

Oh no…

What’s wrong with the tomatoes?  Pretty on top – ugly on bottom??

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See…

Green Bay 1.79 inches of rain
Fond du lac 2.94 inches of rain
Appleton 0.04 inches of rain

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Wednesday, July 25, 2012

Learning to can…

Here I am in Waupaca at the UW extension at the courthouse learning how to can… it was hands on…  very cool!   Carrots and tomato sauce!

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….and this was the temperature when I got in my van to come home…  and it stayed that high!

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morning and evening… misses again..

 

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Tuesday, July 24, 2012

Look what else I found…

….in the back yard…  wonder what it is??

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Even more weeds…

are dying….

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Still going strong…

… with no water or care…  go figure…

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Is it heading our way???

NNNOOOOO…… out to water AGAIN…

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Monday, July 23, 2012

Now these look pretty!

 

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100 degrees today…

…well 97 but heat index over 100…  I’m glad I got up and watered my plants at 6am…  where DO we live…  certainly NOT in WI!

Sunday, July 22, 2012

This help I don’t need…

So I turned the water on so the soaker hose would start watering the tomatoes and then I left for a bit to check on my neighbors puppies.  When I returned Jake had escaped from the house by moving a board I had blocking the dog door and was having a blast with the hose.  He had ripped the one side out creating a stream of water which he was playing with…  it could have been worse..  the water could have been going on to the tomatoes which I’m sure then that is where Jake would have been!   Brita was new to the mess as I brought her out not realizing that the trouble maker was already out!

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Saturday, July 21, 2012

Rain…

ok…  this is the 3rd day this week that rain was heading toward us and it either never got here or sent south of us….   Out to water again…

Wednesday, July 18, 2012

Look what popped up ….

…in the driveway to the side yard….  must have been from the pumpkins and squash I threw on the hill above it because that was the only place the dogs wouldn’t get at them for a snack!  Looks like one bigger plant with a small one near it and then another one a little bit away!

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Sunday, July 15, 2012

OH NO!!

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Saturday, July 14, 2012

Sometimes you just forget the obvious…

Spent this morning trying to figure a way to configure my hoses so I only have to turn on one faucet and everything gets watered...  Thank you Ari for all the old hoses that were chewed in half that make great soaker hoses!  Forgot one important thing that I'll have to think through... 

…water does not run UPHILL....

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Back to the drawing board!

Do I or don’t I?

….  wait to see if it rains or water the tomatoes??

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Friday, July 13, 2012

Grapevines…

….but no grapes….

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HHmmm……

I really should have labeled things better… these are in a raised bed… will just have to wait and see!

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Another puzzle….

 

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It’s REALLY dry….

When the forsythia bush and the milkweed are drooping…

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Thursday, July 12, 2012

Blueberry bushes…

So the grass was growing around the bushes – 2 of which were planted for me while I was in the hospital…  Someone mentioned cardboard around them so I soaked it in the pool and put it around the bushes…  so far so good!  And Brita was such a help!

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Friday, July 6, 2012

The blackberry bush…

…what happened to it?!?!  OK..  so it’s not the best planting job but I just had hip surgery… and Brita just had back surgery!  I think something ate it!

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Wednesday, July 4, 2012

Yet another good idea for sprouting seeds!

Photo: Excellent idea! Please share.

Friday, May 25, 2012

Grow a Potato Tower

Thanks to Gardner Scott for this article  http://gardenerscott.blogspot.com/2012/03/grow-potato-tower.html
Potatoes are easy to grow in a vegetable garden. They can be started in cool weather so spring is a great time to plant, a couple weeks before your last frost date. Chit them, plant them, follow standard garden habits, and in a few months you dig up your harvest.

A typical potato harvest
I've written previously about some concerns with potatoes in a home garden. With standard growing methods you devote a lot of space for little comparable payout. There are many other delicious vegetables and fruits that you can grow in the same space for a better investment. In other words, it's far cheaper to buy a 20-pound bag of potatoes from the grocery store than to grow the same quantity, and unlike many crops like tomatoes and squash, potatoes from the garden don't taste much different than store-bought.
Potatoes are a crop that shouldn't be grown in the same spot as the previous year. You should actually rotate the locations on at least a three-year cycle to avoid some diseases and soil issues. This can be difficult for many gardeners with small gardens.
Potatoes grow deep and like to be planted in loose, well-amended soil. Preparing the planting bed can be hard work and keeping the soil evenly moist through the growing season requires a lot of water and attention.
Another concern arises at harvest. Using a spade or garden fork to dig up the potatoes invariably results in some sliced and speared tubers. It's hard to dig up all of the potatoes damage-free. I've tried many techniques and always injure some of my crop, regardless of how careful I am.
All of these issues can be dealt with by growing potatoes vertically, in a potato tower. A small space and big payout, easy rotation, easy maintenance, and easy harvesting make this an ideal method for growing potatoes.
The concept is simple: you start potatoes in an enclosed vertical planter and add soil and compost as the plant grows. Many potatoes will grow roots and ultimately new tubers wherever the main stalk is covered with soil. A seed potato planted in a garden bed will give you a handful of potatoes at harvest. If that same plant is covered with soil when it is about eight inches tall (20 cm), it will produce tubers at the original harvest depth and again at the new level. If covered with soil when it reaches eight inches again, it will produce another harvest level.
A tower three or four feet (1 to 1.3 meters) tall can multiple the quantity of potatoes that a single plant normally produces. A small planting footprint gives you a harvest comparable to a large planting bed. Just two pounds of seed potatoes can give you more than 20 pounds at harvest.
I begin making a potato tower with welded metal fencing four feet tall. A piece 12 feet long (3.6 meters) makes a tower about four feet wide when the ends are attached together. A potato tower four feet tall and four feet wide can hold many tubers. The wide tower is very stable and won't tip over like slender ones can.

A simple metal potato tower
I select an unused spot in my garden for a tower. Since it needs just a four-foot space it can be almost anywhere. The base soil is amended and loosened as deep as possible. In this soil, I plant the prepared seed potatoes  about 4 inches deep (10 cm) and 12-15 inches apart (30-40 cm) within the four-foot ring. You can plant closer together but the final potatoes will be smaller.
Water to keep the soil moist and in a few weeks there will be potato plants growing within the tower. When the plants are about eight inches tall cover with soil, though I prefer a mix of straw and compost. The straw and compost will not weigh as much as soil and stays within the open-wire ring better. Also, it retains moisture very well and reduces the amount of watering the tower needs. If you choose to use a well-amended soil for each new level, you'll need to support the tower with rebar stakes and wrap it with fabric or plastic to keep the soil from spilling out.

Layers of straw and compost are the growing medium
Keep evenly watered and in no time the plants will be about eight inches tall again. Cover with more straw and compost. Continue this process two or three times. Ultimately you'll have 32 or 40 inches (.8 - 1.2 m) of soil or straw and compost inside the ring. You've effectively created a potato taproot more than three-feet long (1 meter) with tubers growing along the entire length.

Add more compost and straw as they grow
Keep the plants watered throughout the summer and during flowering. A few weeks after they flower they'll turn yellow and begin to die back. Stop watering at this point and let the plants rest for a week or two.

Potato plants dying back
My favorite part of growing a potato tower comes at harvest. A couple weeks after the dieback, the ends of the metal fencing are released and the entire contents of the tower spill out. At this point it's very easy to pluck the potatoes from the soil and loose compost and straw. Not a single tuber is pierced, sliced, or damaged in any way.

Peeling back the straw reveals the harvest
Another huge benefit of a potato tower is revealed at that point too. The compost and partially decomposed straw mix are perfect amendments for my garden soil. Turning it into the existing soil at that spot makes it suitable for new plants in the next year -- just not more potatoes. An out-of the-way garden location has just been primed for more crops.
The tower can be constructed with many other materials. Some gardeners use old tires. Plant the seed potatoes and cover the spot with an auto tire. When the plant reaches the top of the tire, fill it with soil and stack a new tire on top. Continue stacking until the tower is four or five tires high. At harvest just remove the tires to reveal the tubers.
You can also make a planting square with cinder blocks. You follow the same basic procedure of adding soil and stacking a new level of cinder blocks. At harvest, just one wall of the tower needs to be removed to access the crop. If you have carpentry skills you can built a wooden box with removable slats for your tower.
Growing potatoes in your garden, particularly in a tower, gives you great flexibility with which varieties of potato you choose. However not all potatoes will grow new tubers along the entire taproot. Some varieties like Russet will provide a bountiful harvest. Red Pontiac and fingerling potatoes do well. Others like Yukon Gold will not. I prefer Yukon Gold on my dinner table so even though I use the tower method I don't need to fill the tower more than a few feet tall because it won't increase the quantity at harvest.
Typically, indeterminate potatoes should do best in a tower. I haven't found a definitive authority or list identifying all of the varieties that will work so if you have a favorite potato try it in a tower and let me know your results.
A potato tower allows you to create a new planting bed without dedicating prime gardening real estate; you can save your raised beds and open rows for other crops. It gives you great flexibility in how many potatoes you grow and where you put them. After harvest the same tower can be used again the next year for a new crop, ideal garden recycling.
If you grow potatoes, consider a potato tower. You may never revert to the old system again.

Sunday, May 20, 2012

Toma Verde TOMATILLO (HEIRLOOM)

Toma Verde TOMATILLO is adapted to grow successfully in a wide range of climates, and is a large-fruited, 3' - 6' tall variety. These papery-husked wonders prefer growing conditions somewhat similar to tomatoes (and are related to a tomato), Tomatillo Toma Verde HEIRLOOM Seedsbut will handle a lot more heat than tomatoes. Grows quickly and produces in both southern and northern climates. Used in a wide variety of Mexican foods.

This packet plants approximately 40 plants.
Days to Emerge:  10 days
Seed Depth:   1/4”
Seed Spacing:   A group of 3 seeds every 18”
Row Spacing:  3’
Thinning:  When 2” tall  thin to 1 every 18”
When to sow outside: 2 to 4 weeks after average last frost, and when soil temperatures are warm.
When to start inside: RECOMMENDED. 4 to 6 weeks before average last frost.

Harvesting:       Fruits should be harvested when they almost fill the husk, but are still green in color; the husk will change from green to tan. Fruit at the bottom of the plant ripens first. If left on the vine too long, and allowed to turn yellow or purple, they lose their unique flavor.

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