Thursday, July 8, 2010

The Other Shoe Dropped!

I knew it had to happen.... the other shoe finally dropped on my veggie garden.  Now, who do you think is the evil little furry varmit that has been dining on my eggplant?!  Is it a squirrel? Chipmunk?  Rabbit?  Raccoon? I say show yourself you miserable little guy.... or gal!  And, let's have at it!


On the brighter side of things my Provider Bush Beans (from Johnny Seeds) are blossoming all over.  Don't you think they have the sweetest little purple petals?


And, I've got more baby cukes than I can count.  Time to get out the pickling stuff!



Walking through my garden this morning I stopped to admire our stone walkway.  I love the cottage feel of the walkway with the moss growing in between the spaces, but I have to tell you that weeding this area is almost a daily chore.  I don't want to use weed killer because it will kill the moss, which I love, so I hand pick each and every weed and doing the whole thing can take a good hour at a time.  As you can see, I missed some this time.  *sigh* 




Another bright spot! The hydrangea is blooming!



But.... and there's ALWAYS a but.....  my front perennial bed is loaded with fungus.


It started on the tall garden phlox and has now spread to the peonies (thank goodness they've finished blooming) as well as the cone flowers (I've never had a problem with fungus on them before), hollyhocks (no surprise there...), and foxglove.  It's been a very humid and warm season and although I've been spraying with sulfur it's not working.  As much as I love the phlox (and I'll show a closeup pic in another post), I'm really thinking of pulling them out this fall and replacing them with something else... something easier.  It seems that all of the cottage flowers I love the most (tall phlox, foxgloves, and hollyhocks) are notorious for having fungus problems and powdery mildew.  Usually we don't have this problem until mid to late August, but this year with the early hot and humid weather we are fighting it earlier than normal.  I'm not sure what that will mean for my late summer garden.... thank goodness for Rudbeckia because if everything else looks bad at least these winners will put on a show.

PS...  Do you ever get discouraged by some of the perfect gardens you see on blogs? I know I do.  There are some bloggers whose flower gardens don't have a single bug hole, fungus speck, or yellow leaf.  How do they do it?  Is it good luck?  Creative cropping in a pic?  Selective picture taking?  Use of non-organic chemicals?  Or, just plain hours and hours of hard work and gardening experience?  I'm in my garden constantly (any more and I wouldn't time for a job or a life!), and just can't seem to get in front of these problems.  I'm almost ready to give up.  Please let me know the secret because it's giving me an inferiority complex. 

Tuesday, July 6, 2010

First Summer Squash Harvest!

We are experiencing an unusual heat wave in New England.  The recorded temperature is at 101 degrees right now (which is 38.33 celsius for my Canadian friends).  While the temps were still in the cool 80s this morning I checked on the veggie garden and did some harvesting.  Today's harvest consisted of my first summer squash of the season (yellow and zucchini).  I also noticed that the collards greens were starting to bolt so I pulled them up and harvested the last of them too.  With the empty space in the bed where the collard greens were I will sow some more seeds - most likely beets and turnips for a fall harvest.


Well excuse me now while I go sip on an ice tea with some fresh mint from the garden and park myself in front of the AC unit.  I need to blanch and freeze the collard greens, but standing next to pot of boiling water for even a few minutes sounds about as much fun as getting some teeth pulled right now.  Stay cool everyone!

Wednesday, June 30, 2010

Waiting for the Other Shoe to Drop

Do you ever worry when things are too good? ( I sure do....  actually I'm a chronic worrier so that's my normal state.)  Case in point....  Here's a picture of my several of my veggie beds. 



 Yellow squash and zucchini.



 16 tomato plants and 8 eggplants.


Cucumbers, bell peppers, and bush beans.




Yes they look wonderful.  No signs of disease and not a bug within sight.  So what's the problem?  Well that is my problem - they look too good.  The growth is incredible for this time of year.  Everything has blossoms and small fruit - I've harvested lots of spring veggies and the summer veggies aren't too far off from picking.  I've got tons of tomatoes - actually some are quite large, and even a sizable green bell pepper is about 1 week away from harvesting (which never happens this early in the season for me in New England).  And, I'm not even spraying (organically of course).  The only real problem I've had is that my squash got top heavy because of their growth and snapped off at the base (and believe it or not this isn't from vine borers - I checked - just weight!).  And.... I took the snapped off top piece of the vine and buried in the soil and 'lo and behold.... the darn thing survived and took root! I never would have guessed it.... you have no idea how many times I've tried to do that in the past after many battles with vine borers in order to save my squash crop and I've never had luck with it.  *sigh* 







 Reflecting on what may be different this year I can't come up with much except incredibly warm weather early in the season and just the right amount of rain.  The soil may be slightly more improved, but I've done nothing drastically different.  It just goes to show you that when it comes to gardening Mother Nature really is in control.  We can try to tame her and nourish her along, but when push comes to shove the best soil, preventative measures, and praying are no comparison to plain ole really good weather (which is incredibly rare in New England).

Beets...lots of them poking through soil.  It won't be long now 'til harvesting them.


Fingerling potatoes growing in 3 containers.



Well I hope this post has jinxed it all.  I'm sure those evil little vine borers are ready to hatch, the leaf loopers hiding beneath the cabbage leaves, and the chipmunks ready to pounce as the southern breeze carries month-long rainy weather filled with blight just waiting to wreak havoc on my picturesque raised bed! UGGHH...  maybe it's time for a tranquilizer!  Darn gorgeous garden!

Monday, June 28, 2010

I Admit it....

.... I'm a Martha Stewart fan.  Yes, sad but true.  I guess it's the perfectionist in me (and let me preface that by saying I'm no where near as bad as she is! Thank God Andy would say!).  Any way, her daughter Alexis has inherited many of her mother's qualities and is an accomplished baker.  When I saw this garden cake that she recently posted on her blog I thought how cool is that!  I would never have the patience or skill to make one of these myself, but I would love to have one for a special event.

Check this out!



There's even a stone wall!  I bet it's delicious.  Now excuse me while I go whip up that box cake I have sitting in my cupboard.