Gardening, anyone?

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  • Wren44
    Wren44 Member Posts: 8,585
    edited July 2017

    My Mom always mulched with straw. It was so dry in Okla that it helped conserve moisture from the watering. Ours here are in a raised bed because slugs love them. As a child, I hunted in the strawberries for horned toads (actually a spiny harmless lizard). They liked the shade. I would play with them for a while and put them back.

  • coachvicky
    coachvicky Member Posts: 1,057
    edited July 2017

    I put beer in plastic cups I buried and the slugs are gone

  • Heidibird
    Heidibird Member Posts: 213
    edited July 2017

    Scottie, how cute is that picture of the turtles?! Mae me smile. :-)

    Lori, the garden is looking super. Sorry about not getting any zukes this year. I picked my first one yesterday and have 3 babies on the plants. All the other blossoms are males. Also have 2 spaghetti squash growing. Yeah! Ate some more "fruit of the yard" this weekend.....apples, asian pears, blackberries. Looks like I will have a few hot peppers soon. Typically the pepper plants don't start a wild growth spurt until the end of July so I am anxious to see how they do.

    I love fireworks but absolutely do not like neighbors firing them off after 11 p.m. when I need to get some sleep. UGH I know tomorrow night wlll be so much worse. Because we live outside the city limits it is legal to have them here but people, have some respe

  • pink_is_my_colour
    pink_is_my_colour Member Posts: 308
    edited July 2017

    I see buds on the hydrangeas

  • pink_is_my_colour
    pink_is_my_colour Member Posts: 308
    edited July 2017

    Clematis in full bloom. Definitely need to cut it back this fall. Too much dead at the bottom.

    image

    Not sure what this plant is. Bought it at Home Depot but sure do love the color.

    image

  • Heidibird
    Heidibird Member Posts: 213
    edited July 2017

    Wow! What gorgeous pops of color!

  • coachvicky
    coachvicky Member Posts: 1,057
    edited July 2017

    Thanks Wren44.

    Put a plastic cup in the ground. Fill with beer. Slugs gone!

    Coach Vicky

  • Wren44
    Wren44 Member Posts: 8,585
    edited July 2017

    I love tart cherries for pies, and they're so hard to find.

  • Gardennerd
    Gardennerd Member Posts: 174
    edited July 2017

    Summerrain - glad you came out from lurking. Love the pics of your garden. Lucky to have a friend that helps too. It has a nice layout.

    Coachvicki - congrats on that first tomato. My first one didn't even make it to the table . . . hmm? not even out of the garden. Burp.

    Mommyof2 - won't be long, it sounds like, and you're going to have lots of tomato's.

    Bluebird - I imagine it is hard to give up your garden for travel. Thinking of how you could have a mobile garden, I can only think of pots. But I imagine if then they would be limited as to how many you could travel with. Maybe you should consider smaller crops, such as going with herbs. Or if possible a few hanging pots.

    Lori - Raccoon babies so CUTE. Mamma doesn't mind you petting them. I've heard of people having raccoons as pets but as soon as they get mature, they are less domestic and unreliable as being safe to be around.

    Rose - thanks for the idea about the tomato pasta. I know in years to come I will be producing more tomato's and love this idea.

    Scottiemom - We've been hit hard with rain also. Month of June broke a historical rain record. Over 20 inches in month of June. I'm up close to DC and they are hurting for rain. Everyone wishing for some and I'm thinking I don't want to see another drop for a while. Hubby is picking veggies everyday as everything is splitting.

    Thanks to all on well wishes for my Dad. He is in physical therapy facility and doing well considering he is 92. It wasn't a week ago and he was in ICU so we are very happy to see the improvement. I am unfortunately the child that does not live close by (1000 miles away), but I am here with him now. I am blessed to have a brother that lives in the area AND is very actively involved with our Dads care. And so much of my visit is my desire to relieve him of the stress he has had in past two months. I can't do enough (in my mind). For those that have experienced in being the main caretaker for their parent(s) if you can offer any suggestions for the sibling that does live close by in how you would have loved their help, please share. Eventually I will have to go back home and work leaving my brother with all the responsibility again.

    And please keep sending in pics of your gardens, I miss mine . . . .

  • WenchLori
    WenchLori Member Posts: 1,558
    edited July 2017

    Gardennerd, I'm glad to hear your Dad is doing much better. Praying he continues to improve daily!

    Coach Vickie, I put my strawberries in a wooden box my hubby put on a stand to keep them off the ground. I planted them in Miracle Grow potting soil and placed straw all around them and they are starting to get tons of strawberries on them.

    Pink, I love your pictures of your flowers. Very beautiful colors indeed! The bottom plant looks a lot like the coneflowers we get in Indiana. They are very pretty too. My hydrangeas are starting to bloom too. I'll get pictures once they get a lot bigger.

    Heidi, my pepper plants aren't very big yet but I'm getting peppers so I'm not going to complain. My FIL's pepper plants are beautiful but he has no signs of peppers yet. I think I'll take my little scrawny plants with peppers! lol

    We came back from visiting my hubby's parents in Peoria last night. When I checked on my garden the tomato worms were having a blast with my tomato plants! One of my Early Girl tomato plants has been reduced to twigs but I have 5 nice sized tomatoes on it. I'm hoping it comes back but I'm not holding my breath as it hurts when I hit the floor! I got 6 cucumbers while we were away, my hubby took a few to snack on while at work today. I'm glad he left one for me!

    Sending out gentle healing hugs to All 🤗



  • Heidibird
    Heidibird Member Posts: 213
    edited July 2017

    Congrats on the cukes an tomatoes, Lori! I have now picked 4 zucchini and have at least 4 more babies. I managed to hunt and find one lil bitty cucumber. I also saw 3 spaghetti squash. Hurrah!

    We had rain twice within the past week which is highly unusual for us in July (or almost any month!) The chiggers are horrid this year, for my husband at least. They don't seem to bite me as much nor do the mosquitos.

    I bought some Tanglefoot to smear on my pecan trees in hope of staving off the pecan weevils this year. DH cut a lot of tentworms out of the trees too. UGH.

    Hope everyone is doing well and enjoying the fruits-and veggies-of your your labor as well as the beauty of the flower gardens.

    ~Heidi

  • Scottiemom11
    Scottiemom11 Member Posts: 1,298
    edited July 2017

    Still having daily heavy rains. My backyard is starting to melt into the lake and my hummingbird and heron went into hiding.

    Scottie

  • Wren44
    Wren44 Member Posts: 8,585
    edited July 2017

    We got our very first tomato! It's one of the little ones but we'll cut it in half and share.

  • M0mmyof3
    M0mmyof3 Member Posts: 9,696
    edited July 2017

    Got there tomatoes growing now. Pea and green bean plants are flowering. I've got one little flower on my cucumber plants. Tomatoes look like they are going to go like crazy.

  • pink_is_my_colour
    pink_is_my_colour Member Posts: 308
    edited July 2017

    WenchLori Got those at Home Depot and for the life of me I can't remember what they're called. It had the botanical name on the tag. I'm pretty sure it started with a C. One of those names you can't pronounce.

  • coachvicky
    coachvicky Member Posts: 1,057
    edited July 2017

    WenchLori,

    I think I will raise my strawberries after this season.

    Thank you!

    Coach Vicky

  • Heidibird
    Heidibird Member Posts: 213
    edited July 2017

    Woohoo! We had an unexpected rain shower Saturday night. I don't know which of you sent it, but thank you! The next week is predicted to be 98 to 100+ each day so the rain will be a big help. Picked more zucchini, blackberries and Asian pears. I even used some of my tomatoes in my salad last night.:-) I love this time of the year!

    Wren, that first bite is always the best!

    MOmmy it sounds like your garden is growing great too!

    ~Heidi

  • M0mmyof3
    M0mmyof3 Member Posts: 9,696
    edited July 2017

    It is. Haven't really had to water much, have gotten some rain lately. Supposed to see thunderstorms or rain showerstomorrow.


  • WenchLori
    WenchLori Member Posts: 1,558
    edited July 2017

    Boy did we get hit with heavy rain and wind while we were in Ohio and again today! Still no zucs but the plants are lovely lol

    Just wanted to share...

    grass and oak tree

    O to lie in the ripening grass
    That gracefully bends to the winds that pass,
    And to look aloft the oak-leaves through
    Into the sky so deep, so blue
    !
    –William Roscoe Thayer (1859–1923)

  • Meow13
    Meow13 Member Posts: 4,859
    edited July 2017

    My strawberries all eaten, maybe chipmunk?

    Still tons of moss everywhere.

  • Heidibird
    Heidibird Member Posts: 213
    edited July 2017

    He probably wrote that poem while lying in the grass. :-)

    Meow, almost any of the small critters, rabbits, squirrels, chipmunks, will munch on the juicy berries. I love the critters but dislike the fact that hey feel the need to take the fruits of our labor.

  • ananda8
    ananda8 Member Posts: 2,755
    edited July 2017

    Evidently there aren't any chiggers in Ohio.  If Thayer tried that in Arkansas he wouldn't have written a poem about it.  :)


  • Heidibird
    Heidibird Member Posts: 213
    edited July 2017
  • M0mmyof3
    M0mmyof3 Member Posts: 9,696
    edited July 2017

    Lol

    Praying we get some rain today, even if it comes in the form of thunderboomers

  • Wren44
    Wren44 Member Posts: 8,585
    edited July 2017

    Very funny Ananda! We don't have them up here and I don't miss them at all. Mosquito bites didn't bother me very much but chiggers were another matter.

  • Gardennerd
    Gardennerd Member Posts: 174
    edited July 2017

    Lori - love the Thayer poem. Tells it like it should be enjoyed.

    Traveling back home and beyond the travel concerns I find myself wondering what my garden looks like. Two weeks is a long time to not tend to it. DH has picked tomato's but he doesn't talk to the plants like I do (smile). I am SO pleased, the facility is telling the family it looks like Dad will be able to eventually get back to his own home with someone checking on him. Which is so what he wants. So I am leaving him on a positive note. Not bad for being in hospitals/ICU/and rehab facilities for three weeks and being 92. It has been hotter here then back home . . . 98 today in Maryland.

  • flaviarose
    flaviarose Member Posts: 442
    edited July 2017

    For those who might have too much zucchini on their hands, a poem:


    Marge Piercy - Attack of the Squash People

    And thus the people every year
    in the valley of humid July
    did sacrifice themselves
    to the long green phallic god
    and eat and eat and eat.
    They're coming, they're on us,
    the long striped gourds, the silky
    babies, the hairy adolescents,
    the lumpy vast adults
    like the trunks of green elephants.
    Recite fifty zucchini recipes!

    Zucchini tempura; creamed soup;
    sauté with olive oil and cumin,
    tomatoes, onion; frittata;
    casserole of lamb; baked
    topped with cheese; marinated;
    stuffed; stewed; driven
    through the heart like a stake.

    Get rid of old friends: they too
    have gardens and full trunks.
    Look for newcomers: befriend
    them in the post office, unload
    on them and run. Stop tourists
    in the street. Take truckloads
    to Boston. Give to your Red Cross.
    Beg on the highway: please
    take my zucchini, I have a crippled
    mother at home with heartburn.

    Sneak out before dawn to drop
    them in other people's gardens,
    in baby buggies at churchdoors.
    Shot, smuggling zucchini into
    mailboxes, a federal offense.

    With a suave reptilian glitter
    you bask among your raspy
    fronds sudden and huge as
    alligators. You give and give
    too much, like summer days
    limp with heat, thunderstorms
    bursting their bags on our heads,
    as we salt and freeze and pickle
    for the too little to come.

  • Wren44
    Wren44 Member Posts: 8,585
    edited July 2017

    Love this poem!

  • WenchLori
    WenchLori Member Posts: 1,558
    edited July 2017

    Ananda, that is so funny! I've only had to deal with chiggers once and that was more than enough for me! If I'd lay in the grass here I'd be carried off by ants!

    My tomato plants are loaded with tomatoes but none are ripe enough to eat. I'm waiting for my Early Girls to get big enough for some fried green tomatoes. Yummy! We had an algy bloom and we have lost a lot of fish. I'm so sad! Most of our paddle fish were doing great! They were the most interesting fish we have. The catfish don't seem to be having any problems at this time. I'm praying they are still swimming when it gets light enough to see the pond. My DS will be here later today or early tomorrow, I'm so excited!


  • WenchLori
    WenchLori Member Posts: 1,558
    edited July 2017

    Maybe I should use some of our dead fish for fertilizer!


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