Tuesday, June 20, 2017

Garden Diary June 20, 2017



It's supposed to hit 120 today, so I have been doing some extra watering and paying special attention to our newest trees.  Look what I found in the  tree well around one of our young peach trees!

Monday, June 19, 2017

Garden Diary June 19, 2017


97 degrees at 8 am. It's supposed to reach 118 today. Yikes! Most veggies are dead or dying already, and sunflower and artichoke blooms are collapsing. Today will be the coup de grĂ¢ce who haven't already succumbed. I am trying this water bottle wicking technique on some of my young melon plants. We'll see. There's always fall planting which which to look forward.

Monday, June 5, 2017

Garden Diary June 5, 2017


Currently 99 and sunny; expected high 104/ low 75. There's an excessive heat forecast for the next couple of days, so it will only get hotter.

I went out long enough to bury the contents of our kitchen compost container, give the struggling kumquat tree a bucket of pond water, move the hose to the melon patch, and pick (and eat) a few blackberries. I'll cook the last of the green beans tonight; I don't expect to get many more this season. There are also still a few yellow pear and cherry tomatoes.Marigolds and zinnias are just starting to bloom, and there are still artichoke and sunflower blooms. There are also a number of basil volunteers coming up now.

Yesterday evening I cleaned out a bunch of clover weed that was damming up the streambed. It is nasty stuff and what you see is like the tip of an iceberg. The fragile stems break off easily, but the thick mats of roots aren't extracted easily. There once was watercress in the streambed, but the clover weed apparently choked it out. Although difficult to remove from the streambed, at least it's possible. It's impossible to get out of the lower pond, although Mike regularly wades in to do battle with it.

Friday, June 2, 2017

Garden Diary June 2, 2017


Currently 96 degrees: projected high of 101 and low of 73

Tomatoes in the patio bed look terrible and have already stopped setting fruit, so I pruned them back rather severely and got rid of the cages. Maybe they will survive and put out new growth, and maybe they won't, but since they aren't producing, I haven't lost much. Most of them were volunteers that came up in locations that were probably too close to the concrete blocks containing the raised bed, and I'm assuming that their roots got cooked once temperatures started to rise. However, the two plants I purchased and set in primo locations are also suffering, with much more dead and dying than healthy foliage, and I'm not sure how to explain those. The only healthy tomato in the yard is a Roma volunteer in another location.

The water leveler in our lower pond malfunctioned, causing it to overflow, and we pumped out the excess water for our artichokes, some of which are looking very droopy. I have been careful to deep water them regularly, so it may be that they are just too heavy for their stems. I like to admire their flowers more than I like going to the trouble of preparing them for consumption, so I didn't harvest any, and that may have been a mistake.

I'm still picking quite a few bush beans, mostly purple ones, but don't expect those to last much longer. Several sunflowers have opened up, although the tallest (estimated 10 feet high!) hasn't. The hollyhocks have pretty much finished blooming, and I'm working on cutting those back and saving the seeds.

The kumquat we planted last fall is not happy. It has lost most of its leaves, although there is some new green growth. I think its root system hasn't gone deep enough to tolerate waiting a week between waterings, so I'm trying to remember to give it a bucket or two of pond water every day.

Wednesday, May 31, 2017

Garden Diary May 30, 2017



Weather: Currently sunny and 95 degrees; forecast 75 low 100 high.

It is getting too hot for me to spend more than a few minutes at a time in the garden, I try to accomplish whatever needs to be done before 8 am, with short forays out to move the hose around in spots that need additional watering. This morning I picked (and ate) a couple of handfuls of blackberries, along with cherry and yellow pear tomatoes and purple bush beans.

Santa Rosa plums are close to ripening. There are only a handful on each tree, and I tied small netting bags around each in the hopes that we get to eat them instead of the birds. The birds have been especially problematic this year, even attacking tomatoes, which they have never done in the past. Red Flame grapes are turning color and getting sweet, although as usual they are pretty small.

The tomatoes are disappointing this year, although we pick enough to enjoy fresh. I doubt I'll be freezing any for sauce this year. There are more cherry (Sweet 100) and yellow pear tomatoes than anything else, and I'm experimenting with slow-roasting them in the oven. (instructions here)

We're also harvesting a few zucchini and yellow squash each week, along with quite a few bush beans. I used a high dense-planting technique with the beans which helps them survive the heat, but makes for some interesting bodily contortions while harvesting. I did a fair imitation of downward-facing dog pose while trying to pick the ones in the middle of the patch this morning.

I'm working on taking out the petunia borders around our raised beds, which have gotten pretty leggy although they are still blooming, and replacing them with marigolds.

Thursday, October 20, 2016

Out with the old, in with the new


We continue to work on clearing out the raised beds and putting in fall plantings. Of our summer crops, the only ones still producing are eggplant and basil. I've mostly been planting broccoli transplants in these beds, with petunias planted around the perimeter.


The okra plants have stopped producing, so I dug them out this week and collected the dried pods. If you like okra and are looking for something that will thrive in the summer heat, it's a good choice. Personally, I don't care for okra unless it is unhealthily fried. I don't like either the taste or its slimy texture. This may have something to do with one summer in grad school when I survived on a diet of okra and tomatoes raided from my mother's freezer. I think the plants, which are in the hibiscus family, are pretty, so I planted a few this year anyway. We gave away some, and I thought I might use the dried pods in a Thanksgiving arrangement, but I don't think that will work. They lose their beautiful red color when dried, and the pods split open, scattering the tiny black seeds everywhere. As I collected the pods, I couldn't help but think of the story of the prodigal son who wound up living in a pigpen and was so hungry he longed to eat the husks fed to the pigs. I wondered if those husks were okra.

I've been trying to take the garden overview picture at the top of each blog post from the same location and angle each time, in order to show how the garden changes through the year. The shadows are lengthening now, so it's hard to get a clear picture, but I think I'll stick with that plan. If you want to see some better pictures, Facebook reminded me that one year ago, the Phoenix Home and Garden article on our Arizona Backyard Eden came out,  Here's a link to my Facebook album containing screen shots of the article, along with additional pictures that were only available in the digital edition.

Saturday, October 1, 2016

Fall planting


October marks the height of one of our main planting seasons in the low desert. You can plant almost any cool-season crop now, but I tend to stick to the things I like best- broccoli, edible-pod peas, and salad greens. I was in Alabama visiting family the past couple of weeks, and came back to find squash and melon vines on their way out. This year's monsoon planting results were disappointing: we got about four unremarkable honeydew, no squash, and only one rather pathetic-looking bean plant survived. There's lots of okra, but I don't  particularly like okra unless it is fried, so I'm letting a lot of the pods dry up and go to seed. I think it's an attractive plant.

I spent some time this weekend clearing out declining plants and attempting to remove as many Bermuda grass roots and stolons as possible from the small bed off our side patio. Then I went in search of petunia and broccoli transplants. I didn't find any regular broccoli, but got an eight-pack of Romanesco broccoli, which is very interesting-looking and tastes more like cauliflower than broccoli.
Here's a look at part of the finished bed:


The salad greens and sugar snap peas I planted in the bed by the lemon tree a couple of weeks ago are coming up thinly. I'll need to replant, but that will probably be helpful in terms of staggering the harvest. This year, I'll also try to be more aggressive about pulling up nasturtiums and hollyhocks which seem to particularly love this area, and self-seed prolifically.

Edible-pod peas
Lettuce