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.