Monday, July 11, 2011

Mystery Plant



Our...Jeff's...garden continues to thrive! Yesterday he tilled around the entire thing and between each row! Even down the middle of the greens/radish row! Now we can thin the radish & carrots and just move the little transplants over. We had to put up a couple Japanese Beetle traps...at $9 each...coz they're in the corn. I wish there were mosquito traps. We have plenty of them. (Oh, yea, mosquito traps are called bats and we do have some of those!) The tomato cages are working beautifully...very rustic, and the potatoe plants are starting to bloom. Potatoes flower on top of the plant but the fruit...potatoes...are under the ground. The peppers are bloomin, too.










And we have a mystery plant. Don't have any idea what it is so I think I'll go to Co-op Extension on the way home with the photo of it.

Tuesday, July 5, 2011

How The Garden Grows


















Our garden has been getting a lot of attention lately and it shows. The rows are weed-free and the soil is rich and dark. Our corn is higher than most we've seen in fields around us...don't know if we'll have many ears but so far we're ahead! The cukes and pole beans have started up their 'rustic' trellis and the potatoes are leaning on their rope supports. The poles for the tomatoes are cut and hopefully will be put in later this week. I found the 1st green tomato yesterday morning!! Last night Jeff sprayed for bugs again...or for whoever is eating the cuke and bean leaves. And, oh, it was back! This is only the 5th time I've run into one in the nearly 50 years I've been in the house. The last one was in the bathroom a couple of weeks ago, so the visits are getting too close for my comfort. Jeff says if it comes back again I get to keep it. LOL! What do I name it? Slinky?? (It is a garden snake.)












Monday, June 27, 2011

The Joys of Composting

Any decent garden deserves it's own compost heap, right? so that was our project this weekend. It was too wet to till/weed the rows...most were full of water, anyway...so Jeff & I decided where to put the compost heap and how to enclose it. Of course, the $400 rotating compost barrel would be nice...oh, that price tag!...and Jeff has a couple of ideas on how to jerry-rig one if he can find the right barrel, but in the meantime, a video on the 'net on building a compost bin using wooden pallets caught our interest. We both watched it and agreed it would be quick and easy and not too expensive. In fact, there would be little expense if we could get some pallets from Jeff's friend, Frank. A trip out to Frank's place on Sunday got us all the pallets we needed ...as long as they were the ones painted blue that Frank wanted to get rid of. (That was OK coz the video recommeded sealing the pallets to prevent rot and if they were already painted....) Jeff managed to get 3 of them into the back of my Forrester and tied another 2 on top. The load was nearly too much for the ol'Subaru but the suspension held and we drove back home on the back roads doing a whopping 20mph with the 4-way flashers going! The video had shown the pallets being wired together but we didn't want to stop at Walmart for wire on the way home, so Jeff cut some poplar saplings and used them as stakes to put the walls together. (Got rid of that stand of poplars and added more green to the compost pile, too.) He tied the corners with twine and will replace that with wire when we get some. The bin has 1 long side made of 2 pallets fastened together...sturdy with the long stakes, and the short sides will be added tonight. The front will eventually be made out of some removeable planks. Saturday Jeff racked leaves from the deck and under the ramp while I trimmed the lilacs so we had a nice pile of green and brown stuff to start the compost pile. Sunday Jeff discovered worms in it as he put together the wall...a very good sign. Mom's not too thrilled about the coffee can (w/cover!) by the kitchen sink to collect coffee grounds and vegatabile peelings but if we empty it often it shouldn't be a problem. (You should hear her on the coffee can of worms in the refrid waiting disposal into the finished compost bin!)

I've been working on knitting swap items...got 2 summer-time swaps and 1 quickie swap almost due. I got a little carried away with the quickie swap and will be exchanging 4 bookmarks with other knitters. (It works out nicely, I couldn't decide which bookmark to make so now I can make/send 4 different ones!) My things in the shop in Cooperstown have started to sell, too, so inbetween knitting for my swaps and working in the garden with Jeff, I have to produce for there, too! Oh, can't forget to do another pair of socks for Jeff, too!

Thursday, June 23, 2011

More gardening news

Boy, did it rain yesterday! A real soaker. Hey, that meant no one had to wrestle the garden hose around to water anything. Jeff's size 12 footprints became little (?) lakes! The rain was gentle enough that the only thing that got beaten down was the biggest potatoe top. Jeff said Tuesday night the potatoes needed hilling but he didn't get around to it. Guess it will have to wait until Saturday coz it's thundering & starting to rain right now and tomorrow we both have medical appointments in Cooperstown.

Last night I tried to take a few photos of one of the resident toads in the garden. Hopefully I can get it to download. If there is a photo of something unrecognizable here, be sure to click on it to enlarge it. The toads are about 1 1/2 to 2" long and really jump when the tiller is moving! Dawg just looks at it. Of course, she just looked at the mouse in the house last night, too. Guess providing protection against toads, snakes and mice are not in her job description.

Friday, June 17, 2011

The Garden's Complete!






Last night was The Spraying of the Potato Bugs...and pepper bugs and tomato bugs and etc. Jeff said he could see the bugs jumping off the potato plants as he sprayed...and he announced each new seedling as he found them. He did some more tilling and decided maybe it's as big as it's going to get this year. Of course he has run out of yard on the road side. His potato hills are about 3' high and the potato plants have started to blossom...so have the beans and peppers. He has already started to plan next year's garden, where he'll put what. If we get only a halfway decent crop this year we will be busy canning and dehyrading at picking time! I planted my herb garden in the old dog's wading pool...even found more stevia seeds to put in there. Boy, is that a shock to pay $2.49 for a packet of seeds and open it to find 10 very small seeds. Jeff started a packet of stevia and transplanted the seedlings but lost the label in the move so I figured another attempt might be necessary. I went with the seeds instead of a plant coz of the cost of one ...around $6/plant...but so far I've got $5 in seeds with nothing to show for it yet. Of course, I may be overwhelmed with stevia plants in a few weeks. I also did my time picking up rocks but Jeff tilled up more! I hope this 'bend and stretch' will show on my waist.

I tried again to start a lace garden hat and got further along on the chart before I ran into trouble and had to rip it out. This morning I enlarged the chart...hope that helps me keep my place. This hat is suppose to be for a summer swap in a knitting group but I think it will end up in the shop in Cooperstown. If I could just work on it without anyone interrupting me I just might get it done. I'll try again tonight.











Thursday, June 16, 2011

More Garden Tales

I had the day off (ha!) yesterday so we worked all afternoon in the garden/yard. I finally got the entire yard mowed once...some parts twice! I also pushed back the weed line in a couple of places...finding a few 'snow on the mountain' survivors that my mom had planted as a border over 50 years ago! I cleared around them and with a little luck and TLC they may grow back. Jeff had trimmed up some of the pine trees last year and those sections of the yard look very 'Adirondack'. I'm still picking up sticks as I mow around the yard and there are stick piles in several locations that Jeff has promised to break/chop into 12" pieces to use in the fire pit. Of course, the fire pit is still only a pile of rocks but once the garden is set, we may get to the fire pit!

The Garden...it deserves a capital G...is looking Great! (Another capital G!) Jeff tills between the rows and hoes between the plants once or twice a week. He's still breaking sod but he's running out of yard so the garden may have reached it's final size...about 35 x 35'. Just about everything has taken/come up and some even have started to blossom. Over the weekend Jeff had cut some poplar saplings and made a trellis for cucumbers and beans. If it works we'll have a 6' wall of green! His friend Frank stopped in last night and among his sterling words of wisdom re the garden, announced that we have potato bug. So Jeff went online and found a homebrew to combat them. Tonight's activity will be spraying the garden. Last night I finished covering the bottom of the old dog's wading pool with rocks and started...well, I started but Jeff actually did it...taking apart last year's raised garden bed and moving the dirt to the pool. I want to get a bag of enriched potting soil to put in it and then start an herb garden. Jeff was talking about emaking a patio area facing the garden under the trees. There always seem to be a breeze there and it's close to the house...a really nice spot.

I decided to watch the hockey game (the only time I actually roote for Boston) and knit after we finally put the hoe and rake away, but I found I couldn't count well enough to work on the lace sun hat I'm trying to do for a swap so after the game was over and the Boston guys took turns skating around the rink with Lord Stanley's cup (what if one of them had dropped it??? I said I was tired!) I gave up and went to bed. Maybe tonight I can knit while Jeff sprays the potatoe bugs.