Thursday, May 16, 2013

Mid May Garden Update


Hello again! Its mid-May, and my garden is looking more like a jungle now.  Many of the cool weather plants have gone to seed, and I've let many of them flower so I can get seeds for next year.  This weekend, I got a bunch of broccoli seeds pods which I had allowed to dry off, and my daughters and I worked on extracting a bunch of seeds from them, and saved them for the fall.  I have some collard seed pods that I will probably harvest soon to do the same too. I am also letting a lot of my spinach go to seed, to see if I can save some spinach seeds too.  I had 2 kinds of spinach,  one the savoy kind, and the other a regular type leaf spinach...so the seeds I get might be interesting.

My snow peas have produced very well but are taking a beating from both the powdery mildew and spider mites.  They lower part of  the plants is completely infested, and the upper part is still producing. I might pull up all the plants soon to give more space to my Rouge Vif D'etampes pumpking vines, which are getting quite large now.


My son's flowers are doing pretty well too.   Here is some Germany Chamomile  in bloom.  We have already picked many of the flowers and are drying them out for use later as tea.  You can also make tea with the fresh flowers... they have a wonderful smell, sort of like apples. 



And here is one of his California poppies.   They are stunning, and are blooming like crazy.  plus I found out you can also use the plant for making tea...  supposed to be medicinal too.






The Cucurbits
Here are the Rouge vif D'etampes pumpkins.   They are growing real fast now, and the vines look real healthy.   I saw my first  Squash Vine borer moth today, and  fortunately was able to kill it.   I inspected all the vines, and just found one egg, on a sugar pie pumpkin vine.  

And here are some of my sugar pie pumpin vines, next to 2 volunteer sunflowers.  


 In dealing with SVB, I think I will skip the tulle netting over the plants. The plants are all very big now, and I have buried many of the vines, so I think they could probably survive some attacks, if my other preventative measures dont work as well.   My current battle plan then is:
1. Neem oil. - I bought some pure cold-pressed need oil, and began applications.  Its the real stuff, not the clarified hydrophobic extract, which has the azadirachtin removed. I got it from ROT Organics, a local company :   http://neempro.com/neempro.php
I started applying it a few weeks ago, and applied again today, especially after seeing a SVB moth flying around.  (Look at my 2012 Blog entry that deals with SVBs... that has more info on these pests).

2. Hand picking eggs.  I plan on inspecting the vines every few days to pick off any eggs.   

I still have a small patch of mustard.  I've picked some of the leaves, and we had some mixed mustard/collard green for dinner last week.  The pumpkin vines (both a sugar pie pumpkin and Rouge Vif D'etampes will soon overgrow this area, as you can see the vines in the background too).

Here is one of the acorn squash, the Table Queen Acorn.  I have about 3 growing, but some of my newer female flowers have recently aborted... I hope I can get more from these plants.

And here is the Hubbard squash. This one has been growing for about  a week now.  The ones before have aborted unfortunately but this one looks like it will stick.  The bad new is that my vines have been looking kind of sick recently.  I suspect it some sort of mosaic virus.  But I hate to pull up my plants, so I'm just going to wait and see what happens. The plant is still growing like crazy, about 3 - 4 inches a day, but the leaves come out blotchy looking and curled up.  Hopefully the plant can survive and still produce.  What a bummer though.. I was worried about the SVBs but didn't anticipate getting hit with mosaic virus...


Chickens
The other big news is, we have chickens now!  I love those little fuzz balls.  They love walking around looking for bugs, and pecking at stuff.    Here are 2 of them, an Americauna chick, and a Gold-Sex-Link chick.
Here is a Black Sex-Link Chick next to a  pumpkin blossom.



1 comment:

  1. Christian your Rouge Vif D'etampes pumpkin vines are doing great! I'm curious to know how you are cultivating your soil or adding any amendments? I would like to get my much smaller Rouge Vif D'etampes vines up to this size.

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