Tuesday, June 29, 2021

June's Garden (2021)


June's garden is finally, finally, finally out.  It feels like it has taken us forever but it is done.  Some areas are sprouting and others are finished.  The potato vines have begun dying so they are almost ready. Putting them in a big pile of horse manure worked great. After they are dug, butternut squash will be allowed to run wild in this bed.  

Growing yellow squash in the horse manure with the potatoes didn't work at all.  They produced huge green leaves but the fruit developed blossom end rot.  


After I amended the soil around the roots, they improved and have just now started producing.  Blossom end rot is common in my garden so I automatically amend the soil when I plant.  The squash didn't get any extra nutrients since this was an experiment.


Sitting beside the potato bed are five big pots.  Four are full of sweet potatoes and one has sugar beets.  Supposedly, it is easier to dig them out of the pots than the ground.  I'm all for less work.


The right half of the garden was planted early and most of it is doing well.


The first row beside the lawn has two rows of peppers side by side with all of their lower leaves removed.  In the open area below, a row of melons are spreading. 


The row closest to the lawn is tied to the short chicken wire fence for support since they become top-heavy as they get tall.  


In the tiny space between the peppers and the fence are cucumbers.  They will go through the fence and hang on the outside of the fence where they can get the morning sun.  


The next row has been planted about three times.  It has been difficult to get anything to sprout because I keep forgetting to water. Now that we are into the heat of summer, if you don't water seeds twice a day, they will dry out and die quickly.  I'll just keep trying.


Next is the first row of tomatoes.  All but one are new varieties to me.  


The lower leaves have been removed which opens up the area for a watermelon.  It tries to spread out into the walkway but I kick it back in line as I walk past - zero tolerance for wayward fruit.


At the beginning of the second row of tomatoes are Super Beef Steak; however, I think they should have been called "short and bushy" beef steak.  They are only halfway up the fence.


So instead of running cantaloupe and watermelon underneath, they are being trained to go up the fence to be above the tomatoes.  No space will be wasted this year.  After the vines get up high, I will trim back their leaves so the first tomato plant in the row can breathe.


At the far end of this same row, the other tomatoes are tall.  They have their lower leaves stripped so cantaloupes, beets, and lettuce can grow below.


In the middle of the garden are two triple rows of corn.  I am not expecting much from them because I have never had success with corn. The row on the right was planted first and then a few weeks later the left row was planted.  It is just now sprouting. 



The field side of the garden was planted late because we were waiting for the horse manure to decompose a bit.


This is a big addition to the garden.  It was an unused corral in our field. It will be here permanently to support plants.  I have discovered it is easier to rotate plants rather than put up new supports every season. 


This bed is also new.  It was the old compost pile for years but isn't used anymore.  Assorted squash will be trained to go down the field fence. My fear is that they will take over the backyard when their roots reach the rich compost deep down.


The back of the garden close to the woods and the shed is in deep shade now.  


The buckets at the end of the rows are placed in these spots to keep the garden hose from smashing plants as it is drug around.


The cucumbers going up the support fence in the back corner by the shed are happy but the okra does not like this dark corner.  They are hardly growing.  It is too late to plant more so this experiment has been a failure. However, the assorted cabbages and beets have been a success. Trying all different kinds has been fun.  


The Chinese vegetables, cabbages, and some of the broccoli are all gone.  Growing different kinds of broccoli has been educational.  Some developed diseases and died immediately, others are healthy and thriving and a few even had different shaped heads - all things I didn't expect.  So far, all have tasted the same. The empty spaces have been seeded with Swiss Chard and pumpkins.


In the onion and leek bed, we planted three different kinds of leeks and discovered we don't like them...who knew?!  With so many new things we are trying this year, it makes sense we wouldn't like some of them.


The onions will be finished soon and since their tops are wilting, it is easy to see the stepping stones once again.  It has been difficult trying to walk on the path without crushing anything but after realizing we don't care for leeks, walking got easier.  


In this back corner are two things I am watching closely.  First is the bitter melon.  I have never eaten nor seen them at any grocery store.  

Bitter Melon

The other new item is the Snake Bean.  Only one seed germinated, much to my disappointment, so I check it every time I visit the garden.

Snake Bean

So far the experiments and taste tests have been interesting plus we still have peak harvest time ahead!

17 comments:

  1. Jeannie, your garden was already very big and you added some new beds! You must be very hardworking person. Planting sweet potatoes in pots seems a good idea to me.

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    1. Margi, it seems the more I grow, the more my family eats! If only they would stop eating, I could stop working. I will suggest that to them and see what they think.

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  2. I always enjoy seeing your experiments. I like the idea of layering plants, to add more to a space. The bitter melon will be interesting. I've never tasted it either. Keep us posted.

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    1. I showed it to Bill and he was confused. Why grow something that tastes horrible? he asked. I told him they are good for you and help you live longer. He wasn't convinced. Why live longer if you must eat bitter food? he asked. I had no reply. I wish I could live to 120 eating chocolate cake every day.

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  3. What a great selection of vegetables! It seems to me that you could open a market stand to sell vegetables.
    Your family is lucky to have all these fresh ingredients for their meals.
    I am sorry that leeks do not find favor with you.Here in Germany and also in France it is an important
    sort of vegetable in summer and in winter, as there are excellent varieties that are very frost resistant.
    Leeks are used in soups, casseroles, served with béchamel sauce and in quiches. Famous French quiche
    lorraine is so popular. Leeks and cheese go very well together and grated nutmeg is a good spice for leeks.

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    1. I tried all three varieties and decided they are too mild for me. I would prefer an onion instead. There are a few still left growing, we have been eating them chopped fresh in salads, in soups and stir fry. They will be left to grow until cold weather to see if their flavor changes. I haven't given up on them but really like strong onions better.

      Quiche is one of my favorite foods. I used to fix it all the time when we had chickens and we were drowning in fresh eggs. I don't miss the chickens but I do miss all the eggs.

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  4. I am so impressed with your garden! Everything looks so nice and healthy, and I love that you experiment and try new things. I sure hope your single little snake melon makes it. How are you ever going to be able to eat the gigantic harvest that must come from this garden? I need to get myself some green thumbs somehow!

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    1. Martha! Dustin is always hungry! Always! He is thin and never gains an ounce. But, this is what really drives me, I have so many food allergies that buying food at the grocery store is almost impossible. Cooking from scratch is necessary. The huge harvest will be either canned, frozen, dehydrated, stored in the basement or eaten fresh. None of it will go to waste.

      If the little snake melon survives, I will make sure everyone knows it.

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  5. Your veggie garden is growing so well, lots of amazing harvests to come.

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  6. Wow your garden looks fantastic, I didn't realise that you had so many food allergies, you must have learnt so much through all your experiments. I have never heard of a snake melon and will look forward to seeing your results. That is a great idea of using the corral. Sarah x

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    1. Sarah, the list of food I can't eat keeps getting longer and longer. It has been four decades since I could go to a restaurant and eat whatever I wanted. However, it has forced me to get creative and grow new vegetables. I will share my results - successes and failures.

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  7. Food allergies explains why you enjoy endless new varieties. I love leeks!

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    1. It is the reason I keep trying new food. I keep running out of others that I can enjoy. It was a surprise about the leeks, since I love onions so much, I expected the same with leeks. However, every time I ate them, I wished they were an onion. When my husband said he preferred onions over leeks also, that was that. No more leeks.

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  8. I haven't been reading any blogs lately, as life has been crazy busy, even for me. However, my nephew, Jake, was asking about you today. I'll never know what brings things into his head, but his question reminded me that I should check your blog and see what you are up to. I'll tell him tomorrow that you have been gardening. I'm glad to see your garden, as always. I love to see how you experiment. I totally understand how you use all that food. I cook all the time. They just keep coming over and eating, or Rob's driving around delivering it for me. What can I say? Plus, I think people with large gardens that can their produce eat more fruits and veggies than some other people do. At least we seem to.

    I didn't try watermelon this year, as we normally can't get it to grow and our summer has been so full of getting a new grandson and helping with the 1-year-old, but I should have. We hit 117 one day--an all-time record for our city. Other days, we were 114. Some of my things are absolutely wrecked, like my blackberries. So, watermelon might have been the thing this year. Oh, well.

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    1. I have taken a break from social media and the internet. It was no longer enjoyable and checking the news was too depressing. I turned the computer off and walked away. Lately, I have been wondering how my friends are doing and stories for posts have begun circling in my head again. It feels as if I am rested.

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  9. I have increasing food allergies as well and grow a garden in Baton Rouge. This spring/summer has been so wet that by June this year we had exceeded our usual annual total rainfall of 60 inches! It's a struggle to try to create more drainage! on another note, please be careful when you first eat a bitter melon. It can lower one's blood sugar and blood pressure to the point where one can't move at all. Yep, it happened to me about 10 yrs. ago. In earlier decades it had never been a problem! Love your immense and fascinating garden, and appreciate your blog site! Thank you.

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    1. THANK YOU for this information. I had not heard that anywhere and will be very careful. My blood pressure is high but I eat a spoonful of flax seeds every day and it lowers it to a healthy level. Blood sugar swings are also a HUGE problem for me since I am severely hypoglycemic. Thank you again for letting me know.

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