Thursday, June 30, 2022

June's Garden (2022)

 
The garden is surviving but not thriving. The weather has been in the upper 90's almost every day and we have only had a little rain once. This is unusual for the month of June but would be typical weather for July and August. The soaker hoses are being used on seedlings, the rest of the garden is mulched under deep layers of grass clippings and so far, we have plenty of well water.


Everything is growing and is covered in blossoms but nothing is producing fruit. The day following a drenching rainstorm, the garden will explode with food, and canning season will begin.  I feel like a racehorse straining at the starting gate. I watch the weather report and wait. 


The strategically placed blue tubs have kept the much-used garden hose from smashing everything as I pull it from one parched area to the next.


In the first row beside the yard, the tomatoes are getting tall and the small row of green beans beside the short chicken wire fence have at least produced a couple of beans. 


The cool weather cabbages under the tomato plants are almost all eaten.  When there is an empty spot, it is immediately planted with winter squash seeds. 


The lower leaves on the tomato plants have been removed to give the seedlings sunshine.  Soon, the squash will overtake the whole area and spread into the yard. It will become a big mess. I know.


The next row over is lush and full of various varieties of beans.  Blooms are everywhere but there is nary a bean pod to be plucked.


The two rows of Orange Icicle Tomatoes have been a disappointment.  After adding saved eggshells accumulated over the long winter, plus amending the soil with everything anyone suggested, and keeping them always watered in this drought, two plants have already developed blossom end rot. They have been given more fertilizer and pampering than anyone else yet still, they failed. No one else is having this problem since I amended the soil. 


They teased me with what appeared to be the first ripe tomato of the season, but alas, after patiently waiting for the perfect shade of orange, it was rotten and squished in my hand. At this point, unless they produce twice the amount anybody else does, their presence will never again grace my garden!


The rows of onion and garlic that were overrun by lettuce last month have been harvested and replanted with winter melons and sugar beets. The winter melons should store for a few months and the sugar beets will be harvested during winter.


This is what I have learned from my mistakes growing onions and garlic.

* Planting lettuce with the onions works as long as the lettuce is thinned and not allowed to overpower the onions.
* Last season I misjudged the number of onions we would eat in a year. This year twice as many were planted.
* Don't peel away the outer layers or cut off the green tops because they form a protective layer as they dry.


* My bulbs came from a local nursery and don't seem to be long-term storage onions. They were just labeled "onions." The red ones will only last a month or two. The white ones will store longer but definitely not through the winter. This harvest is too much for me to use before they go bad. I will squeeze them often and any that are a tiny bit soft will be eaten, frozen, or dehydrated.
* Last year I moved them to the basement where it was dark and cool but this year I will leave them on the hot, dry porch longer to see if that cures them better. Afterward, half will go in the basement and half in the garage to see if either place is better.
* This season I tried growing a few storage onions from seeds and was surprised by how easy it was. They weren't started very early in the year so they didn't have time to mature. I will test them to see how well they store and then buy more this fall for next year.


*Planting garlic and onions together was a mistake. The garlic was ready at least a month before the onions and began rotting in the ground. I couldn't dig the garlic without disturbing the onions so all were harvested at once. The garlic bulbs fell apart so this row in the garden will have to be used for garlic again next year. The lost pieces will begin sprouting this winter.


All of my collard greens died from rotten stems. This problem has slowly gotten worse over the years and I was told it is caused by a boron deficiency.  Borax laundry detergent was sprinkled over the whole area and the same seeds have been replanted.  I tried this treatment and it seems to have worked on the broccoli. 


This row was supposed to be all okra in the center with bush beans on either side. I know I said I was determined to have a large amount of okra this year after last year's dismal harvest. However...

Front Row

A bad storm picked up a metal chair, threw it across the front porch and it landed on the box of okra seedlings. All but a few were destroyed (wish it had landed on the Orange Icicle tomatoes instead). There were only enough to plant in the back row. Oh well. At least it didn't go through the glass on the front door.  

Back Row

My poor pitiful summer squash. This pains me to say but the squash vine borers have won again. These are my defeats this month:

*Putting a row cover over the seedlings didn't keep the little monsters from finding a hole and getting inside.
*Repeated spraying with liquid BT didn't work since it was a year old and had lost its efficacy. I won't buy liquid anymore - too expensive for the short shelf life.
*Put up a scent trap purchased from a new company but it didn't catch anything at all. It was worthless.  Added another scent bait saved from last year's batch but it was expired.  Still caught nothing.
*Lost my temper and sprayed with real poison. Killed everything in the area so nothing got pollinated.

Everything died or is about to die so I planted AGAIN and have purchased new products and will try AGAIN!


On a happier note, the potatoes in the back of the garden did not mind being in the shade at all and have produced as much as those in full sun.  We are digging them up for meals a few at a time when the vines completely die. They are delicious.


The garden is full so I trimmed the potato vines that have spread over the path and pushed them over backward.  In the empty strip that was underneath, winter carrot seeds were planted. Thinking and planning for winter is hard to do when summer is in full swing but now is the time to do it.


Not being satisfied with everything growing, I feel like we still need more food. Extra winter squash have been planted in the old compost pile and will spread down the fence.  Last year the horses did not bother them. 


Food prices continue to rise and I have been listening to the farmers. They are not optimistic that things are going to get better and are predicting an extremely bad year for us.  I'm hearing the word "famine" being used in relation to the USA. I have never heard that before but their sober faces are causing me concern. My solution is to poke another seed in the ground. 

Last Month's May Garden (2022)

11 comments:

  1. I love seeing your garden but you sure do have a challenge to keep everything growing and healthy. I was able to drive over to a farm this summer and get veggies grown right there and picked while I was there but they are closed now. It's gotten very hot here and they provide veggies for the stores too. My favorite was the okra and yellow squash. Oh how I love it! Your onions sure look good too!

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    1. Isn't the flavor difference between store bought and fresh surprising. If I had a local farm that grew everything I would certainly shop there and garden less! Yellow squash is our favorite but growing it seems to be impossible for me. Bill told me to just give up because it is so hard and then we got two little yellow squash from the dying vine. I sautéed them with an onion in butter and we loved them. I looked at Bill and said, I will try one more time to grow them.

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  2. Wow, all those onions and garlic! It all looks very healthy and productive, but I know how touch and go things can be when there's a drought, even a short one. We had a bad one in 2012. I hope you'll get some rain soon.

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    1. The onions we will use but that much garlic is more than I can handle. I have given handfuls away, chopped up a quart and put them in olive oil and now I will try dehydrating it for powder. The house is going to smell horrible.

      Last evening it clouded up, thundered and the wind howled. Every time I walked by a window I looked out. Not a single drop fell anywhere.

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  3. I can so relate to your garden challenges. Some of ours this year have been wire worms in the potatoes, Japanese beetles on lots of plants, which are also eating lots of our immature apples, and just this morning, we killed 14 squash bugs. All we can do is keep trying, right? In the spirit of keep planting, though our potatoes have all been harvested, I saw yesterday the suggestion to plant more, as long as it's 8 weeks before your frost date, and am thinking about doing that. It's such a good staple food to have lots of. I know they don't love the really hot days in August here, so it will be an experiment, but isn't all of gardening? I hope your orange icicle tomatoes turn out better than they're currently appearing.

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    1. I researched wire worms because if you have a problem, I will probably have the same problem soon. Wire worms haven't bothered my potatoes in the past but who knows about this year since I haven't dug mine yet. They are still growing in the shade and I am going to leave them as long as possible. Wire worms are the larvae of the click beetle and I have seen them in my garden this year. I didn't smash them because I didn't realize they would hurt anything. That will change now.

      I am curious to see how your potatoes do planted for the fall. The agriculture charts say that my area can do two potato crops but I have never had any success. They have produced big vines but no potatoes beneath. I wonder if I need to plant the small early potatoes? I will watch your garden with anticipation to see how it works for you.

      The Orange Icicle tomatoes are really on the chopping block right now. They are just too much trouble but I will hold back my judgement until the race is over.

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  4. Hallo, we have a drought here too, the weather is incredibly dry and warm for June. Greetings from Slovenia.

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    1. Margi, the weatherman said we had a 50% chance of getting rain and today four drops fell. One landed on my son who was outside - that is how we know it rained. I guess the weatherman was right after all since we did get something!

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  5. Booooooo to those Orange Icicle tomatoes...

    We got basically no rain until two weeks ago, with a nice long drippy afternoon. But the past few days, we've had a rainstorm every day! (Ok, there was a little hail, too.) Our enemies are the grasshoppers, who appeared way earlier than usual. They decimated the beautiful mix of greens, and lo and behold, have munched off half the stems on the green onions. (The bulbs seem to be ok, so I assume they'll regrow.) Ironically, the plants in the tall miner's kettle, chest-high, are untouched. Because the grasshoppers can't hop that high??
    (Thanks for stopping by the blog. Always nice to hear what you've got to say.)

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    1. The Orange Icicle tomatoes have begun ripening and I am getting two or three every day. They are producing more than any of the other tomatoes! Even with tossing the ones with blossom end rot, they are still out producing any of the others. They make me so mad! I had hoped another variety of the tomatoes would do better but so far that isn't happening.

      We got rain!!!! I wasn't a deep rain but it was enough to keep everything going. Now the humidity is stifling.

      Grasshoppers! Good grief! I didn't think anything liked onions. They will regrow no problem. I cut off the tops and use them in salads all the time. Losing the greens would have broken my heart.

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  6. You have had a challenging month with the weather! Sorry the Orange Icicle Tomatoes haven't been a success. Those a re great tips for growing onions! Sarah x

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