After last month's deluge, the rain stopped and hasn't returned. The garden has baked from the heat and drought.
I have been watering as much as possible so Bill gifted me a new hose pipe - red was chosen so it doesn't resemble a slithering snake. He felt guilty after accidentally shooting holes in the old one while protecting the garden from marauding varmints.
This row now has tiny onion seedlings below the tomatoes. When the first hard frost kills the tomatoes, they will be cut at the soil level. The roots will remain and decompose over winter so as to not disturb the onions. The fence and posts will then be removed and a hoop house put up over the onions. They are probably too tender to make it through the winter unprotected.
Even though we provide water, the birds have begun pecking the tomatoes. If the drought continues, squirrels will start eating them too. The odd things hanging on the fences and wrapped around the ripening tomatoes are grocery produce net bags - which birds hate. They are also used to hold cherry tomatoes whilst sipping coffee and picking with one hand.
As the summer vegetables finish, they are being replaced by winter ones. Drawing a diagram ahead of time and planning what goes where never seems to work for me. Whichever seedlings are ready will be planted into whatever spot is empty. I stopped working when the sun rose high enough and took these pictures. Detailed planning is not my strength.
After it was planted, I began working in the celery bed beside the lettuce plot. Four different varieties were growing as a test but all became spit-out-of-your-mouth-bitter. Ugh! None have been harvested and used this season. After research, it seems heat, drought, or low nutrients can cause bitterness. I had all three problems. I trimmed away the bad stalks then fed and watered them constantly in hopes of an improvement.
The Afina Cutting Celery is a winter variety that I have grown for years. It can withstand frigid weather without missing a step. Even though it tasted bitter, I think it will improve as the weather cools.
The flavor isn't as good as regular zucchini, but since it is prolific, I keep experimenting with new recipes.
The bitter melon is quite content wherever it is planted but I haven't found a recipe yet to make them taste enjoyable. They are too easy to grow to not learn to like them.
With each bed, the first step is to dig compost out of the pile. Last fall, it was stuffed high and allowed to decay over winter. When spring arrived, I started removing one side and then worked across to the other. The goal is to empty all of the usable decomposed mulch to make room for more debris before the fall cleanup.
Each garden row is turned over with a pitchfork, and then compost, fertilizers, and amendments are added depending on what is needed. This spot was rock hard and had large clumps of clay. The garden soil is improving every year but it still has difficult spots. Dried grass clippings were added to the compost and then a pinch of 13-13-13 fertilizer was dropped in each hole for the lettuce seedlings. After they are established, they will get a spray of an organic fertilizer.
After it was planted, I began working in the celery bed beside the lettuce plot. Four different varieties were growing as a test but all became spit-out-of-your-mouth-bitter. Ugh! None have been harvested and used this season. After research, it seems heat, drought, or low nutrients can cause bitterness. I had all three problems. I trimmed away the bad stalks then fed and watered them constantly in hopes of an improvement.
Utah Tall's flavor has improved but is still not great. Tango tasted fine but looked pathetic. This was their second failure and so have been ripped up. Chinese Pink has improved a little but only the healthy ones were kept. Maybe they will improve after the cold weather arrives.
The Afina Cutting Celery is a winter variety that I have grown for years. It can withstand frigid weather without missing a step. Even though it tasted bitter, I think it will improve as the weather cools.
Pickling cucumbers are best for pickling because they stay firm and don't become mushy like varieties used for fresh eating. Whether the weather is dry or rainy, the pickling varieties always develop mildew and fungal diseases. It starts with the older leaves and moves up the vine. It will still produce fruit but it will eventually die.
In the past, I used fungal sprays to fight the problems but it would only delay the inevitable. Now I have stopped wasting my time. I plant seeds whenever an empty spot appears, harvest what is produced, rip it out, and then move on. It is much less work.
Natsu Fushinari has been the best disease-resistant cucumber variety I have found. This is my third year growing it and it has always produced well. This one plant vining up a shepherd's hook had five big cucumbers when this picture was made.
By mistake, the National Pickling and Natsu Fushinari were planted side by side (I forgot which I had planted).
In the past, I have always been careful to keep them separated to avoid disease cross-contamination but I discovered it doesn't matter. The pickling variety became sick but the Natsu Fushinari stayed healthy.
Even though the leaves were intertwined, the diseases didn't spread. It showed how mixed varieties of the same vegetable growing side by side and treated exactly the same can perform differently. Finding the right varieties for my space matters.
In the back corner of the garden looking scraggily is the Zucchino Rampicante, moschata (vining zucchini). It was planted in the spring and is still producing even though it looks bare.
Oddly, the fruit only grows on the backside or southeast side of the fence. The only thing we can figure out is that the blooms open at sunrise and turn facing the light.
The flavor isn't as good as regular zucchini, but since it is prolific, I keep experimenting with new recipes.
The bitter melon is quite content wherever it is planted but I haven't found a recipe yet to make them taste enjoyable. They are too easy to grow to not learn to like them.
Now for news about the summer squash area.
First, the Lima beans have overtaken the arch, spread down the fence row, and are shading the peppers so much that it has slowed their production. I tried trimming the Lima bean vines but gave up. I seem to always underestimate how fast they grow and how slow I move in the heat.
NOW THE BIGGEST NEWS EVER! The sole growing (our favorite) winter squash, Georgia Candy Roaster, pepo, died last month so more seeds were planted. A new plant survived and has spread over the arch, down the field fence, and back over the second arch! It is going wild! It was my goal, my big dream this year to have this arch covered with Georiga Candy Roasters. The impossible has happened!
Squash vine borers 1000 wins to my 1 win
That's awesome you're getting both summer and winter squash this year! I agree the zucchini rampicante doesn't taste as nice as regular zucchini, but it doctors up well. Interesting about the produce net bags. I always learn something here! Many wishes for a happy Fall garden!
ReplyDeleteThe birds avoid the nets at all costs and have even stopped pecking the uncovered ripe tomatoes. I think they fear getting tangled up in them.
DeleteThe zucchinio is good battered and fried but of course, anything tastes great fried. I'm mostly dehydrating it in small pieces to soak up the broth in soups. I've tried using it my yellow squash recipes but everyone says its not as good. I will keep experimenting.
One word . . . squash! Hooray you did it!
ReplyDelete--Melanie
I am keeping my fingers crossed that the Candy Roasters have enough time to mature before the first frost. They are growing so fast I can see a change every day.
DeleteIt's incredible, summer and autumn squashes at the same time!
ReplyDeleteI even have a cheesy, yellow squash casserole in the oven right now baking for dinner! Life doesn't get better than that...unless it is deep fried battered squash (which is only prepared on special occasions).
DeleteHurray that you have won the battle of the vine borers! Persistence! All of your work and dedication in growing a garden keeps me in awe! Very clever in using the bag netting. I had to chuckle as I read of the hose shooting of your husband. The bitter melon is an oddly pretty fruit......have you tried making relishes from it? With so many things added to relishes........maybe you could find something that pleases the palate with the melon. Enjoy your hard earned bounty!
ReplyDeleteThe bitter melon tastes like battery acid in my opinion. I have tried it pickled and slipped in salads. A relish sounds like a good idea because the strong flavor is a shock to my taste buds. It is extremely healthy and easy to grow so I keep trying. Why can't chocolate candy bars grow on trees and be good for you?
DeleteWow your squash area looks amazing! Sarah
ReplyDeletePlus they taste good too! This evening while watering (still no rain in the forecast) the Georgia Candy Roaster winter squash has begun to ripen to a lovely shade of a pastel pink. It might make it before frost hits!
DeleteI bow in homage to the Squash Queen...
DeleteHopefully your influence will extend to my garden next year, which I'm looking forward to. ON MY OWN LAND. (Grasshoppers not invited.)
And I was going to ask what bitter squash tasted like. Now I know. Why would you want to grow it...even if you could? (If you've ever read QUIT LIKE A MILLIONAIRE, she talks about her Chinese dad eating bitter squash -- because it was about the only thing he could get, as a kid. And he eats it now to remind himself of those hard times.)
Tomatoes... drool.
Next year.
I look forward to watching your new garden take shape. Maybe you moved so far away that the grasshoppers won't be able to find you.
DeleteBitter melons really taste like battery acid. Seriously. If you lick your finger and put it on one end of a C, D or AA battery and then stick your tongue on the other end, you can tell how much electricity is left in the battery by the shock to your tongue. No shock - toss the battery. A decent shock - still usable. If the battery has leaked, you can taste the battery acid. My sons taught me that trick.
Bitter melons are the only food I have found that supposedly helps you avoid getting Macular Degeneration. Mom went blind with it, I saw how much she suffered so I'm trying to avoid it. I did learn it is caused by eating seed oils. Info is at CureAMD.org.
There is a method to my madness.
Congratulation on your Georgia Candy Roasters, they look splendid. You also have a wonderful garden, so many vegetables. The extent of my gardening this year is buying a couple of basil and mint plants. Some of my bushes in my front lawn died last winter. I was waiting to see if they would come back, but didn’t. In July I purchased a Black&Decker super cordless hedge trimmer but didn’t open the package until yesterday because Brush Pick-up in Nashville is tomorrow. Well, the battery won’t work and I can’t return the trimmer, too late. A new battery would be $96 and it’s a new trimmer, never used. So now have to use manual shears. Did you lose any bushes to frost last winter?
ReplyDeleteThat is disappointing about the cordless hedge trimmer. Nothing seems to be made to last any more. I tossed the sweet potato vines and bean plants that I had just pulled up today over the fence for the horses to devour. They are my Brush Pick-up team.
DeleteI lost all kinds of plants due to the polar vortex that hit last year and most of them were well established. The English Ivy had been growing for over 15 years and was in different areas and all of it is gone. Some of my flowers that always reseed themselves didn't come back. I also lost all of my winter vegetable garden and that was heartbreaking.
Tonight the temperature is dropping down to 37 degrees. It will be the first frost of this fall and it is one week early. The weather is not cooperating with me.