Urban Farming and Flowers on 1,000 Square Feet

Big Gardening on a Small City Plot

Sunday, September 12, 2010

It's a Jungle Out There!


I wrote this on August 16th.  Somehow it never posted.

Turtle Heads

Isn't it amazing how much can change in the garden in two weeks!  When I left, there was order and predictability in our design.  The borders were smooth, the weeds contained and the Cherokee Purple about to explode.  In the time that I was gone - 60 Cherokee tomatoes ripened, and the plants settled into complacency, the turtle heads bloomed,  the hanging baskets went dormant and then began to happily flower again  The borders became memories, with only a hint of definition, the lilies disappeared under a riot of Trillium, and any place we gave up and let the morning glory grow, is now in impenetrable barrier.  Two weeks!

I was also happy to see that the Shasta Daisy was having another flowering, as was the coreopsis.  The beans are finally going into flower.  I was thinking we were going to have this hefty tee-pee of green vines and nothing to show for it.  However, these beans are all heirloom varieties, and I guess they just do their thing in their time.  I'm so looking forward to fresh beans!

My first action once I get the luggage in the door was to go to the garden and find the most perfect Japanese Black Trifele out there.   That variety is doing so well this year.  We have double or triple the output we expected, and the fruit is much larger than we have seen previously.   So, I brought in this still warm tomato and made a sandwich on oatmeal bread with some thin slices of feta.  Not very conventional, I know, but it was Heaven!  (It's a bad thing when one misses garden produce more than one's spouse. But he understands.)


We made a huge batch of pesto yesterday morning - our first attempt.  It turned out quite well.  We froze some of it.  We then added spinach to the mixture and used it on a Pasta, Pea, and Pine Nut Salad.  That was a Food Network, Ina Garten recipe -  http://www.foodnetwork.com/recipes/ina-garten/pasta-pesto-and-peas-recipe2/index.html .  I would certainly recommend it.  If you don't like the flavor of pine nuts (I'm not a fan unless they are super-fresh) then leave them out - they really don't add much.  You also might want to assess how much garlic to use.  She calls for 9 cloves - we used two.  I'm not a great lover of garlic (unlike it rest of the world, it seems) and two was more than plenty.  This recipe makes enough to feed fifteen - so halving it might be a good idea. 
We took this to a neighborhood gathering and it disappeared pretty quickly.  Nothing like fresh basil in the hot summer.

It's good to be home.

Monday, August 9, 2010

Winding Down

My time here in Indonesia is about to end.  I will be on a plane headed for Hong Kong in less than 48 hours and then onto Vancouver and then New York.   I miss Tim, I miss the dog and the garden and I miss the boys (although Rory is still in San Diego for a few more weeks.)  But, even after a year, I still have trouble getting my head around the idea that Polly, who is central to my life the way only a daughter can be, is 13,000 miles away.  When I say goodbye, it is not for a few days or a week or a month, but for many months.  I am so grateful for email, and Skype and international cheap phone rates, but I can't pretend it is the same.  I love the time I have with her and I am sorry to see it end.  The next time I see her, it will be Christmas and Rory's wedding.  That will be quite a time!   Indonesia isn't forever and wherever she goes after that - well - it will be impossible to be farther away.  I've experienced a great deal because of her choices.  Not only have I done things I never would have imagined I could do, but I am far more confident because of it all.  I see possibilities I never would have considered.  All this is so positive.  But in the end, most of all, I just miss her.

Tim has been home while the rest of us have been globetrotting (Bob is in Sweden.)  He has been madly processing the tomatoes which have been coming in at an astounding rate.  The Cherokee Purples peaked last week, but now everything else is ready.  Something else I miss very much is the taste of fresh summer tomatoes.  Because I am only in Indonesia for a few weeks at a time, I make it a point never to eat fresh produce - too much risk of contamination and I have no antibodies to combat that.  But even if I wanted a tomato - the ones available here are mostly green and barely ripe when they get to the market.  They don't ripen them before they eat them here, so it really isn't the same experience at all.

This weekend, Polly and I traveled to Jogjakarta - a city Southeast of Jakarta.  It is more of a cultural center than Jakarta and we did see some remarkable things.  The picture of Polly above and the one below, were taken at the largest Buddhist temple in the world - Borobudur.   The temple was astounding in its beauty and construction, the views were remarkable, and the terraced gardens leading up to the summit were just lovely.  Despite there being hundreds of people there that evening, the atmosphere was one of quiet, respite and contemplation and it has been there for 1,300 years. 

Friday, August 6, 2010

An Education

It goes without saying that one should never go to a foreign country and expect to be accommodated in one's own language.  That is certainly true here in Indonesia.  I have been much more adventurous this trip, in terms of striking out on my own, but I have had a lot more trouble communicating as a result.  I've had some very long taxi rides because I was not able to make the driver understand where I needed to go.   As a matter of fact, I had one driver ask me to leave his cab (told me, actually) because he didn't want to bother trying to understand what I was trying to convey.  One is lured into a false sense of familiarity here because so many of the signs are in English.  At the mall, all the advertisements and directions are written in English - sometimes just English.  I think most people (at least those who read billboards and go to malls) can read "mall English" but that certainly doesn't mean they speak it.

I love the giant red shoe that provides the support for the escalator.
I am very pleased that I had one minor success.  I had purchased minutes for the cell phone that I use here.  When we got home, we realized that the minutes had not been loaded onto the phone.  I was able to go back by myself, find the store (in a MONSTER mall - see picture) and communicate that I had not received the minutes and needed a refund or minutes loaded to the phone.  It took a while, but all ended successfully.
Malls and Stalls - Both extremes are important
anchors of Jakarta economy.



I am impressed at how well Polly can get around and communicate.  She feels that her Bahasa Indonesian skills are lacking, but she speaks well enough that she gets attention.  People appreciate her efforts and go out of their way to help her express herself.  I will definitely learn some Indonesian before I come here again - it is only right.

I am being honest when I say that Jakarta is  a very ugly city.  I don't think there are many who would disagree.  One reason for the opulent, massive malls is that they provide a primary leisure escape for much of the population.   The air  here is awful most of the time and  much of the city is crumbling.  The sewer system is dreadful and runs under what used to be sidewalks, now just open pits with random slabs of off-kilter concrete.  There is frequently a lingering odor of sewage that, unfortunately, can also emanate from the drains inside homes and other buildings.  But there is great inner beauty that exists behind this unfortunate exterior - both in the people and in the place.  One just needs to be able to see beyond the surface.  It is not easy, and sometimes quite tricky, but I am learning.  The rewards are great.

Saturday, July 31, 2010

A City of Contrasts

This is my second day in Jakarta, after spending Thursday in Singapore.  We have been on a number of excursions the last few days and my reaction is always the same.  I feel like one of the those cartoon characters with eyes the size of saucers and their head on a swivel.  This is one of the most Asian of the large Eastern cities and everything is very different from what I know.  In order to orient and begin to understand, one must adopt completely new vision.  When you let go of preconceptions, things start to slowly come together and make sense.  It's like beginning an intricate multi-colored jigsaw puzzle with no decipherable design and no picture to guide you.  It will be revealed - it just takes patience and determination.

Curb appeal is a rather foreign concept here.  The outward appearance of a many homes and businesses is of much less concern than what is hidden inside.  The contrast between the external and the internal can be profound.  The picture above is the street outside Polly's house.  Below is the view from her back door.
The View From Polly's Back Porch



I could write for days about the contrasts and surprises that I've encountered both on this trip and the one last spring, but I think I will just be content to post impressions as I go.

Monday, July 26, 2010

Jakarta Bound

Tomorrow I am leaving to visit my daughter, Polly, for two weeks in Indonesia.  I love spending time with Polly no matter where we are, but a trip to Indonesia is something quite special.  The plane ride is very long - about 24 hours total.  Nonstop to Hong Kong is 17 hours and then another its another 3 to Singapore.  I will be meeting Polly there and we will go on to Jakarta the next day.  Coming back is harder than going because the jet lag is much worse - but it is all an endurance event.  So it is good there is someone I love and miss waiting at the end.

Tim will not be going with me on this trip.  He doesn't like leaving our dog, Penny, and he doesn't like leaving his garden.  He will be on his own more than usual this time because our son, Rory is leaving on Friday for a cross-country driving adventure taking his fiance, Kati, to school in San Diego.  Our older son, Bob, who splits his time between here and Philadelphia, is also going to be away.  He is leaving on the 4th for a wedding in Sweden.  Not having anyone around but his buddy Penny, means Tim can keep his own schedule and do exactly as he likes.  He will also have to take over processing the tomatoes.  He has already had me purchase a food grinder so he can improve on my recipes.  I'm sure he will do a great job. Tim is not a real techno-wiz, but he has become very fond of Skype as a means of keeping up when family is away. Staying connected makes the coming a going so much easier.
The pictures above were taken when I was last in Indonesia in March.  Polly's eighth grade students at the Jakarta International School each are given a 4 x 4 garden plot to work with a partner.  They love this project and grow some great produce.  Gardening is not the popular past time in Indonesia that it is here.  Polly is beginning an all-school gardening initiative to introduce a number of students to eco-friendly practices such as composting, vermiculture and soil enhancement.  She is hoping the students will be able to sell their crops at a school produce stand, which will also promote healthy eating.  I find this whole project very exciting and look forward to seeing how it all progresses.
I will be posting from Jakarta, and where ever else we wander, in the next few weeks.  Jakarta itself is not especially attractive, but much of Indonesia is very beautiful and it is all fascinating.









Driven Indoors

I believe this is the hottest weather I've ever experienced.  I was in Arizona a few years ago, and we did have temperatures over 100, but the air was dry and light and I found it actually quite pleasant.  Our air here is so heavy that moving is an effort.  The morning is bright and the sky doesn't give away that blanket of moisture, but it is there.  Walking out the door feels like walking into some strange, altered universe.  It looks the same, but clearly it is unfamiliar, dangerous territory.

These days, I have been spending quite a bit of time indoors letting my ideas bloom in fabric (and processing all those tomatoes.)  Above is a baby quilt I made for a friend of Polly's who is due at the end of August.  It was originally inspired by a piece of fabric that was covered with clovers and lady bugs.  That fabric, unfortunately, ran when I prewashed it and was unusable.   So I improvised and created as I went along.  I love the way it turned out.  The garden is an endless source of information - even when only viewed through a window.

Thursday, July 22, 2010

There's Sharing and Then There's Sharing

NOW we have tomatoes!  Lots and lots and lots of tomatoes! So far we've kept up with the flow, processing daily batches of sauce and stewed tomatoes - not to mention eating them at nearly every meal.  But we have some competition that we've never encountered before.  Ants!

With all the heavy rain that followed that long hot dry spell a number of the thinner skinned fruits have a tendency to get cracks.  They are so full of moisture that a bump while picking will essentially cause them to burst.  Cracks in themselves are not a real problem, especially if they heal over, or the fruit gets picked and cooked quickly.  But right now, each time one of the Cherokee or other sweet varieties cracks, the arts swarm in.  I guess they are going after the sweet moisture, but if I don't get there before they do, they can ruin a tomato pretty quickly.

We've been given some suggestions for safe, organic solutions ranging from borax to DE to cornmeal.  TIm is going to experiment with them all.  I'll post here about how successful we are.

This is certainly the year for ants.  Usually they are a bit of a nuisance in the kitchen in the  early spring.  Some careful control measures have them gone by mid-June.  But not this year.  This has become a war.  I win battles and believe briefly that I have turned back the invaders, only to discover a few days later that they were just regrouping.

But here in the city, we don't have deer, or groundhogs or rabbits to do wholesale crop damage.  We have plenty of wildlife, but not the type that strips the garden overnight (except for an occassional locust.)  I supposed I can deal with some annoying ants.
I believe I have mentioned that Tim and I have very different ways of approaching the garden.  Our styles mesh well, as long as we agree to "mesh" and not let one stance take precedence over the other.
The flower above is a good example.  That is Thistle and not the ornamental kind.  That is Thistle with thorns that make the rose canes look like velvet in comparison.  There are several plants like this (probably more than several) growing near the finch feeder.  These, like many of our sunflowers, are the result of seed being flung from the feeder along with the chafe, or traveling unimpeded through the birds' or squirrels' digestive system and being deposited around the area.

To Tim these unplanned stands of bird favorites are a welcome addition to a wildlife friendly habitat.  I can't say I mind the sunflowers  - even in some of the odd places they end up - but I am NOT a fan of the thistle.  I have acquiesced to Tim's request that I let them be - for this year. I am not contrary to having surprise varieties in my well-planned, carefully maintained garden.  It''s just that I foresee a big problem next year when these finch food providers have huge generations of offspring.  THEN I will I have to be diligent (and brave) about clearing them out - not to mention very unhappy with Tim.  I think it's inevitable - but maybe the finches will eat all the fresh seed and peace will rein.  Or it will give me something to B%t#* about - which somedays you need anyway.
Now these unplanned additions are another story.  The variety of sunflowers that appeared from the feeder seed is amazing.  During the earlier heat waves (we are on # 6 right now) the squirrels were so hungry, they would climb up the plants and gnaw off the entire flower and carry it away.  This flower at the left was gone the morning after I took this shot.  One squirrel found a way to get all the way up on a 12 foot stem to claim his prize.  (see below.)  We seem to have solved that problem by putting sunflower seed in the feeder, which we normally wouldn't do this time of year.)

This giant shot up next to the fence behind the tomatoes.  It is at least 12 feet tall, maybe taller.  The squirrels got the first bloom, but have been afraid to climb the thinner branches since them.  We have another one of these (different color) growing in the patch outside the fence.  Certainly not planted there by us - but a real showstopper, never-the-less.  
 


So the squirrels are happy, the birds are happy, and we are happy - in sunflower land.  Now if I could only figure out a way to co-exist as well with the pesky ants!

Friday, July 16, 2010

Heat and Fireworks

"Every day is a miracle!"  I heard a woman on the street call this to her son as he stood on his porch waving goodbye the other day.  "Each and every minute!"
"Thank you," I thought.  "That is a truth that is so easy to forget."  Grumpy about the heat, the dogs reaction to the construction workers, the rising cost of electricity and a thousand other minor annoyances, I did appreciate that dose of reality right then. 

I thought about that message again this morning.  There is nothing quite so wonderful as two slices of soft whole grain bread, stuffed fat with a tomato still warm from the vine, fresh, sweet basil leaves, and thin slices of cheddar horseradish cheese.  As I settled into the lounger on the front porch with this prize and a tall glass of mint tea, I reminded myself that these tiny pleasures are the greatest blessing.  There is a  platter of miracles presented to us each day.  The challenge is to recognize and savor them.

The heat has returned with a vengeance, but two days of downpour have made everything a lot more resistant now.  I believe the final tally was 5.2 inches of rain over two days.  There was some flooding, especially roads in low lying areas, but you didn't hear much complaining.  We desperately needed the water.  The forecast is for 90+ degree days for at least the next week, but the hot afternoons are supposed to spawn thunderstorms.  Let's hope.

The tomatoes have started coming in quickly now.  I've been so eager that I am guilty of picking before they are completely ripe.  That hasn't stopped me from enjoying them.  Some days I have them at all three meals.

The tomato above is a mystery tomato.  We ordered several varieties of seeds from a organic heritage tomato grower last year.  The seeds in the package labeled "Cherokee Purple," did not grow Cherokee Purple tomatoes, but this variety.  These are exceptional -  sweet, but with a savory complex flavor that is just delicious.  They are very prolific.  We saved a few seeds from the original package and planted them again this year.  This season, the tomatoes are huge, but taste every bit as good as before, if not better.   I wish I knew what we had.  I would happily order them again.

The Golden Rod has just exploded this week.  I think this may be my favorite summer flower.  There is a good reason this variety is called "Fireworks."  Even with the heat accelerating the life cycle, we should have these for several more weeks.  .  If the weather cools off, they will be with us well into August.

Those of us with gardens should not even need to be reminded about every day miracles.

Monday, July 12, 2010

Puppy Love


Well, it would appear that appreciation for a garden extends to some unlikely aficionados.  Channel, the tiny (for now) mixed breed puppy from across the street has taken a real fancy to my herb plot, especially the sage.  She stopped by yesterday to play with our dog, Penny, but spent most of her time picking off sage leaves and happily munching away.  When all that picking and playing got the best of her, she just curled up under the sage and went to sleep, much to Penny's dismay.  Penny, is a bit on the hyperactive side.  In fact, we would have to describe her as extremely, over-the-top, lots of fireworks, hyperactive and that might still be an understatement.  Penny only sleeps when there is absolutely nothing better - to do, bark at,  chase or chew.  She is a bit puzzled by the puppy's ridiculous need to rest.
As I predicted, the tomatoes are now ripening quickly.  We had three yesterday, and some more this morning. We had tomatoes in the salad last night, I had a tomato sandwich for breakfast, and we had grilled cheese and tomato for dinner.  I think by the end of the week, we will have more than we can eat, even eating them at every meal.  The workers, who are just about finished with the addition, are still asking when they can got some of those tomatoes, so I think the extras will be spoken for next week, at least.
 The heat has made for some strange flowering patterns in some of the shrubs and perennials this year.  That's a Pretty Polly rose, which normally only flowers in the spring.  It is having a second bloom right now, but the flowers are tiny, just a bit larger than those miniature roses they sell at all the grocery stores.  The blooms are very pretty however, and I am delighted to see them again, especially when so many plants have been a disappointment this summer.

Saturday, July 10, 2010

Really Ripe and Really Rainy!


Today it was NOT 100 degrees in the shade, today it rained and rained and rained.  If this day had happened during a normal summer, we would be complaining about the terrible humidity which made the air feel sodden and heavy even in the middle of a downpour.  But this is not a normal summer and any rain is a cause for celebration - and this was A LOT of rain.


 I actually spent several hours this afternoon weeding the back and side yards in the rain.  People were working in their gardens and walking their dogs and doing all sorts of normal Saturday things as if the sun was out and the streets were dry.   Even the birds were out in force.  I was visited by a female Ruby Throated Hummingbird while I was weeding and several Goldfinches were chirping in the sunflower area.  Later I sat on the porch and watched two juvenile Cardinals practice flying from bush to tree to porch roofs and back again.

We were actually disappointed when the sun finally did peek through late this afternoon.  I think we could stand another two, three or four days of this before we got tired and cranky about wet weather.

It is amazing how quickly the plants responded to all that water.  The hydrangeas - which I really thought were a lost cause - perked up beautifully.  The Sweet Woodruff, which appeared to have died back, was springy and green in a matter of hours.  Unfortunately, the rain didn't come soon enough for the Shasta Daisies.  Their blooms faded in the heat three days ago and all the new buds turned brown and hard.  No amount of rain was going to help that.  They were beautiful while they lasted, but they didn't last nearly long enough.

I thought the tomatoes were doing quite well in the heat and drought, but I realize now, they were waiting for water to ripen.  In the course of the day, about half the plants had tomatoes begin to blush.


The biggest excitement of the day, however, was the picking of the first ripe tomato of the season.  It was a Japanese Black Trifele, a little on the small side, but it tasted like heaven!  Normally, the Black Trifeles don't produce a lot of fruit, but what we get is the most delicious tomato we ever grow.  This year, however, the plants are loaded with fruit so we have great hopes of a strong harvest.  Warm from the plant, these tomatoes rival fine wine.  They also give a depth and complexity to sauce and soup that can't be rivaled.  We have some new varieties this year, so we'll see if I find something I like as much - but I think these Tirfeles are hard to beat.

Tuesday, July 6, 2010

We're Havin' a Heatwave

The hot days just keep coming and coming and coming.  It was 102 degrees in the afternoon today.  The grass is gone and many of our plants are dry, limp and confused.  The daisies are surging through their lifespan and some plants have just given up and gone dormant.  The Stokes asters are history for this year, the snap dragons are all but gone, the hydrangeas look dreadful and the inpatients are struggling.  Surprisingly, all the containers are doing well, maybe because it is easier to keep them hydrated.
The tomatoes are the other big exception.  The plants are covered with fruit and they are about to ripen.  Several are beginning to blush.  We will have a Cherokee Purple by the end of the week.  Tomatoes will show heat stress eventually, but right now they seem to be doing well. It looks like we are going to have a huge crop all at once and then a steady crop after that happens.  Last summer I put up tomatoes every other day.  I may have to increase that schedule this year.  Unfortunately for Tim, I will be in Indonesia from July 27th until August 11th.  This will be prime tomato time and he will be the prime tomato processor.  I'm sure he will develop vast improvements over my system and I will have lost my job by the time I get home.  I think I will be able to deal with that.
The exterior of the new addition is finished.  We are thrilled at the way it is turning out.  We are also delighted that not one leaf of one plant was harmed.  Some of the carpenters were lusting after the tomatoes last week.  I promised to make sure they got some when they were ripe.    I think the second best thing about a good yield is being able to give part away.  Nothing is more appreciated in mid-summer  than a fresh tomato or a basket of beans. 

A few years back, our daughter spent her summer working at a summer theater in Massachusetts.  She left before the sugarsnap peas were ripe.  I didn't want her to miss that special pleasure, so I sent her a big of sugarsnaps by overnight express when they were ready.  I wish I could take fresh tomatoes to Indonesia with me.  Polly and Max did move into a new house with a patch of yard,  and she is looking forward to growing her own produce.  When she lived in Boston, she grew a variety of  flowers and vegetables on her third large floor deck.   I think once someone has been exposed to the practice of gardening, it just becomes part of one's being.

Wednesday, June 30, 2010

So Far, So Good


Today was one of those rare, breathtakingly beautiful days that seem to infuse everyone with optimism and energy.  If one had to have the back wing of their house demolished - I would say this would be the kind of day to do it.  So we are very lucky that's how it worked out.

The workers arrived around 7:30.  They told me they were treating this as a "small demolition" and would be carrying everything out by hand so as not to disturb any of the garden.  I found it hard to believe this was possible as the nearest beds are about 3 feet from the back wall of the rooms that were coming off.   However, when they left at 3:00, not one plant had been affected by their work and the back rooms were just a memory.
The light was beautiful late this afternoon, so I took the camera out just to get a different perspective on my plants.  I particularly liked the shot of the sun flower (above) and the cleome.
For some reason the Cleome (also known as spider flower) is doing beautifully in the not-so-good soil along the fence, but very poorly in the front of the house.  It's a great plant, provides a lot of height and interest, as well as color.  What is especially nice is that it keeps blooming all season from late spring to mid-fall.  The plants get larger and larger with more blooms as the season goes on.  In August, when everything is about spent and the fall flowers are a month away, the Cleome is in full glory.

These are helianthus tuberosus, which I believe are also known as Jerusalem artichoke.  They are one of Tim's favorites and another flower that keeps blooming well into the fall.

Tomorrow they begin to frame in the new back room and bathroom.  I hope this crew is as careful as the group today.  So far all our worrying has been for naught.

Monday, June 28, 2010

Rain - Finally, Rain!



As soon as the sun rose it was certain there was going to be rain.  Despite the bright sun and the soaring temperatures, there was a that stirring that comes before wet weather moves in.  By noon the cumulus clouds had started to build upward, like huge mounds of cotton candy forming around a cardboard core.  By 1:30 it was sprinkling, despite large patches of blue sky, and 30 minutes later, the skies opened up.  There was distant thunder, but no significant wind.  The heavy downpour went on for several hours.  The ground was so dry, the water just ran off at first and flooded the streets, but shortly be earth began sopping it all up like the massive sponge that it is.
 

Funny, I took the dog out twice this morning and I was the only person around.  Even the landscaping and construction work around the neighborhood appeared to have been called off today because of the heat.  Yet, once it started to rain, there seemed to be people everywhere, some on their porches, some walking with umbrellas, and some, like me, just standing in the rain because it felt so good.
 
Oh, there was that storm a couple of days back.  We had some gusty winds and sideways rain for a little while, but areas north and west of us got hammered with terrible wind.  Power is just now being restored to some of them.  But that storm came and went very quickly and, despite all it's bellowing and drama, didn't drop enough rain to even penetrate the parched soil.  Today was good.  Today was very good.  Now if we could just get a few more.  But it doesn't look hopeful.  No matter - I'll take what I can get and hope the weather forecasters just have it all wrong.

Saturday, June 26, 2010

In With the New

My plan to get a couple of flats of annuals to fill in where I pulled out the larkspur, was slightly altered.  That's what happens when we ignore our resolution NOT to go back to Always a Garden (or any other nursery) this season.  Unfortunately for our wallet, I read an article last night in Fine Gardening  about a virus that affects the color patterns of Toad Lilies.  I had never heard of Toad Lily, but I was intrigued when I read that it requires shade and blooms in late summer.   We took a "quick detour" on our way to the grocery store this morning, just to see what annuals Always a Garden had on sale.  I asked about Toad Lilies and sure enough, they had them - and on sale!  They had lots of things on sale - and we bought - lots of things!
This was Tim's favorite purchase - a birthday present to himself.  He has been searching all season for a watering wand that could extend up to six feet.  I don't know why we didn't see this before on one of our many visits - but it is perfect.  Not only can he water the whole front standing on the porch, but it has numerous settings on the nozzle and a flow regulator!  He is a happy guy.
Tim spent the rest of the day planting all those purchases in the newly bare, shady area under the tree.  The toad lilies are perennials, as are some of out other purchases, so hopefully this will be the last time we have this problem after the larkspur.

Tim does this funny thing that works quite well for us.  I've never read about it anywhere else, but I'm sure we are not unique.  He plants a lot of his "extra" plants randomly on the edges of his compost area.  He also tosses blubs there that he digs up during spring planting.  It is like his own mini-nursery back there.  When he needs something to fill-in, or a plant replacement, he checks his compost area (hopefully before going to the nursery.)  Living in that rich environment the plants are beautiful and extremely healthy, so they tolerate transplanting well. Today, he "harvested" quite a few plants to use in the front.

So what was a very sparse area yesterday, was full and lush by this afternoon.  Always a-changing - I guess we'll just have to keep going to Always a Garden.

Friday, June 25, 2010

Change is Scary

That's the back vegetable garden today.  Monday it may not look like that at all.  On Monday that little back addition is being torn off and rebuilt.  This is a project a long time coming and I am thrilled that it is finally going to happen, but I'm a wreck about what it is going to do to the garden.  The builder promised that nothing would be disturbed, but that's a little hard to believe.  This was all supposed to happen last Fall, but our  original contractor dragged his feet for so long that his prices went up beyond our reach.  I was relieved to find another builder who could do the work for the original estimate, but now it's going to happen at the one time of year we were trying to avoid.  On the other hand, this means I'll be here to keep Penny from having cardiac arrest - so that's a plus.  This dog has a  near stroke everytime someone walks near the porch, so I'm thinking that someone removing the back of her house might upset her a little.

This year Tim put in far more tomato plants than we could use or, I suspect, keep up with.  He was thinking that if we had to sacrifice those nearest the house, it wouldn't be a great tragedy, but I'm a sucker for variety so I hate to see any of them go.



We had a beautiful morning today, low humidity and clear.  I pulled out all the larkspur in the front, that had gone to seed.  I thought there were more plants hidden there amongst the larkspur, but apparently not.  All the astribles  that we had tucked in there were dead or dying.  We are going to have to put some coleus and inpatients and some other shade loving annuals in there to fill-in.  Not my favorite solution, but it will be fine.  Tim HATES having that big pear tree casting shade on half the front.  My point that it cools down the porch by about 15 degrees is always the winning argument - that, and the fact that the birds love it.  He gives me the invasive species argument - but he doesn't believe it for a minute.  We do have to have it pruned heavily this fall.  I better be sure I'm home or money will cross someone's palm, a fatal cut will be made and  - oh well - we will just have to replace it with something smaller.  Ha!  Not on my watch.

Thursday, June 24, 2010

No Wasted Space

Another insanely hot day.  The mercury topped out at about 98 degrees.   I spent a good 90 minutes watering the tomatoes and the flower beds.   Late in the day we had some fierce thunderstorms so the plants all got a double dose today.  They needed it.  The Hydrangeas seem to be faring the worst.  They wilt during the day, which is protective, but when they perk up in the evenings, they are looking very singed along the edges of their petals and leaves.  The oak leaf hydrangea is the exception.  It seems to be thriving.  What a fantastic plant!  Beautiful in the summer and spectacular red leaves in the fall.


Another area that is struggling in these temperatures is the narrow flower bed outside of our fence.  The area is only about 9" wide but we hated to waste it, so we put annuals and perennials in there every summer.  Eventually the tomatoes grow over the fence and those pesky Morning Glories fill in the spaces in the middle, so by August it is quite impressive.  It does face west, however and there is nothing to shade it from the intense afternoon sun.  But we keep it well watered, and everything seems to be holding up, but not exactly filling in.  Too much heat stress.   Since June was like August, I'm hoping that July will be like June.  That would be great.

Penny and I took a walk this afternoon.  We wandered down a couple of blocks to see two more urban gardens that are very impressive.  The house above is a corner property, very similar to ours.  However, they strictly grown perennials.  They do a terrific job of keeping everything tamed, even though their garden is quite a few years older than ours.  I love their variations in level, color and texture.  It is quite a showplace.


This family, a few doors further down, really knows how to make use of every inch of space.  They grow a full assortment of flowers, ornamentals and vegetable, much like us, but a lot of their plants are in containers.  As you can see, they even use the porch roof!