When my garlic collection was much larger (36 varieties) German Red was one of the ones I grew. Sad to say, it was not very productive for me. I never had a chance to rate its flavor... providing samples for local chefs to evaluate was planned, but I lost the entire collection before that could...
A little off topic... but when I lived in San Jose in the 80's, I once got a traffic ticket for my lead foot. I was offered traffic school, as an alternative to stricter punishment, and had to choose from available training sites. Unfortunately, I confused Los Gatos with Gilroy - which was over...
I was able to finish weeding & prepping the garlic bed today, and planted 30 each of the 5 varieties in my previous posts. Couldn't put the hay mulch on the bed though (ran out of time) so that will have to wait. A good soaking rain tonight is watering it in.
I grew Argentinian White last year, started indoors as transplants. they grew well under LED shop lights. They flowered early (most directly below the main stem) about 30 days after transplant. the yield was surprisingly decent.
Just an odd observation I've noticed over the years, in how some plants can change greatly, depending upon the season & day length. This has been most notable in the "Zebrina" mallow (Malva sylvestris) which I've allowed to naturalize in my vegetable gardens. The seeds will sprout all season...
The USDA hardiness zones are most useful for nursery stock & long-lived perennials; but are of little relevance for growing seasons. The best climate info I've ever seen was the Sunset magazine's Western climate zones. Those took into account more than just winter low temperatures. GDD is much...
2024 garlic, continued:
Ron's Single Center (a.k.a. Trueheart) (soft neck / artichoke type). Very sensitive to wet feet, but bulbs can be very large if soil is well drained. Consistently large cloves with tight skins even in the center, with very few of the 'mini cloves' so common in most...
Garlic was one of the few bright spots in my garden this year... and now that I've opened all bulbs to prepare for planting & dehydration, I'm finally getting around to posting photos.
German White (hard neck / porcelain type) Consistently large bulbs which break open easily. Large cloves...
Yes. Wind (or less likely insects) can cause crossing between different varieties.
One of the biggest potential problems with growing grains is keeping birds & rodents from harvesting before you do. Here, since my neighbors on both sides have bird feeders, I would have to cover the ripening...
To judge by my neighbor's cedars, which had severe deer damage (from the one year he did not wrap them in burlap over the winter) the chances for recovery are few. Even then, the tree is unlikely to recover a symmetrical shape. :(
:epAn impressive accomplishment... but personally, I refuse to grow anything that requires a forklift. Or a chainsaw. :lol:
Serious bragging rights though.
I re=grew the hyacinth beans which were smothered by weeds in the rural garden last year, to see what they would do under better conditions. Like everything else this year, they were planted (from transplants) in mid-July. They still took the entire 6' trellis, and were reaching for more...
The "Dolgo" crab planted 3 years ago is finally beginning to bear in respectable numbers. It looked more impressive before deer snatched (snacked") all the low-hanging fruit. :mad:
Crab apple "Dolgo". These (along with the crab apples from another tree elsewhere) will be cooked for jelly.
OK...
Stunningly beautiful hydrangeas, @Shades-of-Oregon .
I haven't posted much this year, so playing a little catch-up. Some of the flowers from this year:
poppies, and "Moly" alliums
Iris, and peony. The peonies looked better than ever this year.
Day lilies (which were phenomenal until the...
Don't be surprised to see some Chinese lanterns emerge next year. I fought that battle a few years ago. Thought I had them wiped out, but apparently some roots went dormant, and the battle resumed the following Spring.
The wild ground cherries that popped up in my rural garden were even worse...
The pods on mine were mostly 9-12" long, with 8-9 seeds. I grew Kentucky Wonder White last year, which is virtually identical in appearance; but not the flavor of the dry beans. Since KY 191 is widely available commercially under several aliases, I won't grow it again, and try to maintain...
I'm still alive & lurking occasionally, but the weather & my personal life have not been kind to me this year. I'm only today (!!!) putting in my Phase 3 garden - which is no seed crops, no sweet corn, and nothing harvested mature. No trials or experiments, no plan, just plopping things into the...