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- #1,261
Beekissed
Garden Master
As I spread hay and tuck it beneath plants, I'm simply amazed at how lush and healthy most of my plants are compared to last year. I've been thanking God for that all morning...I've had so many years now of failed gardens, battles with extreme pestilence, etc. that this year's garden, though not perfect, is still a balm to my gardening soul.
I picked beans on Fri. evening and pretty much cleaned out the vines, but today I notice they are heavy laden once again, which causes me to rejoice! If I can keep them picked off and canned up, they should produce well until first heavy frost. I'm really loving them growing amidst the tomatoes...that seems to have diverted the attention of the bean beetles and JBs to other places.
I'm also finding many cukes I've missed and have gotten almost too big or some that have already gone to seed, which is great...we got zero cukes last year. All squash plants are the healthiest I've had in many a long year, no squash borers in site and not a single squash beetle on any of the four yellow squash plants...compared to hundreds last year and not a single yellow squash harvested last year. We've got squash coming out our ears this year!
I just went ahead and covered the onions up with hay, they were that pitiful. Will clean them out of the raised bed also, along with the turnips that were not thinned and so didn't make anything but tops. The carrots, even though planted in the raised bed with a soft soil medium in which to grow, are stunted and deformed, so no sense in planting anymore. They won't grow in this soil and they won't grow in a raised bed, so I give up on that. I'll clean out that bed and sow it all to greens come Aug. and place a tunnel over it.
Might also do that to the spud bed, as it will not have produced a single spud....may just clean out those vines this month and sew the whole thing to greens and tunnel it.
That will give the peppers planted around those beds some good sun so they can finish well this fall. Everything is so deeply green and healthy looking it's hard to believe it's the same garden I've been struggling with these past 6 yrs or so, but especially in the past 4 yrs since adding chips. I didn't even have to side dress anything with chicken compost this year as the hay didn't seem to leach any nitrogen away from the plants. All I fed everything was epsom salts and a little sulfur dust and that was just the once. I'm very pleased and thankful to God over the garden this year!
I picked beans on Fri. evening and pretty much cleaned out the vines, but today I notice they are heavy laden once again, which causes me to rejoice! If I can keep them picked off and canned up, they should produce well until first heavy frost. I'm really loving them growing amidst the tomatoes...that seems to have diverted the attention of the bean beetles and JBs to other places.
I'm also finding many cukes I've missed and have gotten almost too big or some that have already gone to seed, which is great...we got zero cukes last year. All squash plants are the healthiest I've had in many a long year, no squash borers in site and not a single squash beetle on any of the four yellow squash plants...compared to hundreds last year and not a single yellow squash harvested last year. We've got squash coming out our ears this year!
I just went ahead and covered the onions up with hay, they were that pitiful. Will clean them out of the raised bed also, along with the turnips that were not thinned and so didn't make anything but tops. The carrots, even though planted in the raised bed with a soft soil medium in which to grow, are stunted and deformed, so no sense in planting anymore. They won't grow in this soil and they won't grow in a raised bed, so I give up on that. I'll clean out that bed and sow it all to greens come Aug. and place a tunnel over it.
Might also do that to the spud bed, as it will not have produced a single spud....may just clean out those vines this month and sew the whole thing to greens and tunnel it.
That will give the peppers planted around those beds some good sun so they can finish well this fall. Everything is so deeply green and healthy looking it's hard to believe it's the same garden I've been struggling with these past 6 yrs or so, but especially in the past 4 yrs since adding chips. I didn't even have to side dress anything with chicken compost this year as the hay didn't seem to leach any nitrogen away from the plants. All I fed everything was epsom salts and a little sulfur dust and that was just the once. I'm very pleased and thankful to God over the garden this year!