digitS'
Garden Master
Some of you are in the thick of harvesting. An entire crop may be gone from the garden. That's true with radish here and the earliest lettuce is going. The lettuce is just fine but making a dash for the finish line in record heat. The radish was barely okay in April before bolting like rockets! Oh yeah, the "rocket," arugula, has pretty much blasted off ... is that where this salad green got its name?
My first sowings of sweetcorn and bush beans are only inches high. It's difficult to assess how they might perform in a couple of months. The melon plants are just deciding to grow - I'm anticipating a stellar melon year but no one could know that by looking at the plants ...
The tomatoes are topsy turvy from the windstorms again in 2016! No, not the planters and growing system. "Real" topsy turvy, mostly growing off, flat against the ground, and in the downwind direction. I'm giving them a hard squint when I'm out there, trying to assess flea beetle population and damage as the pests may take advantage in the plants' vulnerable state. Actually, the tomatoes at home in my sheltered backyard look the best in 2016, again. Kimberley has a bunch of green fruit.
The wind and flea beetles have caused real damage to the broccoli. I guess I should have sprayed them but with the sudden onslaught of scorching heat, the spray itself would have stressed the plants ... oh, I'm just making an excuse. @Ridgerunner may be able to say that his cauliflower is already performing famously but my broccoli is in a serious struggle.
@baymule may say it's her crookneck squash, that's off to a head start against the competition. What looks good to you as the first week of June comes to a close - harvesting or anticipating the harvest? For my gardens, it's probably the silly pumpkins. I've got a hose bib and sprinkler on the final section of irrigation pipe so that if the field sprinkler plugs and fails this year, the silly Jack o'lanterns won't burn up months before Halloween. The corn, beans and melons better come through, as well!!
Steve
My first sowings of sweetcorn and bush beans are only inches high. It's difficult to assess how they might perform in a couple of months. The melon plants are just deciding to grow - I'm anticipating a stellar melon year but no one could know that by looking at the plants ...
The tomatoes are topsy turvy from the windstorms again in 2016! No, not the planters and growing system. "Real" topsy turvy, mostly growing off, flat against the ground, and in the downwind direction. I'm giving them a hard squint when I'm out there, trying to assess flea beetle population and damage as the pests may take advantage in the plants' vulnerable state. Actually, the tomatoes at home in my sheltered backyard look the best in 2016, again. Kimberley has a bunch of green fruit.
The wind and flea beetles have caused real damage to the broccoli. I guess I should have sprayed them but with the sudden onslaught of scorching heat, the spray itself would have stressed the plants ... oh, I'm just making an excuse. @Ridgerunner may be able to say that his cauliflower is already performing famously but my broccoli is in a serious struggle.
@baymule may say it's her crookneck squash, that's off to a head start against the competition. What looks good to you as the first week of June comes to a close - harvesting or anticipating the harvest? For my gardens, it's probably the silly pumpkins. I've got a hose bib and sprinkler on the final section of irrigation pipe so that if the field sprinkler plugs and fails this year, the silly Jack o'lanterns won't burn up months before Halloween. The corn, beans and melons better come through, as well!!
Steve