Posts Tagged ‘garden’

Random Thoughts

Tuesday, November 17th, 2009

So this week and next expect me to be a little hit-and-miss. I’m desperately trying to super-clean my house and rearrange a bunch of rooms before my grandma arrives on Monday for Thanksgiving! And then since she’ll be here I’m not sure how much posting I’ll get to. I am going to try to get my Daring Baker post up next Friday, so you can at least look forward to that. Here are some tweetish thoughts:

Personally, I think one of the more terrible forms of torture would be pulling out my fingernails. That might get me talking.

How is a ten-minute car ride enough for a nap?

I’d really like my superpower to be the ability to put anyone to sleep.

Is a pumpkin a melon? If so, then I can say “Check out my massive melon:”

nov13 002

I found it hidden under the leaves. Didn’t even see it start growing. This was last week. Today it’s roughly the size of III’s torso. Pretty exciting.

My other pumpkin died:

This is about the 6th little pumpkin to end up like this

This is about the 6th little pumpkin to end up like this

I may have enough tomatoes for a whole salad! They’re getting to be pretty large for cherry tomatoes:

Approaching ping-pong ball size. This is one of many.

Approaching ping-pong ball size. This is one of many.

Waiting for the tomatoes to turn red is akin to waiting for labor to begin, with the added bonus of a painless and yummy end result.

The weatherman’s tweets today were obsessed with how cold it got last night—I think the average was around 30°. Still haven’t turned my heat on. Used the A/C though.

Bought a 13-pound turkey for $3.51. That’s something to be thankful for!

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Posted in Twitterific Tuesdays |

Coolness

Thursday, October 22nd, 2009

We’re finally entering into cooler weather here in Texas, and I am so thankful. I am quite the winter-lover. Today was a “cool” day, and absolutely beautiful: slightly cloudy, a slow breeze, and about 65°. This is the time of year when our part of Texas becomes nice. We get lots of rain, so everything is green, and you don’t sweat through your underwear just going for a walk around the block.

Today I am doubly thankful for the cool weather, as it seems to have revived my dead garden! The vines have finally slowed down in their mission to overrun the entire yard, and have settled into fruit-making. I went out to look at things today, and imagine my surprise when I saw this:

It's about the size of my fist

It's about the size of my fist

Now, clearly this pumpkin will not ripen in time for us to carve him up for a nice Halloween jack-o-lantern, but maybe he could fill in as a tasty Thanksgiving pie. He wasn’t the only one out there, either. There were two other little pumpkin buds, and while there have been others in the past that ended up withering, maybe with this nice weather they will actually survive. I am curious about pumpkin-raising in Texas though. There are plenty around, so I know it’s possible to have them by October, but how?? Not that I really care; I’m just a little curious.

Also, despite the fact that I wrote off the garden and quit trying to take care of it, the tenacious tomato plants seem to be doing ok, even with the pumpkins trying desperately to take them down. They’re just cherry tomatoes, but check it out:

They're almost the right size!

They're almost the right size!

I found a total of four tomatoes, which is more than I anticipated! Let’s hope the critters stay away long enough for them to finish growing—I’d really like to eat at least one thing from my garden (do birds eat tomatoes? I heard I can put a silver pinwheel out to scare them away…maybe I should do that).

So that’s it. Beautiful weather brings a revival of life and hope to my garden, and I guess to me, too!

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Brown Thumb

Monday, September 28th, 2009

Well, think it’s time to call it on the garden: massive fail. I knew going into this that there was a greater chance of death than success, but I also retained a tiny bit of hope that maybe this time would be different for me. Let me start by taking you back a week or so…

Remember how I mentioned that something was eating all my strawberries, and I wanted to get a fence to keep that something out? Well, we went to Home Depot, and I was going to get this green fencing called “Garden Fencing.” Seemed perfect, right? Of course, I was with my father and husband, who both wanted to be helpful, and was convinced to get chicken wire instead. Ok. No biggie. It was cheaper, anyway.

Later, I headed outside to put said chicken wire around my garden. I had envisioned in my head how I would go about doing this, but the ever-helpful husband had an even better way. But he wasn’t around to actually help, just to suggest how to do it. Being as I am fairly insecure about my gardening abilities, I attempted his method. My first problem was the chicken wire itself. It comes all neatly rolled up, but in getting it unrolled it became unruly. And as this is Texas, I was getting very sweaty. I won’t go into all the boring details of my fight, but I took a siesta on the fencing for a day or so, and when I came back I tried again, only to be completely bested into giving up. I tore it all out.

Also, in my great gardening wisdom, I decided to pull up some of the dead pumpkin plants so that the one that actually had a little tiny pumpkin budding on it could survive. This, I believe, wasn’t an entirely awful idea, but the vines were so intertwined, that I ended up damaging the healthy vine, too. The little pumpkin bud died. :(

garden001

Here is the carnage of the removed vines and chicken wire. Been like this for a week. Should probably clean it up so Lloyd can mow. And below is a picture of the garden, post vine removal. Can you see the newly dead bits? I know it’s not completely dead yet, but I can’t find a single fruit on any of the plants, except withered, teeny pumpkins. (I did have a dream that there were like 5 fully-grown ones, though!)

garden002

I’m sure the main problem is just not allocating enough space for the garden, but I also think there are smaller creatures now attacking my plants. The strawberry plants seem fine—they’re actually growing, but I don’t expect them to be flowering any more. The pumpkin leaves in the back are covered in little yellow dots, which to me says disease, or insect:

See the spots?

See the spots?

And look very closely right in the middle of the picture. See the little green spider?

And look very closely right in the middle of the picture. See the little green spider?

Anyway, looks like we won’t be growing our own pumpkin for Halloween this year. And next time I’ll actually have a bigger space for the vines to grow. Still, I’m just not sure I’m up to becoming a green thumb. I was reading some gardening blogs, and it seems like to really have a garden that thrives you do need to dedicate some time to it. I know, that seems like a no-brainer, but while I do think it’s cool to grow your own stuff, I just don’t care enough to work to keep out insects, disease, small creatures, weeds, AND make sure the plants get enough water, not too much sun, etc. Plus, I hear it is harder to grow things in Texas, so it’s not really my fault, right? ;)

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Posted in Mediocre Mondays |

The Garden

Wednesday, September 2nd, 2009

As a kid, I used to read the American Girl books, and there was one series that centered around a girl during the 40’s.  And as the books were supposed to teach lessons about our history, I vaguely remember reading about victory gardens. Ever since then, I’ve had this sort of happy dream about growing a garden of my own. Of course, growing up, my parents were obsessed with planting gardens and growing things, and I wanted nothing to do with it (nevertheless, I remember spending hours lugging gallon buckets of water across our three-acre yard to water blueberry bushes and other strange trees–why didn’t we just get a longer hose??).

But now that I’m all growed up and have my own home and my own kids, I decided to finally start a garden. This is something I had planned to do when we bought our first house in York, but it never happened. I did, however, weed around and trim some rose bushes in back, which gave me a small sense of accomplishment. Back to the point. Now, with Emma as my trusty sidekick, we set out to have a garden in this little 12×5 fenced-in area at the side of our house.

I let Emma choose what we should grow, and we ended up planting canteloupe, pumpkins, tomatoes, strawberries, and cucumbers.

garden3Here is our sandy little garden area. We broke up the sand a bit, and added red edging stones to keep everything contained to our yard. I didn’t want it all washing away under the fence!

garden4Here’s sweet Emma working. We got her a special pink pad to kneel on and keep her clean. It was a little windy that day.

garden5Then we added some nice mulchy dirt over the sand.

garden6And here’s Emma showing it off. Like the shoes?

garden7This is really more of Emma than the garden. She was having a lot of fun. We both were.

garden8And here it is after we got done planting everything. Clearly, we didn’t get enough stones to go all the way around (this is why you should measure your space first!). The wilty sad-looking things on the left are cucumbers, and on the right are strawberries. Everything else we started from seeds.

garden9This is about a month or so later. Things are starting to grow. Emma found some seeds that were washed up.

garden10Here she is again, showing her seed. I thought this was a cool picture. One thing I sort of thought about, but then basically ignored, was rainfall. You see, our house does not have gutters, so every time it rains the rain pours off the roof in a long line. Well, I just happened to plant quite a few seeds right in the line of fire, and it rained the first few days after we planted everything, effectively ruining any chances of those seeds growing. The cucumbers died pretty much right away, too.

garden11Anyway, some things finally started growing (and we got grass in the rest of the yard, so that created a bit of a barrier for the end of the garden). Now, I’m not much of a green thumb, and I’m pretty impatient, and like to just wing things. So when the packaging for the pumpkins and canteloupe said to allow 8 to 10 feet between seeds, I said, “Whatever!” and planted them all about a foot apart. Here’s when I began to think that maybe those packages knew more about the growth of those little seeds than I do. Down in front, the pumpkins began taking over my strawberries.

Which brings me to another problem with the garden: creatures. I believe them to be mice, as I have seen them scurrying through our yard. On at least 3 different occasions the strawberries bloomed and grew fruit. Emma and I would look in wonder at the small white fruits, just beginning to ripen, and the next morning there would be nothing left but little stubs. This also happened to some bean plants we transplanted outside. We put them in the dirt in the evening, and by morning there was just a teeny stump where our plant had been. Rather depressing. I still have not done anything about it. Thinking of getting some wire fencing stuff to put around the garden. Maybe that will keep them out. Anyway…

garden2Here is the garden this morning. Those pumpkins most certainly do need a lot of space. Now they’re headed for the yard. Surprisingly, the strawberries are actually doing better now. I think the big leaves from the pumpkins are shading them. No more fruit, though. At this point, I know I need to go in and perform some surgery on the intimidating pumpkins, but I haven’t been able to bring myself to do it. It’s so cool how big it’s getting. But I also realize that it needs room. I must save it from itself. And maybe save the tomatoes, too. I think the cantaloupe died, as well. Honestly, I was never sure which was cantaloupe and which was pumpkin, so I guess we’ll find out if we ever get fruit.

garden1Flowers mean fruit, right? I have lots of flowers, but I have this sneaking suspicion that I will never have anything edible from this garden. Well, it’s still been fun to watch grow. I’ll keep you posted!

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