Showing posts with label 2011. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 2011. Show all posts

May 06

2008

2011

2008

Gardening in the High Desert
  • Watered beds, sunflowers, weeds
  • Looks like volunteer oregano germinating in bed #1
  • Took some photos of strawberry blooms
  • Sunflowers planted kind of close, but since it's only one row, hope still will be OK. Need to plant more, more, more. Some for the backyard, too.
  • Is the last hard frost gone yet? Can I try toms outside? Time for another sacrificial tom? Time to plant some purple "cool soil" beans?

2011

Gardening in the High Desert
I can't find my garden journal!
  • Planted out 4 toms today:
    • Red cherry between beds 2 & 3
    • Super Sweet 100 + yellow pear at end of bed 3
    • Early Girl between half barrels
  • Also planted some plants in my sitting area
    • 1 Shasta Daisy "Alaska" [2012-05-06 Bunnies ate it down to the ground]
    • 2 Chamomiles [2012-05-06 Didn't survive not being watered when I was on travel]
    • 2 Salvia Blue Bedder [2012-05-06 Didn't thrive, but didn't die, either. Bloomed for two months or so.]
  • And more
    • Culinary sage in the garlic area [2012-05-06 It grew well and has come back this year]
    • Taragon in SE corner of bed one [2012-05-06 Doesn't appear to have come back; something kept eating it]
  • Windy like crazy. Sprinkled in the a.m. but not enough to be useful. I manually watered.
  • Elm and maple in the back yard budding [2012-05-06 I think they have both finally died :-( ]
  • Apple trees about done blooming
  • Desert marigold blooming
  • Desert mallow has first leaves
  • Ate small plate of spinach
  • Observed a duck bathing in water tub
  • Ducks moved outside today
  • Strawberries blooming
  • Some type of bok choi has sprouted, as well as some chartreuse lettuce. Very tiny.
  • Sunflowers under row covers sprouting. Primarily north fence near sitting area and w[est] fence near garlic
  • Pulled weeds - made a path from gate. Also semi-weeded main garlic beds
  • Watered and turned compost

April 02

2008


2011


2012



2008


Gardening in the High Desert
  • Watered weeds, veg beds and garlic
  • Some weeds starting to bloom - a delicate lavender one, and one with white flowers. Also tumbleweed now germ along with a new weed that I haven't seen before.
  • First daffs in garden blooming - pale cream yellow
  • Weeded all beds
  • Irises growing like crazy
  • Large rabbit tracks in the garden
  • Time to feed and water trees - they are starting to break dormancy
  • I am thinking of buying some onions and some garlic at the store to grow - just to see what happens
  • Forgot to water my oregano transplant. Well, I guess we'll see just how bought it really is.
  • Got to sleep good, gt to work early, go home early and then take lots of photos of the garden tomorrow
  • More pease are up

2011


Gardening in the High Desert
  • Water garlic, peas, spinach, daffodils
  • Pulled grass from 3 west rows in corn patch and added osmocote fertilizer. It is ready to receive seeds
  • Finalized oasis plan
Received from a trade on Dave's Garden from R.X.
  • 6 flying saucers morning glories
  • 6 purple white stripped morning glories
  • 6 star of yenta [morning glories]
  • Lots African Marigold
  • 6 Mexican Sunflower
  • Summer thyme
  • Lemon Balm
  • Anise Basil
  • Salad Burnet
  • Crystal White Wax Onion
  • Pepper Mint
  • Pkg Scarlet O'Hara [MG]
  • Pkg Heavenly Blue [MG]
  • Pkg Tall Mixed [MG]
  • Pkg Forget-Me-Not
  • Pkg Purple Cone Flower
Sent in exchange
  • Spinach - Bloomsdale
  • Spinach - Matador
  • Sages - Broad Leaf, Blue Bedder Salvia, Culinary Sage
  • Garlic Chives
  • Basil - unknown small leaf, cinnamon
  • Lemon cuke
  • MG - ground
  • Lavender moon flower

2012

Gardening in the High Desert
The gale-force wind from yesterday seems to have abated, so maybe today I will go out in my barren garden and see what's alive. Even though there are no veggies to put out yet, the strawberries and irises and daffodils should be making an appearance, along with lemon balm, oregano, thyme, and rosemary.

April 01

2011-04-01

Gardening in the High Desert

Seedlings that are up [sprouted] inside

    Peat pellets
  • 3 purple cone flower
  • 1 white cone flower
  • 1 vera tomato
  • 2 cells curly parsley
  • 2 cells tarragon just breaking ground
  • 2 bee balm monarda
  • 3 cells gama grass
  • 3 tall vine tomatoes
  • 1 dill bouquet
  • 3 cells chamomile
  • 2 Joe's Long Cayenne [pepper]
  • 4 Shasta Daisy
    Bedding Tray
  • 4 Clumps garlic chives
  • 9 Tam JalapeƱos (2 not doing so well)
  • 3 culinary sage
  • 6 pomadore [tomato] (1 not doing well)
  • 5 flat leaf parsley
  • 10 Salvia Blue Bedder
  • 3 red pear [tomato]
Purple Basil Tray Almost ready to transplant Tam JalapeƱo Flat (6) not germ yet
    Outside Status
  • Spinach in ground has germinated
  • 1 pea has pushed san aside
  • I covered rows with some ferny weed leafs - hopes that hides them until they are too big for the birds to care
  • Garlic beds doing well
  • Weeded - lots of ferny things - pulled ones closest to the individual garlics
  • No weeding for daffs, but I did feed and water ones buy west fence and the volunteer daffs and crocus
  • Old Biddy followed me around and scored a big, fat caterpillar. That's about 4 I've dug up so far this year
  • Read certain butterflies like to lay their eggs on parsley, so I think I shall plant more parsley. And cilantro, too. Maybe a whole swath in my tinny "wildflower" garden
      Watered
    • Bed 2 and 3
    • All Garlic
    • Volunteer daffs
    • Daff bed West
  • Corn stubble - chickens have worked over the stubble - no over-wintered bugs there!
  • Ferny weeds along the north and east corner - these will be the backdrop to wildflower are. I know some caterpillar eats them
  • Watered and turned compost - not steaming, yet, but smelling more strongly of ammonia. Something is alive in there
  • Ordered floating row covers. Hopefully they'll be here soon. I am ready to direct sow seeds.
      Direct Sow Candidates
    • White Sage
    • Sunflowers
    • Peas
    • Spinach
    • CA Poppies
    • Salvia
    • Turnips
    • Rutagega
    • Law Grass
    • Morning Glories
    • 4 O'Clocks
    • Lettuce Mix
    • Wild flower mix (in rows, so I know they aren't weeds)
    • Malabar spinach

January 23

2006

2012

2006

1:03 AM

Gardening in the High Desert
Germination:
5 of 8 Sweet Baby Girl Cherry Toms
7 of 8 Mortgage Lifter Toms [1/31/2006 - one more germ'd]
Snapdragons germinated but did not survive my [business] trip
6 of 8 Steak Sandwich Toms [1/31/2006 - one more germ'd]
2 of 4 Morning Glory - Heavenly Blue
One Steak Sandwich Tom did not lose seed shell

21:54

Skinny, spindly, leggy seedlings. That's what I get for starting seedlings and not being there to see them sprout. Removing the cover & leaving the lights on seem to have helped. Need to find my grow light.

Can I start spinach yet? I've read it will grow in partial shade and tolerates frost.

Onalee says my lavender and white moon flowers have shipped. [2012 - Note - Seeds from both the lavender and white moon flowers were successfully grown out in the summer of 2011 from the 5 year old seed]

2012

Gardening in the High Desert
Weather: Snowed on the overnight
Traffic: 2 1/2 hours to get to work
Looks like it will be warming up so that the snow will all melt. Trees getting some sweet water today.

December 25

2005

2006

2010

2011


2005

Gardening in the High Desert
Warm, sunny day, and I didn't even go outside today.

Frost this morning looked almost like snow.  Glittery, shiny on the sand, cars and fence boards.  As the sun warmed the fence boards and the ice crystals melted, the boards looked like they had diamonds twinkling on them.

2006

Gardening in the High Desert
Merry Christmas - bright, sunny, clear - in the mid 50*F [during the day].
  • Sprayed deer off on all the trees out front
  • Check out veg area
    • Garlic on the ground have been nipped down but none have been dug up
    • Garlic in [raised] beds not nipped
    • [in reality, it didn't matter if the leaves had been nipped, as far as final production]
    • Irises mostly brown now
    • Oregano going strong
  • Orchard - glad I wrapped my tress - the ones from last year that were chewed are chewed again.  My wrapped ones are safe, for the moment.  Can't believe how thick their trunks got in just one season.  I am heartbroken to think that I will have to leave them.  All that work to coax them along, and I won't be around to see them mature.  I hate starting over.  I finally have something and I have to let go.  I guess that's just how my whole life is - having stuff just to have to let it go.  It's so hard for me to let go.  Children, dogs, gardens, land, husbands - so hard for me to say good-bye.

Rosemary - Buy one early, harden off and put in the ground in a sunny place.  The one from last year did pretty well in partial shade - it'll be good to see how well it does in full sun.  Maybe I should put it in a pot and bring it indoors for winter. [2011 Note: the original rosemary plant is still going strong, having survived negative 10*F weather and several snow storms over the years]

Basils - Could I really put out a hundred plants? If so, how yummy and how pretty.  Let the ornamentals go to flower - cut back stalks when just beginning to set seed.  Will they really grow 2 ft tall in full sun?  Will the rabbits and chipmonks really leave them alone?  I mean, something has topped off my garlic sprouts, so obviously, they didn't read the book on what they're supposed to like.

Garlic - Did I mulch them well enough? [2011 Note: even non-mulched hard neck garlic has done well over the years] What kind of yield will I get?  Are desert bunnies desperate enough to eat garlic in the winter? Ate least none of the cloves have been dug up, yet.

Black-eye Peas - Plant a lot all at once and use as "shelly beans."  They'd go good in corn and peas salad.  Use the yard long beans for stir fry.

2010

Gardening in the High Desert
Weather forecast says wet snow or rain

2011

Gardening in the High Desert
  • Have a whole bunch of stale bagels from work, so the wild critters will get a treat.  Also have a new bag of cracked [presumably corn]
  • Hot water froze yesterday
Lessons Learned
  • Regular, deep watering is key - yes, use a timer
  • I recently read that it takes 3 - 5 years for soil to really show the benefits of care - my personal experience here with the sand concurs
  • The roma and Alaskan Fancy toms both set early, making them the most productive (the already have a lot of tiny fruit set before the summer heat starts preventing pollination)
  • If you plant it, they will come - butterflies and bunnies, birds and chipmunks - all to enjoy the bounty of the garden
  • Zukes really do need to be looked at every day - and even then, some will be missed and grow to the size of your arm
  • I like the taste of green zukes better than yellow squash
  • The hybrid yellow squash and zukes are more prolific than the open pollinated - but surely, one does not need that high of a production in a home garden environmentD! The OPs were plenty productive.
  • Don't plant squash too close together (I leared this years ago, but, apparently, I need to learn this again)
  • Cukes sown under zukes do not get enough sun
  • Velour beans were the tastiest - but also the most finicky to grow
  • Bunnies will eat morning glory leaves if they are hungry enough
  • Home gron corn really isn't worth the effort - until you eat one raw off the stalk.
  • I need to find some more efficiencies if I'm ever going to do this on a market garden scale
  • I'm starting late in life to be dreaming of becoming a full-time farmer; therefore, I shall have to use all of my wits and the wisdom of others to pull this off
  • I can raise 50% of my chicken food during the summer months with barely any extra effort

November 16

2011

Gardening in the High Desert.
First seed catalog of the season: Pinetree Garden Seeds. Yipes! Need to finish my seed inventory soon so I don't buy stuff I already have! I love getting seed catalogs. Like good friends, they always show up for the holidays.

November 25

2010

2011


2010 - Harvest

Gardening in the High Desert.
I could plant and plant right now - the urge to grow things when the world is frozen is strong. Maybe stronger this year as I know there are only a few seasons left before I more and leave my lovely, large garden. I can't wait to move to Tennessee, but I am not looking forward to the transition time when we are living in an apartment. It's been a long time since I've lived in an apartment. 20 years ago. How will I survive? The sun and sky have been my saving grace.

Freezing weather means having to fill frozen water with hot water a few times a day for the chickens. I will miss them, too.

Have to keep in mind that the short term sacrifice will find us finally in Tennessee and on a piece of property we can marry. Something to spend the rest of our lives building our dreams on.

It is cold enough to winter sow my wild flowers - mainly CA poppies and shasta daisies and a few others. Not a real prairie mix - but not too bad. I really would like strip of wild flowers behind the main garden - something tall and colorful.

2011 - Harvest

Gardening in the High Desert.
My granddaughter ate one Spinach Leaf.

January 22

2006

2008

2011


2006

Gardening in the High Desert

Seed Orders

Bought 200 seeds of a lavender moonflower.  Never seen lavender ones advertised before.  [Finally got a few blooms in 2011 from a rabbit ravaged vine.] [Purchased from Onalee's Seeds] Also bought a few more seeds.  We'll see.

D has put up 10 more fence posts and is out of concrete now.

Should I get a Mantis Tiller? [2011-11-18 I did not, and I'm glad I didn't.  The sand is easy enough to just hoe up, and I do not have that big of a plot.]

Ordered some [used] "backyard bird" and "backyard wildlife" books from Amazon.com.  Had so much fun watching birds and such with my brother at his house.  Ordered a bird ID book, too.

From Onalee's Seeds - $27.50 Onalee@aol.com

  • $15.00 - Impomoea Alba - White Moon Flowers
  • $12.50 - Impomoea Turbinata - Lavender Moon Flowers

Plants of the South West $28.50 (Rec'd 1/28/2006)

  • $2 - Lemon/Apple Cukes [2011-11-18 - Grew this in 2011 - seeds still viable - did not check germination rates, but it was over 50%
  • $8 - High Desert Wildflower Mix 1 ounce
  • $5 - 2 Pkt Blue Gama Grass
  • $2 - Yellow Pear Tomato [2011-11-18 - These were also still viable in 2011]
  • $2 - Sugar Snap Peas
  • $2 - Mexico Miget Tomato [2011-11-18 - These were also still viable in 2011]
  • $5 - Shipping

Prairie Garden Plant Ideas

(medium tall)

  • Butterfly weed
  • Columbine
  • Cream False Indigo
  • Narrow leave purple cone flower
  • Nodding pink onion
  • Orange Cone Flower
  • Prairie Smoke
  • Prairie Spiderwort
  • Purple Con Flower
  • Purple Prairie Clover
  • Western Spiderwort
  • Wild Petunia
  • White Aster
  • Prairie Dropseed Grass
  • Blue Sky Aster (short)
  • Downy Sunflower (tall)
  • Little Blue Stem Grass
  • Prairie Blazing Star
  • Blue Gama Grass
  • Big Blue Stem
  • Prairie Sage
  • Common Ox-eye
[2011-11-18 Note: Need to check if they are on the state "invasive" list.  Also, need to see what is poisonous to livestock, incase some escape from the "Prairie" to the "Pastures."]

Prairie Garden Tips
  • Grow some samples in know places so you know what the seedlings look like
  • Photograph samples for future 

Sweet Potato Storage


  • Wash/Dry
  • Grease with crisco, prick w/fork
  • Bake 350*F until done
  • Let cool & then wrap in foil (regular)
  • Put in plastic bag and freeze
To Use
  • Run under hot water and peal
  • Prep as if fresh boiled
  • Or microwave and will be like fresh baked

2008

Gardening in the High Desert
Need to start tracking weather in N TN and S Ky.

Remember: Procrastination Kills Plants!

2011

Gardening in the High Desert

00:46

I swear it feels like the tomatoes grew 2 inches in the last few days. Looks like the weather will be warm enough to put them outside a spell again.
Started, yes, more tomatoes. Also started some peppers. 12 weeks ahead of transplant time - just about right. Tomes will be leggy for sure, by then. But still, the more important thing is that they'll be old enough to start flowering as soon as they're in the ground. And set fruit before the scorching season arrives. Hopefully sunflowers will shaw and contain them.

22:17

Got so much done today; it was a good day for gardening
  • Toms and basil and some ivy went outside
  • Potted up some more basil from lettuce tray
  • Potted sweet potato cutting in old Jack In The Box cup and put in a [decorative] tin pot
  • Brought small daffs in for forcing
  • Turned compost
  • Hoed under some weeds in future beds
  • Can't believe how much bigger the transplanted basil is

January 02

2011

Gardening in the High Desert.
Always with the grand schemes and plans for the new garden - but really how many of those dreams actually come true? So many things on the "To Do List" left undone. "This you will be different," I always say, but will it? I am determined to at least do better each year. Last year was better than the year before, and by many measures, my best year yet - ever. Keep striving, keep heading towards an ideal, clear vision, a plan, and ruthless execution - the keys to good project management and attainment of goals.

Snow in subfreezing temps followed by mild day daytime temps should encourage weed seeds to germinate in the new beds. Then I can hoe them under, letting their tiny leaves and roots enrich the sandy sand and help turn it to dirt.

November 18

2011

2012

2011

Gardening in the High Desert.
Howling winds last night. I heard that they were over 50 MPH with gusts close to 80 MPH. Windy all day today. We lost power for a while, but that is normal when it is this windy, and we're used to it now. Big fire in Reno. Winds calmed in the evening, and their was a light snow falling by the time I left work.

Not much gardening going on this time of year.
  • Watered houseplants: ficus, sweet potato and sweet potato daughter, and my golden pothos, which is a daughter of my original golden pothos from a plant I brought home from a job over 10 years ago.
  • Transcribed a few more days of my written journals
  • The first seed catalog came this week

So this is my first "on line" journal post that I did not originally hand write in one of my books. Not sure how I feel about that. Will my kids or anyone else care about having the hand-written copies? I am at the dividing line between two technologies, and while I love the digital world, I am not yet able to leave the old one behind. Perhaps I am destined to be anachronistic.

2012

Gardening in the Middle Tennessee.
Went to Bass Pro in Nashville yesterday. BOught a turkey fryer and also a bird feeder. In NV it took a week before the birds felt comfortable eating at the feeder - here, it was more like hours. In one day, they've eaten about 25% of the sunflower seeds. I can see it from the kitchen window, hanging in the grand old magnolia.