July 2008 Archives

Meme Day

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gladiolus.jpg I was tagged (ages ago) by Lee17 at The Sun is Killing Me, and

The rules are as follows:
1. Link to the person who tagged you.
2. Post the rules on the blog.
3. Write six random things about yourself.
4. Tag six people at the end of your post.
5. Let each person know they have been tagged by leaving a comment on their blog.
6. Let the tagger know when your entry is up.

6 Random things about me:

1. I have yet to successfully grow a passionvine.  So much for that invasive monstervine!

2. I have a short attention span, and my garden could benefit from better focus.  For instance, I could weed more than once a month.

3. I feel like I'm the only nerd asking, "What plants do you have that attract bees?" at all garden shows and swaps.

4. I can never find any of my trowels.  Should I buy more (only to lose them, too)?

5. I have a really hard time thinning seedlings.  I feel for each of the tiny sprouts, like they're babies that I nurtured from embryonic.

6. I've been seriously considering planting a vegetable garden in my front yard, with the express purpose of being there for the many people who pass by to pick and eat things.  Unfortunately, it's likely to just collect the trash they throw onto my lawn.


I'm not tagging anybody because... I'm just not. But if you read this, you can consider yourself tagged if you'd like to be.  Let me know you've taken the survey, too!

Long Time

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onion-blossom.jpg

It can be hard to find inspiration to write during the hot, dry Texas summers. This summer has been particularly hot and dry, and I find that the 140-character Twitter allowance fits my needs pretty nicely.

In the garden, some things (like the strawberries and potatoes) are long since done for the season. Some things are just dead because I couldn't manage to water them enough. I killed a lantana. I thought lantanas were invincible!

My tomatoes are hanging on for dear life in all this heat. The time to be planting more tomatoes for a fall crop is coming upon us soon, but the current plants haven't given up the ghost yet.

To summarize the essay and a half that I posted in MSS' comments this weekend about growing tomatoes in the heat of summer, we planted many plants in a fairly small space this year, a variety of full-sized, cherry, and plum type tomatoes. I'm a big believer in planting a variety of tomatoes. Early Girl is the first variety to set fruit and ripen in the spring for me by far, but when it finishes, the heat-resistant ones are just getting started. We've had a fairly modest crop this year, hampered, certainly, by the early onset of awful hot weather and drought. Our vegetable garden is shaded by trees off our property, so while production might not be what it would be in a bright, sunny patch, it's sheltered a bit from the crazy heat we've been experiencing this summer.

We've got plenty of space, and Scott was hoping to make sauce and salsa from our tomato overflow this year, so we planted lots of tomato plants - at least 7 or 8. From those, we've gotten an average of perhaps 5 full-sized tomatoes per week, plus a number of cherry tomatoes. We had a bumper crop last year, with our record rains, and we watered with seaweed emulsion about once a week. We haven't been as diligent this year, which probably plays a role in our smaller production. Needless to say, Scott hasn't been able to make sauce or salsa yet; our tomato production has been eaten and given away to a few friends during the Great Tomato Salmonella Crisis of 2008(tm).

Despite the heat, our plants are still producing in small quantities. Our biggest trouble has been those pesky stinkbugs, who like to suck the juice out of my tomatoes! It's about time to prune the vines back substantially and try to get them going again for a long fall.

In the side yard, we've dug up all our potatoes (and what yummy potatoes those were, too!) and are experimenting with using buckwheat as green manure/cover crop. Scott sowed the buckwheat this past weekend, and as of today (about four days later), it's germinated and growing.

We've gotten sporadic rain in the last few weeks, which has been psychologically healing, if nothing else, after a long dry autumn, winter, and spring. Our grass has perked up a bit, but I'm starting to notice big unhealthy-looking yellow patches throughout. Those will be my next beds, I suppose!

Lee17 tagged me with a pyramid-scheme-like meme in order to inspire an entry. I'll fulfill the meme next entry, but here's the entry that's been brewing for a little while! (It only took me four days to write from start to finish.)

Stay cool, Austin garden webloggers, and drink lots of lemonade.

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