Category Archives: My Gardens

What works and doesn’t work in the home garden. Great garden ideas, practices, blooms and growing suggestions

Parsley


Common parsley, Petroselinium crispum, a member of the carrot family (Apiaceae) I never grew parsley as a biannual before. But this year the parsley came back and took off on it’s mission to reproduce seed in the second year.

It’s grown as an annual in my garden both as a food source to butterfly caterpillars and some of my favorite recipes. Snip this leafy stalk-like herb close to the ground and begin clipping on the outside edges of the bunch. Cutting parsley like this will encourage new growth. Keep pruning parsley all season. Usually parsley grows to about 12 inches tall in my garden the first year.

This second year, I just left the plant to grow a second year. It grew about three feet tall before blooming and setting seed. Black Swallowtail butterfly caterpillars which are black, green and yellow caterpillars feast on parley. So I always plant a lot of parsley. Parsley is slow to germinate from seed. Be patient, and keep the soil moist. Parsley leaves are very high vitamin C content. They also contain vitamin A, B1, B2, Calcium, Iron, and anti-inflammatory flavonoids.

I’m collecting seed this year to plant next spring. I’ve always purchased seed for growing both curly and flat leaved varieties. When I have a lot of fresh parsley, I tend to use it more. One of my favorite summer recipes includes loads of fresh parsley, mint, and tomatoes.

Really, it’s not good unless you have fresh parsley.

Recipe for Toubli is here:
Tabouli Salad and Lemon Thyme Couscous

Carbon tomato: big, juicy, rich flavor

Getting close to tomato taste test party time.

I was speechless when I discovered two of my first ready-to-pick tomatoes had been ravaged by a squirrel. It’s too painful to show you the gruesome sight of half eaten black tomatoes, so they are burried in the compost pile now.

I am on the verge of Tomato Abundance. I know it is time to pick the tomatoes because this morning a squirrel ate the very tomatoes I intended to pick today. These big black tomatoes are Carbon tomatoes.

I admit to holding off for another day because usually, the first tomato that I pick every year should have waited one more day to achieve sun ripened perfection.

As soon as I started grousing to cousin Bob about these darned tomato eating squirrels, he shot back this email:

“SHOOT THE SQUIRRELS AND HAVE SQUIRREL AN DUMPLINGS.”


Just my bad luck that I traded in my squirrel gun for an elephant gun this week at Bass Pro in Springfield. (
Bass Pro really does have elephant guns – I’ve seen them. But they don’t take trade-ins) Admittedly, there is a very short safari season here in the swamps of Southeast Missouri. But, I digress.

Tomato Stuffed Squirrel may even be a healthy dish. Well, for me, not the squirrel. The squirrels around here have a healthy vegetarian, organic diet. This diet keeps the squirrels fit enough to outrun me. I tried not to cuss a blue streak in the garden since the tomatoes are already blushing.

Carbon tomato won a taste test of 10 heirloom tomato varieties at Cornell Research Farm. Black/Purple tomatoes are becoming more popular for the home gardener and at the farmers market. Every year I try a different black variety. The Carbon tomato is out producing last years Cherokee Purple in quantity and size of fruit.

This is one of the heirloom tomato plants from Abundant Acres. Since they grow more than 325 heirloom plant varieties, I’ll be writing to them requesting information on squirrel resistant tomatoes.

I also bought seed from Baker Creek Heirloom Seeds.

 

Tomatoes by the Bale

Straw Bale Gardening

I order seed and herb plants most every year from Nichols Garden Nursery in Albany,OR. I didn’t know much about herbs when I started my first herb garden. But, armed with a copy of Herb Companion and a seed catalog from Nichols, I plunged into culinary herbs.

I can’t say I have the same herbs I planted 20 years ago because I’ve moved. But I am starting a new garden with the same tools for success: herb plants or seed from Nichols Herbs and Rare Seeds Catalog and the most current news about herbs in Herb Companion Magazine.

This year my little garden will be expanded by adding straw bales for gardening. I learned about that from Rose Marie Nichols McGee. She tells all on her website.

Gardening friends and neighbors have always visited over the garden fence. This year Rose Marie and I are going to compare notes about our straw bale gardens by way of our blogs.

Heirloom Tomatoes are ordered and will be delivered from Abundant Acres by planting time. I’ll be planting some tomatoes by the traditional method and others in bales.

The straw bale gardening method is a new territory for me. I’ll keep you posted every step of the way, tracking what works and what doesn’t.

The exciting news is that you’ll also get to learn from the master, as Rose Marie shares here adventures in straw bale gardening.

One thing I know for sure because I’ve already ordered the seed, my bale will gave a little added color with Whirlybird Nasturtiums poked in some of the bales.

April, April, finally April

April, April, finally April!


National Poetry Month calls for a poem:

April
The roofs are shining from the rain, The sparrows twitter as they fly, And with a windy April grace The little clouds go by. Yet the back yards are bare and brown With only one unchanging tree– I could not be so sure of Spring Save that it sings in me.
by Sara Teasdale

 

My yard if full of daffodils! They appear randomly throughout the yard, testament to where there were gardens at one time on this old plantation estate. I’m relocating many of them to a newly designed area I call the sun garden. Some of these hardy hangers on look like antique or heritage varieties and some of the daffodils are the larger multicolored varieties.

If your flowers are blooming, it’s too late to add fertilizer. The best time to apply fertilizer to spring-flowering bulbs is when foliage emerges in the spring, not when they are flowering. Roots are most active when the foliage emerges from the soil.

Bulb roots actually begin to die at flowering, so fertilizing during bloom is a waste of fertilizer. An all-purpose fertilizer application when the plant begins to poke through the ground will provide nutrients for the bulbs to produce flowers next year. If your soil has plenty of phosphorus and potassium, and it probably does, fertilize with blood meal. This natural fertilizer promotes green leafy growth and is a fast acting source of nitrogen.

Deadhead the daffodils if you want, but leave the foliage until it dies back naturally. Energy from the foliage is transferred to the bulb, creating next year’s blooms. Leaving the foliage is the best investment you can make for next springs’ blooms.

The tulip foliage is emerging. Next, we will have tulips and then iris to enjoy.


Thinking Spring

I’m Thinking Spring.

It’s a long way from Ground Hog Day to Spring. But real gardeners are already preparing. I am reading and studying the seed catalogs. I like the paper copies for reading and planning, but I usually order on line.

I have had great success with Renee’s Garden seed. I order the combination seed packets Like the Tricolor Pole Beans and tree colors of cherry tomatoes to give variety in my small garden.

Why I Grow Pole Beans:
Vertical Gardens Save Space

Tricolor” Pole Beans:

Renee’s Exclusive – A blend of three colors of pole beans that makes good use of limited space. Extended heavy harvests of delicious gold, green and purple pods. Thee beans extend the reason: Blue Lake, Yellow Pole Wax and Purple Peacock.


Why I Grow Cherry Tomatoes:
They are the first tomato to ripen.

“Garden Candy” Cherry Tomatoes:

Renee’s Exclusive – color-coded seeds enable gardeners to grow three premium varieties of luscious gold, red and orange cherry tomatoes from one convenient packet.

The rainbow of tomatoes add a gourmet touch. If you close your eyes, regardless of color, all these tomatoes burst with sweetness in your mouth. They add variety and are beautiful in any summer recipe. And, who needs a dozen yellow cherry tomato plants in their home garden?

Renee has a great article, Starting Tomato Seeds Indoors-
Technique Tips with Photos .

Banish Winter by ordering seeds and planning this springs garden.

Leaves and lawn care


Black Gold

Don’t Bag It.
Fall Leaves have the same nutrients as the fertilizer you put on the ground this spring. Rake those leaves and compost them or, shred and mulch autumn leaves for some of the best product you can place around your trees and in your gardens.

This is the organic matter we talk about that will make your soil more friable. Use this mulch around your mums after the ground freezes. But first, cut mums to the ground. This will prevent the mums from heaving in the frozen ground. Heaving means the roots are pushed up above ground during freezing weather.

Mums can live for years if trimmed back in the fall.

http://preezo.com/view.php?key=8327e716df90fce639a5c7d7406560ee

 

Teen Challenge


http://www.teenchallengemidamerica.com/

Vision Statement – Teen Challenge International of Mid-America
Our vision is to be a Christ-centered ministry setting the standards for excellence in helping those with destructive lifestyles, impacting our area of influence with programs that bring freedom from addictive behaviors through faith in Christ.

Nobody has worked harder and done a better quality job than the teen challenge workers. They have been asked to do hot, hard, heavy work in 100 degree weather. Everything is done to the highest standard. Good enough is not good enough. These young men set a higher standard – all work is done exactly as requested. They have a much higher work ethic than the folks working on my kitchen.

They have hauled rock, moved boulders, dug trenches, built flowerbeds, hauled horse manure, compost, gravel and sand. They tilled, mowed, edged, weed whacked, weeded, watered, dug out huge tree stumps, landscaped with only modest tools and minimal instruction.

All this when they weren’t pouring concrete and building driveways, sidewalks, a patio, carport, building stone retaining walls, removing brick walkways.

They are working for the Lord, at my place.

 

Road Kill Is Organic, Poison Oak Is Botanic


August 2007
Gardening Forever

Ah, summer, what power you have to make us suffer and like it. – Russel Baker

Rest Stop

Find a shady, restful spot for a reading chair or a peaceful garden bench in your yard. You can make a garden bench yourself or spend a fortune on an artfully designed concrete, teak or wrought iron bench. A really nice garden bench is something you can put on your wish list for a birthday or anniversary. My neighbors’ children went in together to purchase a garden bench for their parents’ anniversary. The bench has a little brass engraved tag commemorating their wedding date.

Regardless of how you come by the bench, get one. It can serve as a garden highlight or a simple oasis in the shade. Everyone needs a place in the shade to enjoy the fruits of their labor, listen to the birds, and enjoy a tall, cool drink. Consider an attractive, sturdy garden bench as your garden’s best perennial asset. Now is a good time to shop for one. Make sure the bench is stable and placed on solid, ground. Make benches and chairs a bit of peaceful and restful garden art.

As I was digging up a new space for a garden, I came across some huge limestone squares that must have been foundation stones at one time. The limestone blocks were big enough to make into a stone garden bench.
The stone bench is surrounded with recycled pavers and stepping stones and, I’m planting some hardy herbs, creeping thyme varieties, between the pavers. The thyme is a ground cover that can withstand some light traffic. The thyme came from an over crowded herb garden. I paid a strong young college student to remove the stones from my new garden area and set up the bench. The overgrown plants from the herb garden and the recycled pavers were free.

Well, except for the rumbling and grumbling from Jules as he paid the college student for his manual labor. I’m thrilled to have the “new” garden bench, made from native stone that serves yet another generation in this old house. Asked what he thinks of the bench, Jules mumbled, “lot of work.” He could have been thinking of the original stone carvers, or the young man that did the heavy moving for us. Or his own daily bench testing regimen. Find a shady spot for your own good sturdy bench. A bench is one of the best things you’ll ever put in your garden. If you need a bench tester, I’ll loan you mine. He’s a jewel.

Robber Weeds

Once weeds get a foothold in the vegetable or flower garden, it makes a lot of work for you and robs your plants of water and nutrients. I don’t believe there is such a thing as a totally weed free garden. Still, I don’t have many weeds this year.

These four steps work for me:1) Don’t till. Minimize soil disturbance so dormant weed seeds stay dormant and without light and air; 2) Choose permanent paths for walking and permanent areas for planting to avoid soil compaction and the need for tilling; 3) Keep a layer of organic mulch on all soil to prevent weed seeds from germinating as they blow in or are dropped into the garden by birds; 4) Use drip irrigation to water, I use a soaker hose to avoid promoting weed growth in paths and between widely spaced plants.

Road Kill Is Organic
Poison Oak Is Botanic

Botanical means “of or relating to plants.” Crabgrass and poison ivy are botanical. That a product is botanical is a trendy selling point. It only means that the product contains some plant matter.
Organic means that the product has plant and/or animal matter. All botanicals are organic. Not all organics are botanical. It’s not necessarily a good thing if something contains a botanical substance. Botanicals can be found in some shampoos and most salad bowls.

My husband Jules, the botanist, reminds me that botanicals are not always a good thing. He cites okra as an example. I think okra is a good thing. Our marriage, and this perennial okra discussion, is an annual event. Annuals and perennials are both blooming in my garden.

Annuals are plants that you plant annually, or every year. Zinnias and Bachelor Buttons are examples of seeds or plants that you plant every year. They grow and bloom for one year, usually dying with the first frost. Perennials are plants that come back year after year; the old faithfuls of the garden.

Kansas City’s Plant Wizard

Jack Roberson breeds award winning plants, perennials and shrubs. Though he is most recognized as the creator of American Day lily ‘Blackeyed Stella,’ Jack’s recent horticulture venture is breeding boxwood. “Good choices for boxwood borders are Green Mountain (Buxus ‘Green Mountain’), Green Velvet (Buxus ‘Green Velvet’) and Wintergreen (Buxus microphylla ‘Wintergreen)’, all are very cold hardy and good choices for hedges in zone 5 or 6.”
“Another good choice for small gardens is ‘Morris Midget’
(Buxus microphylla var. japonica ‘Morris Midget,’) because it is a compact, low-growing mound. Like most boxwood, it will tolerate full sun or part shade”

“This is paramount,” Jack pauses for effect, “Boxwood can not live with wet feet.” Buxus are susceptible to too much water in the summer and in the winter. Planting in low-lying areas, or under a down spout, even in the hottest part of the country, is a bad idea. Jack uses cottonseed meal* to fertilize his boxwood gardens. Cottonseed meal is a natural slow release fertilizer.

Jo and Jack Roberson, owners of Gardens of Glory in Grain Valley, MO, are also stirring up the attention of gardeners, plant breeders, and growers with Patriot™ Lantanas. Sun-fast, heat-tolerant, lantanas attract butterflies and hummingbirds all summer.

You can find lantanas is a variety to suit most any garden. Choose from weeping, mounding, semi-weeping, semi-compact, and compact mounding forms, with a color assortment from dove white to brilliant red-orange to hot pink. I have the “Patriot” tm ‘Weeper’ Popcorn lantana, which is yellow and white – yes, just like popcorn. Several visitors have commented on the lacy-leaved lantana. Popcorn is the attention grabber in my mixed variety plant containers. Patriot™ Lantanas are available from top growers nationwide. For a listing of all the new varieties go to: www.patriotlantana.com . Seek these plants out, lantanas can take the Kansas and Missouri hot dry summers.

April Fool

April 2007
Gardening Forever

Happy New Year, April Fools

The vernal equinox, was once the celebrated as New Years Day. In ancient cultures, the new year was celebrated for eight days, beginning on March 25 and ending April 1. But then, the efficiency experts began complaining that we were losing too much time.

So, in 1584, when the Gregorian calendar was introduced, King Charles IX of France ruled that New Year’s Day be moved to January 1st. The weather in January is usually so nasty, few people have the desire to frolic for eight days. Efficiency experts were thrilled.

Remember, no one had cell phones or instant messaging in 1564 and it took awhile for the word about the calendar change to get out. Folks who did not learn about the new date continued to celebrate New Year’s Day on April 1.

These traditionalists, or people without cell phones, were subject to ridicule and sent on “fools errands,” sent invitations to nonexistent parties and were the victims of practical jokes. The butts of these pranks became known as a “poisson d’avril” or “April fish” because a young naive fish is easily caught.

This April, we still have tree work to do from last spring’s tornado. Digging holes, planting trees, watering and fertilizing are a lot more work than Jules is used to. He really needs to get into shape for the gardening season, since we (he) will be planting several new replacement trees in the lawn. So, I enrolled Jules in a weight training program.

Although you are more likely to see him at Westlake Hardware store than the YMCA, Jules thought I would believe that they were selling garden supplies and tools at the community center weight room. Supposedly, Home Depot has an outlet there.

A woman instinctively knows when her husband is seeing someone else. I suspected he was out there running around when he come home with the distinct fragrance of potting soil on his clothes and dirt under his fingernails. But the real clue was a receipt in his jeans pocket from Family Tree Nursery. I found a crumpled receipt in the car ashtray from Earl May.

I’m not certain who is the bigger April Fool, me for enrolling him in a class he didn’t want to take, or him for pretending to go. Did he think I wouldn’t notice the shiny new rake and spade hanging in the garage?

Lawn care and daffodils

March 2007
Gardening Forever

Springtime is the land awakening. The March winds are the morning yawn. – Lewis Grizzard

The Big Cover UP

There is no such thing as a maintenance-free lawn or garden. However, a lower maintenance lawn and garden are easily achieved. Nothing upgrades a lawns appearance faster than attractive organic mulch spread on the bare soil under all trees and shrubs. Spread two to three inches of shredded bark or bark nuggets over all bare soil in garden beds, along fence lines, or under trees.

The most popular mulches are bark chips or chunks, wood chips, shredded cedar or cypress, cocoa bean shells, straw and pine needles. Buying the right amount of mulch will save time, money and multiple trips to the garden center. Use these guidelines to estimate the right number of bags needed for a project.

Prepackaged mulch comes in two and three cubic feet bags. Select a bag size; generally, larger bags are more economical, smaller bags are easier to handle. One large 3 cu ft bag will cover 18 square feet with two inched of mulch. A smaller 2 cu ft bag of will cover 12 square feet with two inches of mulch.

Estimate the number of bags needed using the following formula.
Bag Size 2-inch depth 3-inch depth
2 cu ft 12 sq ft 8 sq ft
3 cu ft 18 sq ft 12 sq ft
For example, a garden area 10’ long x 40’ wide would be 400 sq ft. 400 divided by 8 (for a 3-inch depth) would, buy fifty 2-cu-ft bags.
Or, a 400 sq ft garden area divided by 12 (for a 3-inch depth) would result in thirty-four 3-cu-ft bags. (OK, math wizards, its 33⅓, not 34).

Keep mulch 2-3 inches away from the base of trees and shrubs and avoid the ‘Mulch Volcano’ some landscapers favor — it’s the wrong way to use the product or treat a plant. Piling mulch at the base of trees and shrubs is a common error. It can cause too much moisture retention promoting disease and insect infestation in the plants.

Occasionally freshen the look of mulch by moving it around. Raking the mulch moves composted material down into the soil and helps prevent airborne mold and fungus attacks.

After this years brutal winter, many trees will need to be removed or replaced. Tree trimmings from storm damaged trees are a good source of free mulch. For large areas that need mulch, remember that arborists usually pay to dispose of tree trimmings and will gladly give wood chips to you, if you want it all. Of course, truck size and content varies, but you may receive 10 cubic yards of wood chips free. Supplement with additional nitrogen.

Feed Daffodils Before They Bloom

The best time to apply fertilizer to spring-flowering bulbs is when foliage emerges in the spring, not when they are flowering. Roots are most active when the foliage emerges from the soil. Bulb roots actually begin to die at flowering, so fertilizing during bloom is a waste of fertilizer. An all-purpose fertilizer application when the plant begins to poke through the ground will provide nutrients for the bulbs to produce flowers next year. If your soil has plenty of phosphorus and potassium, and it probably does, fertilize with blood meal. This natural fertilizer promotes green leafy growth and is a fast acting source of nitrogen.

The best way to find out what the soil needs are is with a soil test. Chances are the lawn and the garden have different nutrient requirements. Do not use weed and feed combinations developed for the lawn, in your garden.

Deadhead the daffodils if you want, but leave the foliage until it dies back naturally. Energy from the foliage is transferred to the bulb, creating next year’s blooms. Leaving the foliage is the best investment you can make for next spring’s blooms.

When I went to pick up my friend for a round of golf, I found her in the garden poking golf t’s in the soil. Marge said “If I find bare spots or bulbs don’t come up this spring, I just mark the space with a T. In the fall, I’ll remember where to plant the new bulbs without disturbing the old ones.”

Plant brightly colored wooden golf t’s in your bulb beds to remind you where to fill in additional bulbs next fall. Don’t pull up the dying foliage and you’ll have time to squeeze in a round of golf between spring gardening chores.

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