Today's tomato harvest:
Sadly, nothing yet. Had some lettuce earlier on, but everything else is either not ready or eaten by slugs. We were just saying last night -- when will be actually get some food out of this? Noticed a surviving cucumber last night, but only two inches long. Pepper plants have no peppers and most of the leaves have holes.
Is the big red one Corno di Toro? That is my favorite sweet. I just recieverd and sent off the seed train from another forum. I picked out 32 more varieties to grow. I cut back on the supers....lol. I picked out the Corno di Toro Giallo which is a yellow variant. I can have both red and yellow bull horns next year for sauce colors.applestar wrote:Elderberries... and some other stuff
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This one is Donkey Ears. It's wonderfully sweet with thick juicy walls and despite the large fruit size, it only grows to 12-18" tall which makes it perfect for growing in containers.
I have red Corno di Toro also with green fruits. I will compare when they have turned red, but I'm pretty sure Donkey Ears is distinctly sweet while CdT has "regular" flavor....
I have red Corno di Toro also with green fruits. I will compare when they have turned red, but I'm pretty sure Donkey Ears is distinctly sweet while CdT has "regular" flavor....
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Ok....haven't harvested anything the last 4 days or so due to a very busy work week.
Here is today's haul!:
A look at the peppers. 7 store sized bells (Cali Wonder) from one smallish plant. Making pepper jelly tomorrow!:
Squash, anyone?:
It's cuke to be square! Mind you, my 5 little cuke plantsd have already generated copius salad cukes and about 8 quarts of pickles...:
And finally, just for fun....
I'm gonna put a 'mater photo up on the mater progress board....
I'm so thankful for what has easily been my best garden ever. Thanks to all the sage advice on this board!
Here is today's haul!:
A look at the peppers. 7 store sized bells (Cali Wonder) from one smallish plant. Making pepper jelly tomorrow!:
Squash, anyone?:
It's cuke to be square! Mind you, my 5 little cuke plantsd have already generated copius salad cukes and about 8 quarts of pickles...:
And finally, just for fun....
I'm gonna put a 'mater photo up on the mater progress board....
I'm so thankful for what has easily been my best garden ever. Thanks to all the sage advice on this board!
- applestar
- Mod
- Posts: 30543
- Joined: Thu May 01, 2008 7:21 pm
- Location: Zone 6, NJ (3/M)4/E ~ 10/M(11/B)
SUCCESSFUL succession planting then, @digit'S?
I'm "harvesting" Monarch butterfly caterpillars. The technique used is not unlike picking beans and peas -- bend and look under the leaves, hold a stem and flop over one way and then the other way....
Subject: 2015 Saving Monarch Butterflies By Raising Caterpillars
I'm "harvesting" Monarch butterfly caterpillars. The technique used is not unlike picking beans and peas -- bend and look under the leaves, hold a stem and flop over one way and then the other way....
Subject: 2015 Saving Monarch Butterflies By Raising Caterpillars
applestar wrote:Look, look, look !!!
I mentioned elsewhere that I had seen Monarch butterflies flitting around in the garden -- one each day a few to several days ago. And today when I was checking under the common milkweed leaves, I FOUND SOME OF THE BABIES!!!
[...]
I keep them in the family room where we can keep an eye on them. After they molt to 5th instar, they are put in a special cage so they can climb to the top of the container and make their chrysalis for the final stage of their metamorphosis. At indoor temperatures they stay in the chrysalis for approx 11-13 days then eclose into a butterfly. I label the chrysalises with a sticker on the topside of where they are attached with date and sequential number which makes it easier to predict the next one to eclose and when.
Yep . Sorry about the darkness of the photo. It kind of reflects our smoke-filled neighborhoods, houses, cars, clothing ... I didn't see the sun, yesterday afternoon!applestar wrote:... SUCCESSFUL succession planting then, @digit'S?
Yep, harvesting sweet onions and broccoli began in July. The squash and zucchini transplants went in, right in the middle of the beds. The broccoli was in a bit of a holding pattern but is gone now. The onions closest to the cucumbers were pulled first. None remain that aren't now flat on the ground -- meanwhile, the cucumber vines are merrily trailing off the beds.
Steve
Cleaned out the Aquaponics Jungle today. That's one Black Cherry tom sprawling everywhere. It was a sucker from the ones I lost in the flood so it had a late start and just now producing LOL. I will have a nice fall crop when temps drop outside.
Before
I got 3 gallon bags of freezer stock celery from the grow beds for winter soups, stews and sauces. Still lots of bells and basil left in there.
Before
I got 3 gallon bags of freezer stock celery from the grow beds for winter soups, stews and sauces. Still lots of bells and basil left in there.
San Marzano tomatoes have finally started coming in. I've taken around eight pounds or so, with several pounds still green on the plants. A depressing number of them have hidden BER inside. There's no way for me to tell until I've blanched and peeled them, and cut into the blossom end with a knife. I won't be featuring this variety next year, I'll buy my plum tomatoes from the farmer's market. Matt's wild cherry is still producing a bit.
Pole beans have slowed down, I took perhaps a pound this week. Clearly they were peaking when I last posted. Still getting a few Persian cucumbers.
Pole beans have slowed down, I took perhaps a pound this week. Clearly they were peaking when I last posted. Still getting a few Persian cucumbers.
The 1st succession sowing of green beans. They followed the spring lettuce. And, yield was more than a shopping bag full ... so far .applestar wrote:
SUCCESSFUL succession planting then, @digit'S?
What followed the peas will need another week or so. They should have it. Survivors. That bed of beans has already come back from the going-over Benjamin Bunny gave it!
Bok choy that followed the early carrots is ready!
Steve