Tag Archives: gardening

Lampropeltis triangulum

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This fellow seems to be hanging around the yard of late. It’s a very pretty milk snake and is not dangerous but I wish it would not hang about on my patio!

Another garden update

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Spring into…everything.

I always forget -- until it comes around again -- just how busy I always am in the spring!  This year has seemed even crazier than usual, though, for some reason.  And to think that Ian isn't in school, so we don't even have end-of-the-school-year craziness (or, really, much of anything that is Ian-centered) to add into the mix.  Yet.

So, what HAS been keeping me so busy, and keeping me from writing anything?  My last couple of months, in bullet point form:

Knitting: Is, at the moment, not happening, but since last we spoke I did knit a Wingspan shawl (though mine is more scarf-sized) and I liked it so much that I started another.  And I sold a little bit of yarn from my stash (thanks to people asking nicely on Ravelry!).  That's about all the yarn action that's happened around here.  I didn't go to Maryland Sheep & Wool; I thought about Massachusetts Sheep & Wool this weekend but couldn't work up the motivation.

Reading: I'm still on pace to make my 52-book goal for the year!  I love the Goodreads widget that keeps track of my progress for me.  (As of right now, I'm one book ahead.)  I read a couple of prepub books on my Kindle (thanks, Netgalley!) that I really must review; and Book Expo America is coming up next week!  I won't be lacking for things to read, that's for sure.  Even my husband is getting in on the book review action -- the only difference is that, assuming it meets their specifications, HIS is going to be published in an actual print publication that you've probably even heard of (he's frequently published in places you HAVEN'T heard of).  Ah, the benefits of being practically-a-PhD and Knowing People In Your Field.  

Anyway, right now I am still working on book 2 of the Game of Thrones series -- I had every intention of keeping ahead of the TV show, but that didn't happen.  Oh well.  I let it languish for a while, but over the last couple of days I've been picking up speed on it.  Maybe I'll manage to read Book 3 before Season 3 starts!

Ian: Is TWO.  I know, I can hardly believe it myself.  If I were a better/more organized mother, I would have written a heartfelt birthday post for him, but instead I am a busy mother so it'll have to wait.  I have so much I could write about him; I'll save it for its own post.  But I love that he's now at an age where he is clearly listening and taking things in, to the point where we are even able to reason with him these days (inasmuch as one can reason with a toddler).  I mean, he seems to understand the word "later," which was an amazing breakthrough in our dealings with him.  :-)

Work: Is crazy.  I've been serving on a task force for our library consortium, which has necessitated all kinds of demos and webinars and a lot of driving around to different libraries.  Plus, spring is Conference Season, between the Book Expo and the CT Library Association conference and a few smaller other things.  AND I've been teaching a lot of classes at the library.  Between all the time out of my office and the time I've been devoting to preparing for, and teaching, my classes, I feel like I barely have even touched my "normal" job responsibilities lately!  And now summer reading is upon us...woohoo.

Running:  Yes, you read that right.  Running.  I started up a couch-to-5k program again.  I've started (but never finished) a program multiple times over the last few years; I think the last time was the summer I ended up getting pregnant, and when it got really hot I used that as an excuse to quit.  For whatever reason, I seem to be much more motivated this time around.  Today I did week 4 day 2 (there are eight weeks, 3 days per week) so I'm nearly halfway through the program.  It's starting to get difficult for me...but I guess that if it took four weeks for it to feel like a challenge, that's a good thing. Right?

Family: Our big family news is that my sister Kayte finished her RN!  YAY!  She's been going to school while also juggling multiple jobs, multiple sclerosis, and single-motherhood, so it was a long time coming, but she is finally DONE and she just found out a couple of days ago that she passed her state boards, so it's all official and everything.  I am just so proud of her I could bust.  I even got to go to her graduation: the last time (when she got her LPN) I was just days from delivering Ian, so opted not to drive all the way to New Hampshire for the ceremony.  

Gardening: My perennials all came back (except for, oddly enough, the coneflowers -- I would have thought they'd be pretty indestructible) and have spread well and are just generally doing quite well.  Yesterday I bought some plants and some seeds, and Jim got the vegetable garden all planted.  There are a few more odds and ends we want to add to the vegetable garden, and I'd like to add a few more flowers to the perennial beds, but everything is in good shape for this summer!

I think that's all the big stuff.  You see why I've had no time or inclination to blog!  

New Things in the Garden

Garlic Scapes: mean we’ll be harvesting in less than a month!

Baby Peas: eat them straight off the vine!

Bell Peppers:

That Tomato‘s getting bigger:

Corn’s coming up nicely:

With beans planted in between each row of corn, to a) add Nitrogen to the soil and b) hold on to the corn, keeping it from getting blown over in a thunderstorm:

And we’re still eating two salads a day!

 

 

Vegetables, etc.

Though I have had the garden planted for a few days, yesterday we finally got the balcony organized so all the plants received their optimum levels of sunlight.

All of the Earth Boxes are up front with tomatoes, eggplant, zucchini, and cucumber. Then we have basil, rosemary, oregano, and mint spread around the balcony in pots (and a bunch of mini basils that need to be repotted asap).
When you buy an Earth Box, it comes with plastic mulching covers that fit over the box. Last year, we used these, but the holes we had to cut in them to get them over our seedlings still left room for squirrels to dig at our roots and pigeons to root around in the dirt after the squirrels had gone. This year, instead of investing in new covers, I went ahead and planted to boxes as per usual, then Brock duct taped trash bags over them. It seems to be working so far, as all of our plants have doubled in size (and it was a lot cheaper!) And yes, those are old vitamin jars over the watering tube–to help prevent evaporation.

I am overwhelmed with joy every time I check in on my potato bags.

I can’t wait for new potatoes!

Today’s garden tasks include:
Repotting tiny basil seedlings
Adding more dirt to my runaway potatoes
Harvesting some of the giant rosemary plant for drying and then repotting it to promote growth

And just for fun, a look at what I can’t grow.

All of this (except the big chopped onion, which came from the grocery store) was out of last week’s veggie bag. Carrots, peas, turnips, radishes, and green onion all went into last night’s dinner. (The turnips are really good this year!)

Some day, I will grow all of these too.

Hold Your Potatoes!

We spent this past Sunday afternoon recovering from our best-ever shearing party by selectively harvesting some new potatoes.

If you’ve never dug potatoes before, let me tell you: it is absolutely a ton of fun. It’s just like a treasure hunt, except a) you already know exactly where the treasure’s buried and b) the treasure is POTATOES.

We had planted the whole bed rather densely, and, really, it needed to be thinned. So, Sunday, we thinned out half the bed. We’re saving the other half for next week.

This is how you harvest new potatoes:

First, you pull up the top of the plant. You’ll find it growing out of the old seed potato (it’ll be easy to tell which one that is, since the seed potato starts to disintegrate around this point), with tuber-laden roots sticking out in all directions.

 Then comes the fun. After putting the easy pickings in your basket, you get to sift through the loosened dirt with your hands (and a pitchfork), in search of the light-colored flash of a rogue potato. It’s like digging up treasure, or panning for gold. You’re muddling along in the dirt, and, all of a sudden, you find a tiny edible thing! It’s fantastic!

We thinned in two-foot-wide swaths, working across the length of the bed. The tops of the plants should fill those cleared spaces back in pretty quickly.

 It was a lovely afternoon, cool and breezy, and the work was a real group effort– no one wanted to be left out of the fun of digging!

 After sifting the soil to a satisfactory degree, you hill up the loosened dirt around the remaining potato plants themselves. This gives them a little extra support, while encouraging them to send out some more tuberous roots a little higher up the plant.

 And, here you have them: our beautiful, delicate, precious, delicious, little pommes de terre.

 How much did we get from thinning out half a bed that’s been in production for, at most, a month and a half?

That’s a lot of potatoes, folks. I’ve been looking forward to these potatoes so much, and am thrilled that we were able to get enough to keep for ourselves and to share.

Have you all started harvesting from your gardens yet? What are you looking forward to eating?

Remodeling

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We’re not sure what caused the demise of our Mugo pine but decided to replace it with another. It’ll take the new guy a few years to catch up. It was also long past time to move the scraggly lilac that’s been here for at least 15 years. In it’s place we planted a lovely butterfly bush and we moved the lilac over by the gate. Hopefully it will be happier there.

Fragaria

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The first strawberry of the year was outstanding and chard fresh from the garden was delightful. After talking to Dad I ordered a new hummer feeder, complete with ant moat. My old hanging feeder had an ant moat and I found it to be very effective so I have high hopes for this Jewel Box window feeder version. These new windchimes were a mother’s day gift. They are absolutely amazing. I want every day to be windy now!

Good Morning, Zuchini

Good morning, zucchini blossom

This is one of the plants that still needs to go into the earth box. Apparently pretty quickly, because it is getting ahead of me.

So are the potatoes!

I didn’t look in on the potatoes for a couple of days (just a couple, I am not neglectful) due to my job trying to kill me (another post I hope to write soon, I promise) and the potatoes grew! I am a new enough gardener that seeing something sprout after it’s planted in dirt and then watered it still magical. I don’t think it ever stops being magical, which is probably why gardeners are always adding more plants, taking up more of their yards, learning to can and freeze properly. They are addicted–and so am I. Now, if I can just remember to check the potatoes every day, I might be able to keep them alive.

Despite the job that’s trying to kill me, I have done some other stuff too.

I took this sweater out of Pterarnodon Worsted that was too big

to this kinky mess of yarn


And overdyed it a couple of times (I know it’s hard to tell from the photographs, but I promise, it’s much lovelier) to get a darker, richer brown that is destined to become some kind of vest I think. I have just under 1000 yards of yarn here, so I have room to play. Any suggestions?

Also, I started a new sweater.

I do love a poor photograph in the morning, don’t you?

I cast on the Surfer Tee that Stefanie Japel has been blogging about this week–mostly because I liked the neckline and I am a sucker for a kangaroo pocket. The pattern is free right now on her blog–not sure how long it will be up.

I am doing something that most people would advise you not to do ever never ever. I am knitting this sweater in the size I want to be and not the size that I currently am. Perhaps I am overly optimistic because I have lost 20 lbs recently, and am hoping that I can lose another 20-30 more before the cold comes again. I am knitting for my future self and I don’t care who knows it. I needed some sweater therapy and this is just about right. (Yarn is knit picks swish worsted in lost lake heather–which is knitting up nicely, but I have to say, I am so used to minimally processed stuff (EG, Pteranodon Worsted) that this feels kind of like American cheese when you’re used to artisan cheddar.)

What are you working on this weekend?

New garden friends

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While we were out at Garden in the Woods I took the opportunity for a little garden stash enhancement. I picked up a lovely yellow indigo, a delicate little columbine, shooting star, milkweed, and an interesting little scrubby looking bush that will do nicely underneath the mailbox.