All has been the same with the garden, just later in the fall. The only things producing still are the lemon peppers (prolifically) and maybe a jalapeno or two. We have had the threat of frost, and some temps close to freezing overnight, but I don't think we've had that 'hard' frost yet.
My wife and I bought our first house in the spring of 2009. The next spring we built and started up our very first garden. This is the tale of that garden and our amateur attempts to grow things.
Sunday, October 19, 2014
Sunday, September 28, 2014
Saturday, September 20, 2014
Sticks
These are the posts for Kate's raspberries that I mocked up last weekend. They will be finished to Kate's satisfaction soon with final screws placed and support line hung. There is much replanting to do all around the yard today or tomorrow. In the background is one very bushy lemon pepper plant, with a smaller jalapeno plant swallowed up in front of it here.
Sunday, August 24, 2014
Saturday, August 9, 2014
Fat Green Bug
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Fat Green Bug, dead center facing away. |
Sunday, July 27, 2014
Fall and Spring Garlic
A couple weeks ago my wife pulled the garlic that she had planted earlier this spring.
Today she pulled the garlic that she had planted last fall.
There is a size difference, two different kinds of garlic, I'm sure.
Saturday, July 19, 2014
After, or Part 2 - Cleaned Up
The final product after Kate removed the sad tomato plants and a drooping pepper plant. Just to note: Computer problems have kept me from posting since before the last post.
And here's the garlic that was planted this spring. The garlic that was planted this fall is still robust and not yet ready to be picked. I haven't seen how big the cloves may be yet, but fall planting is the way to do garlic, I believe!

West garden. Go garlic, go cucumbers! Above those are still two pepper plants, thyme and oregano.

In the east garden we have, from bottom to top, strawberries, sad raspberry plants, better raspberry plants, and parsley at the very top right.
Before, or Part 1 - Bacteria Wilt?
This is the garden a couple days ago. Since the last post Kate has harvested carrots, onion, maybe radishes, and thinned out the dead raspberry plants. The ones in the middle of the near garden (above) are alive, but the ones near the right are doing a bit better. She has tried to grow it all organically, but we're finding some form of pesticide or fertilizer may be necessary if we want to grow some things.

The tomato plants have been limp, my wife thinks it is bacterial wilt. She looks this stuff up, I don't. But they - and even the cucumber vines somewhat - go limp. They live but they just look, well, bad and sad. These are the before pics from two days ago, next post is after Kate cleaned up the gardens this morning.

In the east garden Kate removed the basil plants that were at the very top of this pic due to slugs, we think. Only parsley remains at the very top right. At the bottom we have living strawberry plants. I don't know what else to say about them. They are protected with the screen above from squirrels but they aren't thriving. We did start these late, however. The first plants were destroyed by the bastards, go back a couple posts and see the video!
Wednesday, June 25, 2014
Monday, June 9, 2014
Another Stab At Strawberries
Right after the strawberry destruction two weeks ago Kate ordered more plants. These were the crowns and roots kind from mail order and not the leafy plants we picked up last time. She planted them Friday evening and was sure to cover them with one of the protective 'lids' I made a few weeks back. We even put mothballs about to keep the squirrel bastards away - and it all seems to be working, for the last few days anyway.
The west garden is growing very well, but the pea plants seem stunted from being nibbled on early before we got the netting over them.
The old gnome's home, above, became a bit too obscured, so he is back along the fence and among the hostas, below.

The west garden is growing very well, but the pea plants seem stunted from being nibbled on early before we got the netting over them.

And now for a view from places around the yard! I don't expect you to take the time, but it's kinda neat for me to look back and see how things have changed and filled out.
The old gnome's home, above, became a bit too obscured, so he is back along the fence and among the hostas, below.
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