How does your garden grow, mid-June
Jun. 14th, 2008 08:31 amWhat a crazy difference two weeks of warm weather makes to a garden!
I think it was
jonquil who told me to plant something in the center medallion of our courtyard that would make me happy every time I saw it. I picked a flower mix sort of at random - Home Depot was selling these circular trays of mixed seedlings that were meant to go in a container, and I thought maybe they'd work okay in the medallion instead. And wow, have they ever grown into a gorgeous, lush, vibrant display.
Petunias were never my favorite flower, but you know what? I am happy every time I open my gate and see this:

The grape tomato and the miniature bell peppers continue to grow like crazy. The tomato has put out a few sprays of flowers, and now has two tiny marble-sized green tomatoes on it. The red mini bell pepper has a ton of tiny green peppers on it, and continues to put out flowers like mad. Even the yellow mini pepper that Alex uprooted during planting is flowering and growing beautifully. Now I'm sorry that I put it in a small pot because I didn't expect it to live.


But the craziest success story is the "Minnesota midget" muskmelon.
Here's how it looked two weeks ago:

Here's how it looks now:

It's flowering like you wouldn't believe, and putting out beautiful branching vines. We may need to put a trellis slanting down to the ground for it.
What caused the change? I think it's that we moved it from one side of the herb forest (where the vegetables are all thriving) to the other. It gets more sun on the other side by maybe an hour or two. I'm going to be so ridiculously tickled if we get cantelopes in our little urban front yard.
I decided to take a couple of large-view shots of the garden/courtyard this time:


The reason the bricks are tumbled is because Alex is in love with pillbugs. She keeps moving bricks to look for pillbugs underneath. At one point she stated her intention to become a pillbug veterinarian. And obviously, she doesn't replace them properly when she's done. Michael needs to get out there this weekend with a shovel and a mallet and do some proper edging for the flowering shade bed, because this way we get water runoff if we're not careful.
Incidentally, the sage that was blossoming two weeks ago is now looking yellowed and sad. Is that because we let it flower and go to seed? My impulse is to cut it way back and let it re-grow. Is that the right impulse?
The lavender is blossoming now, and it is beautiful. We have enormous tons of lavender. I always pictured it as a small delicate plant, but we have big woody lavender bushes.
The whole garden has an amazing herbal smell. I can't believe how happy it makes me to be growing things.
I think it was
Petunias were never my favorite flower, but you know what? I am happy every time I open my gate and see this:

The grape tomato and the miniature bell peppers continue to grow like crazy. The tomato has put out a few sprays of flowers, and now has two tiny marble-sized green tomatoes on it. The red mini bell pepper has a ton of tiny green peppers on it, and continues to put out flowers like mad. Even the yellow mini pepper that Alex uprooted during planting is flowering and growing beautifully. Now I'm sorry that I put it in a small pot because I didn't expect it to live.


But the craziest success story is the "Minnesota midget" muskmelon.
Here's how it looked two weeks ago:

Here's how it looks now:

It's flowering like you wouldn't believe, and putting out beautiful branching vines. We may need to put a trellis slanting down to the ground for it.
What caused the change? I think it's that we moved it from one side of the herb forest (where the vegetables are all thriving) to the other. It gets more sun on the other side by maybe an hour or two. I'm going to be so ridiculously tickled if we get cantelopes in our little urban front yard.
I decided to take a couple of large-view shots of the garden/courtyard this time:


The reason the bricks are tumbled is because Alex is in love with pillbugs. She keeps moving bricks to look for pillbugs underneath. At one point she stated her intention to become a pillbug veterinarian. And obviously, she doesn't replace them properly when she's done. Michael needs to get out there this weekend with a shovel and a mallet and do some proper edging for the flowering shade bed, because this way we get water runoff if we're not careful.
Incidentally, the sage that was blossoming two weeks ago is now looking yellowed and sad. Is that because we let it flower and go to seed? My impulse is to cut it way back and let it re-grow. Is that the right impulse?
The lavender is blossoming now, and it is beautiful. We have enormous tons of lavender. I always pictured it as a small delicate plant, but we have big woody lavender bushes.
The whole garden has an amazing herbal smell. I can't believe how happy it makes me to be growing things.
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Date: 2008-06-14 08:41 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-06-14 10:24 pm (UTC)(permalink)