I haven't written much about my gardening endeavors this year,
not because it hasn't been an daily activity for several months...
Remember my seedlings? Much bigger now! |
...but because everything has been sooooo slow.
Slow to grow, slow to flower.
Until this past week, the only vegetable I harvested was kale.
Thank you, kale! You have given me hope. And food.
A few days ago, I harvested the first straightneck summer squash
from the new and heavily mulched bed near the goat barn.
At first glance, I thought the camera was over-reacting, but no:
this extreme yellow is the genuine color of the squash:
Like last year, there are little garden beds in multiple places,
and a slightly larger garden on the edge of the Upper West Side terrace.
The Upper West Side is a goat browse area,
but a small sunny section is fenced off for the garden.
(I have plans to make it bigger next year!)
There are winter squash growing up the 6-foot perimeter fence,
and you can perhaps make out the sweet corn and pole beans in the background:
I tried the corn/beans/squash "companion planting" thing.
So far, not impressed.
It all looks more "naturally competitive" than "companionable" to me:
It all looks more "naturally competitive" than "companionable" to me:
During Wednesday's daylong deluge, some of the corn took quite a whalloping.
And now we're having very cool weather. Like October-cool.
Will the corn manage to produce ripe ears?
It's a rollercoaster ride, this gardening thing.
And here's a high point:
The very first Thelma Sanders Sweet Potato Acorn Squash,
harvested the day after the storm!
This is one of three Sow True Seed heritage squash varieties I planted
as part of Tipper's Blind Pig and the Acorn "Squash Reporters @ Large" project.
For weeks I have been reading about other gardens and other squash,
and wondering if I would have anything to contribute before Winter.
Waiting, waiting, waiting...
Lots of plants. Lots of leaves. Lots of flowers.
Waiting, waiting, waiting...
Look, Tipper! I got one!
(And many flowers on all three varieties. Fingers crossed!)
~~~
Meanwhile, there's one other precious harvest taking place
by the daily handful:
My lone surviving highbush blueberry
also had a slow, tough haul into Summer,
but is now doing very well indeed!
This is especially satisfying, because last year the bush was clearly
in trouble, striving to recover after a series of catastrophic events.
I did my best to help, but as you know...
well, I love plants, but I'm more useful with animals.
This blueberry bush is a survivor!
also had a slow, tough haul into Summer,
but is now doing very well indeed!
This is especially satisfying, because last year the bush was clearly
in trouble, striving to recover after a series of catastrophic events.
I did my best to help, but as you know...
well, I love plants, but I'm more useful with animals.
This blueberry bush is a survivor!
Doesn't it make your mouth water?
Mine, too!
~~~
All day long, I have thought today was Sunday.
Even when I was at the dump - which is only open on Saturday -
I told someone I'd see them "tomorrow," meaning Monday.
I wonder what day I will think it is tomorrow.
Whatever day you think it is, I hope you are having a good one!
~~~~~
Quinn - My garden harvest last year was also disappointing but I'm hopeful this year will be better. Guess one has to have a bad year to really appreciate the good ones. My (blossom end rot) ignorance didn't help either... ;)
ReplyDeleteThat is one awesome squash. My youngest son ate tons of fresh blueberries this summer in the States. Hard to get them here without paying an arm and a leg. Yes, gardening can be trick ... glad you are seeing results. I won't know forget which day of the week it is since I started back to work today. Boo! Have a super Sunday. Tammy
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