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#1
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Where is everyone
Putting their gardens to bed or waking them up, depending on location.
I'm still working on what will be a multiyear project of redoing my major bed. Cheryl Southern NH |
#2
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Where is everyone
Cheryl Isaak wrote:
Putting their gardens to bed or waking them up, depending on location. I'm still working on what will be a multiyear project of redoing my major bed. Cheryl Southern NH Dennis Mayer from GBay, WI I have 100 pretty nice, superbly Colorful 5' to 6' tall competition Dahlias in bloom!!! They are the best in 5 years of growing 'em. Been quietly working on my 300' G gauge Garden RR.. Hope to finish it before Snow?? I check this news group twice a day for 4 years now. I say little here. |
#3
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#4
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Where is everyone
Cheryl Isaak wrote:
Putting their gardens to bed or waking them up, depending on location. Yesterday I picked a bunch (~2 dozen) of tomatoes from the neighbor-shocking front-yard garden. Gave some away to the neighbors. Some were overripe and went into a pot of chili I made last night. I gues due heavy rains last weekend, quite a few were "splitters", so I'll have to use them up here. There are still a number of ripening ones and a goodly number of greenies of various sizes. I'm in zone 6a (St. Louis) so I expect I'll harvesting for a while yet. Brian -- Day 220 of the "no grouchy usenet posts" project |
#5
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Where is everyone
Cheryl Isaak wrote:
Putting their gardens to bed or waking them up, depending on location. I'm still working on what will be a multiyear project of redoing my major bed. Cheryl Southern NH Spring has come early so I am cutting asparagus and eagerly waiting for the artichokes. I have trays of small seedlings which need to grow somewhat before I plant them. There is an energetic young man staying with us so he is weeding and manuring the beds in preparation while I check to see if he is doing it right :-) He doesn't have much experience and his English is somewhat fractured but he doesn't seem to mind spending his day shovelling horseshot so he is earning his keep. Speaking of asparagus I have masses of self-sown seedlings near the current beds and under the shrubs where the little birds poop, so I have started a new bed with them. You can never have too much asparagus. Some rain would be good to really kick along the pasture, the horses are all praying with me as they are tired of the remnants of last year's stubble and looking for some sweet spring growth. But the days are pleasantly warm and the night pleasantly cool. If life was perfect it would become boring and so revert to imperfect. David |
#6
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Where is everyone
On 9/10/09 6:30 PM, in article , "David
Hare-Scott" wrote: Cheryl Isaak wrote: Putting their gardens to bed or waking them up, depending on location. I'm still working on what will be a multiyear project of redoing my major bed. Cheryl Southern NH Spring has come early so I am cutting asparagus and eagerly waiting for the artichokes. I have trays of small seedlings which need to grow somewhat before I plant them. There is an energetic young man staying with us so he is weeding and manuring the beds in preparation while I check to see if he is doing it right :-) He doesn't have much experience and his English is somewhat fractured but he doesn't seem to mind spending his day shovelling horseshot so he is earning his keep. Speaking of asparagus I have masses of self-sown seedlings near the current beds and under the shrubs where the little birds poop, so I have started a new bed with them. You can never have too much asparagus. Yum and double Yum - love asparagus. Some rain would be good to really kick along the pasture, the horses are all praying with me as they are tired of the remnants of last year's stubble and looking for some sweet spring growth. But the days are pleasantly warm and the night pleasantly cool. If life was perfect it would become boring and so revert to imperfect. David It's dry here too - good in some ways, bad in others. My lawn could use a soaking, but the last tomatoes will split if it does. Never got a cuke or a pumpkin. Maybe next year. Cheryl |
#7
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#8
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Where is everyone
On Sep 10, 1:08*pm, "Default User" wrote:
Cheryl Isaak wrote: Putting their gardens to bed or waking them up, depending on location. Yesterday I picked a bunch (~2 dozen) of tomatoes from the neighbor-shocking front-yard garden. Gave some away to the neighbors. Some were overripe and went into a pot of chili I made last night. I gues due heavy rains last weekend, quite a few were "splitters", so I'll have to use them up here. The neighbors across from me have a front yard veg garden. It looks very nice and tidy. The green beans have made an interesting sculpture that offers shade to their front room. Congrats to trend-setters of the front yard garden. Karen |
#9
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Where is everyone
On Sep 11, 10:46*am, Karen wrote:
On Sep 10, 1:08*pm, "Default User" wrote: Cheryl Isaak wrote: Putting their gardens to bed or waking them up, depending on location.. Yesterday I picked a bunch (~2 dozen) of tomatoes from the neighbor-shocking front-yard garden. Gave some away to the neighbors. Some were overripe and went into a pot of chili I made last night. I gues due heavy rains last weekend, quite a few were "splitters", so I'll have to use them up here. The neighbors across from me have a front yard veg garden. It looks very nice and tidy. The green beans have made an interesting sculpture that offers shade to their front room. Congrats to trend-setters of the front yard garden. Karen I'm still around, Cheryl; still picking cherry tomatoes in droves. They did much better than the full-sized ones -- what the squirrels left me, that is. I got to the point of tying paper bags around the ripening ones we I could get a taste. Tomato volunteers appearing in droves where the cherry tomatoes dropped from the vines. This year I am hardening my heart and thinning EARLY! One of the neighbors bought a humane trap recently Whether it was he, or who? someibe just pointed out that WE HAVE NOT SEEN ANY SQUIRRELS lately. I doubt if it's Animal Control; they wouldn't even come out for raccoons; they sniff "we don't trap healthy animals". Well, la, de da! Other than that, I still have corn coming in big-time. This year I staggered plantings so they wouldn't all ripen at once. Planted lima beans for the first time. They're just flowering; so cute! Also planted carrots, green onions, snap peas, radishes. Cantaloupes about finished -- again, what the squirrels left me (: That's it for food. Decoratively, I've been tackling some hard jobs. Getting rid of those straight reed things (name?) was miserable. They propagate underground; always popping up where not wanted. I worked very hard getting rid of a clump so I could make a path through the landscaping to the back. This involves moving Clivia, which has to be done carefully. DOES YOUR CLIVIA GET SUNBURNED??? Broken slate stepping stones with little Blue Fescue in between. That can handle stepping on, of which there won't be much. Maybe I'll take a picture when it's all in and post. Then I have to get a big plant for the front (North), which gets a LOT of Western sun in summer, and less in winter, esp. because of shorter days. Thanks for listening! Hypatia |
#10
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Where is everyone
Karen wrote:
On Sep 10, 1:08*pm, "Default User" wrote: Cheryl Isaak wrote: Putting their gardens to bed or waking them up, depending on location. Yesterday I picked a bunch (~2 dozen) of tomatoes from the neighbor-shocking front-yard garden. The neighbors across from me have a front yard veg garden. It looks very nice and tidy. The green beans have made an interesting sculpture that offers shade to their front room. My backyard faces west, and it has two large maple trees, plus the neighbors across the back fence have large trees. It's very shady in the back, which is great for lounging on the deck, but not so much for tomatoes. The front yard has only a crabapple close to the house, and obviously faces east. I dug up ivy that was growing along the driveway and put in a few tomato and poblano plants where they get sun a very large part of the day. The results have been pretty good, although it got a tad crowded. Might expand next year. Brian -- Day 221 of the "no grouchy usenet posts" project |
#11
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Where is everyone
Chasing mile-a-minute vine.
-- Pardon my spam deterrent; send email to Cheers, Steve Henning in Reading, PA USA - http://rhodyman.net |
#12
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#13
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Where is everyone
In article ,
Cheryl Isaak wrote: On 9/10/09 6:30 PM, in article , "David Hare-Scott" wrote: Cheryl Isaak wrote: Putting their gardens to bed or waking them up, depending on location. I'm still working on what will be a multiyear project of redoing my major bed. Cheryl Southern NH Spring has come early so I am cutting asparagus and eagerly waiting for the artichokes. I have trays of small seedlings which need to grow somewhat before I plant them. There is an energetic young man staying with us so he is weeding and manuring the beds in preparation while I check to see if he is doing it right :-) He doesn't have much experience and his English is somewhat fractured but he doesn't seem to mind spending his day shovelling horseshot so he is earning his keep. Speaking of asparagus I have masses of self-sown seedlings near the current beds and under the shrubs where the little birds poop, so I have started a new bed with them. You can never have too much asparagus. Yum and double Yum - love asparagus. Some rain would be good to really kick along the pasture, the horses are all praying with me as they are tired of the remnants of last year's stubble and looking for some sweet spring growth. But the days are pleasantly warm and the night pleasantly cool. If life was perfect it would become boring and so revert to imperfect. David It's dry here too - good in some ways, bad in others. My lawn could use a soaking, but the last tomatoes will split if it does. Never got a cuke or a pumpkin. Maybe next year. Cheryl and we just got our first rain in northern California, dang. -- "When you give food to the poor, they call you a saint. When you ask why the poor have no food, they call you a communist." -Archbishop Helder Camara http://tinyurl.com/o63ruj http://countercurrents.org/roberts020709.htm |
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