Tuesday, May 31, 2016

The Veggie Garden Cheater




Last year I barely did any vegetable gardening, and this year, many seeds would be getting started too late, so I've been shopping for (gasp) already started plants from nurseries.  

It never seems like cheating to do that with flowers or herbs, but, the vegetable garden is this highly organized, precise bit of measuring, and placing seeds just so.   It is almost mathematical in the timing, the seed depth, the watering and feeding needs of the many tricksy vegetables you can grow.   I find them a fascinating challenge.

This time, my worries in the vegetable garden are less, I just need to feed and water them, they're all off to a good start, I just need to keep them happy.

I had wildly purchased a little pack container with four six inch long stalks of corn.  I was not gifted with a single ear the last time I tried to grow corn from seed.  While looking to see how best to place and grow these, I kept coming across "Three Sisters".  At first I thought this was some nursery or group of garden writers I didn't know anything about. But noooo. 

The Three Sisters are Corn, Pole Beans and Squash.  The Corn provides something for the beans to climb.  The Beans magically pull nitrogen from the air and put it into the soil as an enrichment, the Squash shades the roots of the others and provides a weed suppressing cover.

Here's a good explanation from Renee's Garden Seeds:

http://www.reneesgarden.com/articles/3sisters.html


Here is my approximation of a nicely planted Three Sisters Garden:




I'm going to add stakes around the bed and also some chicken wire to discourage the squash from taking over the entire garden.  I think that will provide a foil.  I'm also thinking I'd like to provide a bit of trellising with either bamboo or the many sticks/branches I've gathered for the purpose from my trees.   I'm picturing something like this:







I am trying Celery for a second time.   I didn't realize that they were so water hungry and shallow rooted, last time out, so I'll be making sure they're happy this time.  They came in a pack with an indeterminate number of seedlings---they were all sort of stuck together, so I separated them as best as I could and put them in a bed in front of some new daylilies (all pinks) I purchased this season.


I planted them yesterday and am keeping an eye on them today from my window while it helpfully rains somewhat today.   They look happy so far.

No picture (and you can thank me for that because you'd be horrified) but I am trying a watermelon for the umpteenth time.  Only pumpkins prove more illusive as I try to grow them in the garden.   After reading about the beastie that is the watermelon, I see that I never gave it the room it needed.  Its getting its own bed, and my usual cucumber support and a fence will give it climbing room.  I had no idea they had a big monster root system, so my attempts to grow it in raised beds with a landscape fabric liner were sad for the powerhouse plants these wanted to be.   Try putting an elephant in a jelly jar....

So, I am woefully short of garden dirt to fill my newer beds this year (they stopped carrying the one I loved at my local garden center).   Ruthless dog that I am, I dumped a single bag in a mound in the center of a 3 x 6 bed and put Mr. Watermelon in it.  I figure it can get a start and it can dig down and under if it wishes, while I slowly fill the rest of the bed.  Could work.

Sunday, May 29, 2016

Ducks in a Row

After a month of not mowing or weeding and keeping the bird baths fresh, our ducklings finally emerged.  They wandered all over the yard till I opened the big gate for them so they could get to the nearby pond.

This is perhaps the fourth time since we've lived here ducks chose our well protected yard for a nesting spot.


Thursday, May 26, 2016

Garden Miscellany














































Dicentra Alba




Duranta Gold Edge









Lamb's Ears




Jacob's Ladder Stairway to Heaven




Hardy Geranium



Allium Purple Sensation






















Hosta Sum and Substance




Variegated Solomon's Seal




Hosta H. Fluctuans "Variegated" (now known as "Sagae")




Maidenhair Fern




Bloodroot




Epimedium Rubrum, Japanese Painted Fern




Begonia Doublet Pink


Wednesday, May 18, 2016

DOA Lives!

Everywhere but Facebook.  I've found many of my FB Author friends on Twitter, and most entertainment, gardening and cooking sites.

Twitter doesn't have a community feel, as FB did, but as a newsreel sort of thing, it's fine. I think I've found five people I actually know so far, and they Tweet little, but many weren't very active on FB either.

I am grateful that my Twitter feed isn't full of politics, hateful diatribes and hardly anything on the Kardashians.  There was all too much of those things in my FB timeline.

On the other hand, I get followed by more naked women (or so they appear) on Twitter, so I just watch my followers and block them.


Wednesday, May 11, 2016

A Bozo By Any Other Name

Logging into Facebook this morning, a message popped up saying they want to confirm that I am indeed Librariandoa, and that this is the Real World name I would like to continue using. Scan in a document confirming name and date of birth which matches what is in my profile, and I can continue my merry FB existence.

If I do not, it's Lockout Time.  Facebook is SUCH a secure platform!  Of course I'll give them my Driver's License and maybe Birth Certificate, just so they know it's me!  Needless to say, I'll be leaving my snuggly FB community, so sad, but nope on the ID.


Note:  Busy, Busy.  I've copied my Friends List and am looking to see who is on Twitter, a service I've never liked, but I can keep up with my favorite authors and TV shows there. 

Grumpy Twitter note:  There should be a way to make "Re-Tweets" invisible. There are so many Re-tweets clogging up the feed with information I'm not interested in.  Bleh, Twitter, I say bleh.