Garden: May 2007 Archives

Garden Erotica

| | Comments (7)
Badger calls it Garden Pr0n* but pr0n does nothing for me and erotica does a lot for me and so does gardening so umm it's Garden Erotica** over here. These are up-to-date photos of my garden. I took them last night as I finished up with the composting. One-third left to finish but not today. It is raining here so I get a little break. I have rested today. No house work. I am T - I - R - E - D.
view1.jpg
This is the view looking down the length of the main garden patch. The grayish compost is just dried out from the first of the week. The dark black is fresh and only been on the ground about an hour. These pea arbors are 6ft by 6ft to give you some idea of the size of this garden. The plants are spaced 18 - 24 inches apart.
view2.jpg
I did not plan this garden plot. I needed to mix things up and move things around from last year so plants are tucked in where they will fit.
view3.jpg
Five types of tomaotes, hot and sweet peppers, green and red cabbage, romaine and leaf lettuce, crooked and straight neck yellow squash, eggplant, 3 types of cucumbers, 2 types of zucchini and 2 types of peas.
potatoes1.jpg
The potatoes are doing well. Some of the tops are four inches tall. Artichokes are planted here, too. The big patch to the rear has corn, peas, beans okra, etc. Nothing much has begun to sprout. We sowed the seed straight in the ground and did not start the plants like we did the other patch. Even though we have 80+ degree days I don't think it is yet warm enough for the seeds to germinate.
mulch.jpg
This little red truck holds about 1 cubic yard of mulch. I have spread 6 of them this week and have 1 waiting out the rain. I thought my arms would be screaming sore after the first day. Not at all. Lucky me. Today is Colby's 20th birthday. 20 years old. I can hardly believe it. She has no conception of me at her age. I was married with a baby. She doesn't realize how good she has it. Her only obligation is school and her job. I tell her often to enjoy her days of youth and freedom. Because having kids sucks it all out of you and leaves an empty hull. Hahahahahahaha! *Go away weirdos. GO. AWAY. **No way in hell you would find Fabio or similar here either. Yucky Yuck, yuck, yuck! You might find George Strait or Tommy Lee Jones sweaty and shirtless with a garden wench under the blazing sun if this was the cover of a trashy novel.

Compost

| | Comments (4)
We make our own compost. It is not hard to do. You can do it in an outdoor plastic trash can with a lid. We just do it on a larger scale.
compost.jpg
Warm, clean and free.
Our compost is a mixture of the remnants of about 15 giant round bales of hay that were left scattered in our field and around the fence line by the previous owners, animal poop, yard clippings, orchard clippings, weeds, and the kitchen garbage of vegetable matter only. Pile it up, mix it up, wet it down. Keep it turned, keep it damp. The bacteria present will begin to get very active. On a cold morning you can see steam rising. When you turn it you can feel the heat. It can get hot to the touch. Natures way of cooking makes a very clean, dark brown dirt.
garden1.jpg
The cabbage have tripled their leaves in a week.
Yesterday I spread 15 scoops from our front end loader in the garden and around the grapes and fruit trees.
peas.jpg
The peas have doubled their size in a week.
All of the plants love the nice rich tea that runs off when it rains. Compost tea is full of all the nutrients your garden plants need to grow and produce. I know it sounds gross to think of things rotting and decaying but when the cycle is complete compost is clean, doesn't stink at all. It smells fresh and clean.
corn.jpg
The corn hasn't sprouted yet.
We are very careful not to put any meat scraps, oils, etc into the compost pile. We do not want to attract wild animals or rodents. Neither do you. If you make your compost use only vegetation and plant waste.
potaotes.jpg
The potatoes are peaking out from the soil. They are purple skinned.
When I was spreading the compost I found some things we did not put in there. I have no idea where they came from.
oddtreasures.jpg
It is sort of gross but interesting, too.
First, I shoveled up a scull. I have no idea what it came from. It looks to have the beginnings of horn bumps on the top of the scull. Second, I came across a jaw bone with teeth. It is not the same or part of the scull that I found. This was found in a different section of the compost pile. Third, I found a fully intact sea shell. Both halves still closed and the membrane sealed together. Do you think a bird could have dropped it? It takes me longer to do tasks now than it used to. When Colby is home in the mornings she watches Steven and the tasks roll right along. When she leaves for work and its just me and Steven things slow down and sometimes come to a grinding halt. Some days he is content to wander and play in the grass. Some days he climbs on the tractor and 'drives'. There are times he plays in the dirt. Then there are the days when he will not stay close to me. Days when he runs off the minute I turn to do something. Days when he is bound to fall head first into the koi pond. Those are the days I give up and we go inside. The past few days have been pretty productive. Today is already looking like it won't be so productive. Steven has been up since 4am whining and tossing and fretting. He only gets still and cat naps when I am holding him. It is 7:15am. I am already exhausted and pushed to my limit. I have so much that needs to be done today. Anyone want to come play with him while I get my chores done? P.S. - I know I have a ton of email and comments to answer but I haven't had time. But I will. Maybe this afternoon or tonight.

BlogPayHer


About this Archive

This page is a archive of entries in the Garden category from May 2007.

Garden: July 2007 is the next archive.

Find recent content on the main index or look in the archives to find all content.

Garden: May 2007: Monthly Archives

Powered by Movable Type 4.0

Categories