Showing posts with label compost. Show all posts
Showing posts with label compost. Show all posts

Friday, July 12, 2013

By now its all about experimenting...

We have already hit the 2nd week of July and still pretty much nothing from the garden.  Last night I went to pick some basil for our dinner and was able to collect a handful of grape tomatoes.  My bell peppers are starting to produce so hopefully there will be some in the near future to eat.  My zucchini squash plants are big but still no fruit.  As for the rest of my plants... I must have got a bad bunch this year.  

I decided to construct a greenhouse structure over the beds to help conserve water and to speed up the growing process.  I also created a shade structure with a tarp for the bucket garden since it gets way more than 6 hours of sun a day.
all the cords are also being used to dry our laundry

I would feel like a total failure if my neighbor weren't having the same problem.   He has gotten a few big boy tomatoes and some cherry tomatoes.  A few jalapenos and a couple of eggplants.

Its been a few weeks now since we had any useful rain.   That would be the case that as soon as a make a rain barrel it doesn't rain.  Maybe I should also get some gutters installed too. hehehe.

The one positive thing going for me now is my compost..  its definitely getting the heat additive.  Last night I went out to dump our kitchen scraps and nearly jumped out of my shoes when something jumped out toward my feet.   At first I thought it was a rat, but then noticed that it was my little frog friend (I think) from a few weeks ago.  I guess he decided to hang out in the damp compost since there isn't much room in the gutters now.


Get dirty and keep on gardening!

Tuesday, July 26, 2011

Some late bloomers in the garden

So my wife and I just got back from a trip to Hot Springs, AR and I returned to find a small black diamond watermelon about the size of a softball.  It's the first of hopefully more to come, as I can see a few flowers and small marble size melons elsewhere on the vine.

The basil is continuing to do great in this Texas summer heat and it even looks like the parsley is trying to make a comeback.   I bought some organic plant food to spread out to help my tomatoes and covered my beds with the remaining 3yr mulch I had made.  I went ahead and emptied out this years mulch to the open container to let it cook up in the heat, and start the new batch in the closed container to keep out the rodents.

Pretty much everything else is just barely hanging on.  Watering every morning, a few hours before the sun rises, there's not much else I think I could do.  I believe the biggest problem I have is that my raised beds are exposed to to much sunlight to long.  Its about time to start planting for the fall garden, so I think I am going to move it over more in the shaded areas of my backyard.  I was reading an article in the latest Urban Farm magazine about shade gardening, so I think I will give it a try.  The writer said that his cherry tomato plants did well in partial shade along with some variety of beans, leafy greens, and carrots.  Herbs also do well in partial shade, so I think I will do more container herbs so that I can move them around if needed.

Here are a few of the books and magazines that I like to use to help me with my gardening adventure.


 
This time of year you will find hundreds of cicada shells.  I came across these on the underside of a leaf.  Wonder what was going on here?



camera on phone has the worst macro





Get dirty and keep on gardening!