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Gardening, Puttering and Adventure Thread, June 17

ppl iriss.jpg

Hi, everybody! Still spring where you are, or has summer hit? I love these flowers:

Hi,

Derak in North Idaho here . . the iris and midnight blue columbine just peaked. We've had luxurious rains the past two days, much needed after unseasonably warm temps for June.

These beauties will be replaced by a riot of summer color from multitudes of dahlias and zinnia come July, if the slugs, rabbits deer and beaver don't have their way with my garden before they bloom.

Keep up the good work! Love the gardening thread!

colymbin 2.jpg

Thanks for the great photos! Go with this one, I think:

tiggr lily.JPG

NorCal Sierra Foothills Lurker here;

We always called these Tiger Lillies but I read they are actually Leopard Lillies. Either way they are beautiful. When we first moved here we tried transplanting a few and they all died. So now we go see them where they are. The largest one we've ever seen had thirteen flowers on one plant! Most get eaten long before they bloom.

Beautiful lilies!

It would be nice if more of them survived to bloom time. The foothills pose some challenges for gardeners and for stewards of wild plants:

My poor old wagon is in need of some tlc.

bvaggon.JPG

Awww. Poor wagon. Well, you have all summer.

*


Edible Gardening/Putting Things By

Well, and a few other things.

From Grimmy/Intrepid AoS Liason, who has been clearing some land. What an adventure!

As usual, I planted way too many trees, shrubs, and vegetables this spring, and with Iowa having VERY little rain over the last few weeks, I've been busy wandering the acreage watering everything on a nearly daily basis.

Trees are full of ripe (and ripening) mulberries. Tough to take a good picture, but the one I uploaded shows the full mix of berry colors.

mulberr.jpg

The spiky plants in the raised bed are a variety of asparagus I grew from seed a couple years ago. I assume at some point they'll magically transform into something more asparagus? Like the OTHER picture, with one lone stalk from a discounted root pack I got from the local greenhouse's end of season sale. Planted 5 or 6...and only this one showed any life.

g asparagus 1.jpg

aspar 2.jpg

Don't give up hope. Asparagus likes lots of nourishment.

We have a lot of wild grape in the yard, too, and they've grown up along some of the mulberry trees, so we get an interesting combination of fruits. These grapes are very young, but good to see what's coming up.

grap n berry.jpg

While mowing the yard, a fledgling cardinal (?) kept running to (and UNDER) my riding mower! I had to stop it, turn it off, and shoo it away! It finally hid in some tall weeds at the base of a large tree.

hidden fledge.jpg

I set out my new smoker one morning, planning to clean it and smoke stuff later in the day. When "later" came around, I saw our little frog friend hanging out. Probably a nice, warm spot for cold-bloods.

froggy c.jpg

*

Puttering


*


Ah, Nature

*

Gardens of The Horde

I can't resist sending another picture of my Carefree Beauty rose, but the real point of the picture is to show my perennial herb garden. I
have mint (in a buried pot), thyme, chives, rosemary, Greek oregano, and
sage. If you look hard you can also see a few garlic plants peeking out
of the foliage - German hard-neck. (may4a)

This is my 2nd garlic crop and I had a surprise twist this year. I
planted both the hard-neck and California soft-neck garlic for my first
crop. But all the California garlic shriveled up and disappeared last
spring. I was relieved that I got a decent crop of the hard-neck garlic
at the end of June. But this year a lone garlic plant sprouted where I
had planted the California garlic. I pampered it all spring & just
harvested a decent-sized head. (garlic-surprise) Now, do I take one of
the cloves and try again this fall? Decisions, decisions.

My favorite crop is the Egyptian Walking Onion, that pretty much grows
itself. It even plants itself. That's my kind of plant. (onions)

The last crop I'm trying to grow this year is Monarch butterflies. I've
been cultivating a patch of swamp milkweed for the caterpillars. It's
the 3rd year for these plants (sleep, creep, leap) so I'm hoping for
more Monarchs than the single one that hatched last summer. (jun14)

badgerwx

may4a.jpg

The roses and herbs are great together!

garlic-surprisee.jpg

The soft neck garlic is a commercial crop around here. Looks different!

onions.jpg

I wonder how similar this is to the ones our Arizona correspondents grow?

jun14 mw.jpg

Hope you get lots of Monarchs. Do you know the variety of your milkweed?

*

Hope everyone has a nice weekend.


If you would like to send photos, stories, links, etc. for the Saturday Gardening, Puttering and Adventure Thread, the address is:

ktinthegarden at g mail dot com

Remember to include the nic or name by which you wish to be known at AoSHQ, or let us know if you want to remain a lurker.

*

Week in Review

What has changed since last week's thread? Gardening, Puttering and Adventure Thread, June 10


Any thoughts or questions?

I closed the comments on this post so you wouldn't get banned for commenting on a week-old post, but don't try it anyway.


Posted by: K.T. at 01:18 PM




Comments

(Jump to bottom of comments)

1 Live the combo of iris and columbines!

Posted by: Emmie -- July 15 ArkanOklaMoMe RSVP email link in nic at June 17, 2023 01:23 PM (Emce2)

2 Carefree Beauty rose is not showing for me.

Posted by: Emmie -- July 15 ArkanOklaMoMe RSVP email link in nic at June 17, 2023 01:24 PM (Emce2)

3 Good afternoon Greenthumbs
So far my veggies in the green house are doing much better than those in open , most likely due to cool mornings.
And did turn over last year's compost but had to take out more than half to get it broken up and some moisture in it. Working on putting it back.

Posted by: Skip at June 17, 2023 01:27 PM (xhxe8)

4 Carefree Beauty rose is not showing for me.

Fixed it.

Posted by: KT at June 17, 2023 01:29 PM (rrtZS)

5 Have peppers starting in green house, but have often said rarely ever get a useful peppers 🌶 out of the first bunch

Posted by: Skip at June 17, 2023 01:29 PM (xhxe8)

6 I found a big mushroom growing out of the ground about 15 ft from my house.

I kicked it over and...there was a nest of termites underneath it.

Should I be concerned?

Posted by: 18-1 at June 17, 2023 01:32 PM (lc5cP)

7 Termites and mushrooms both like dame rotting wood

Posted by: Skip at June 17, 2023 01:35 PM (xhxe8)

8 You may want them destroyed before they find they want bigger space

Posted by: Skip at June 17, 2023 01:36 PM (xhxe8)

9 "The roses and herbs are great together!"

Of course his career didn't really take off until he hooked up with peaches.

Posted by: fd at June 17, 2023 01:37 PM (iayUP)

10 I got all the grass cut so am taking a break. Next task is to fix the dang chainsaw that won't idle.

Posted by: fd at June 17, 2023 01:38 PM (iayUP)

11 Thank you KT, beautiful pictures.

The desert is getting drier, we are refilling the bird/animal water dishes (24x3 inch) twice a day now, another month and we'll start the monsoons though.

Red bird of paradise has started attracting swallowtails, the 2 yesterday were yellow. soon we'll get the black ones as well.
The saguaro 'tunas' are splitting and showing their red interiors so each saguaro is topped by a white wing dove chowing on them.

Oh and the weeds have dried out enough that it's time to hook the drag to the quad and knock them all down.

Posted by: AZ deplorable moron at June 17, 2023 01:40 PM (sei1f)

12 fix the dang chainsaw that won't idle.
Posted by: fd

Drain gas, flush with Seafoam and then soak overnight with Seafoam in the carb, drain and then fill with fresh gas.
It has worked really well on motorcycle carbs when they were 'gummed up/varnished'.

Posted by: AZ deplorable moron at June 17, 2023 01:46 PM (sei1f)

13 I bet the garlic, chives, and other herbs help keep diseases away from the roses.

Posted by: Emmie -- July 15 ArkanOklaMoMe RSVP email link in nic at June 17, 2023 01:48 PM (Emce2)

14 Fixed it.
Posted by: KT at June 17, 2023 01:29 PM (rrtZS)


Thanks, KT!

Posted by: Emmie -- July 15 ArkanOklaMoMe RSVP email link in nic at June 17, 2023 01:49 PM (Emce2)

15 hiya

Posted by: JT at June 17, 2023 01:53 PM (T4tVD)

16 Very much summertime here...Just came back inside from uprooting shrubbery that is wildly overgrown.

I really need to get a landscaper in here to replace it all with grass. Much easier to manage.

Posted by: "Perfessor" Squirrel at June 17, 2023 01:53 PM (BpYfr)

17 I'm battling flies. Hundreds of black flies that congregate on the back of our house, the sides of the pool and other surfaces that face the early sun. I know they're attracted to the heat, but this is absurd. They disappear after it gets warmer/hot.

No food, dead animals or anything else that would attract them. It's gross. And weird. But mostly gross.

May have to initiate chemical warfare.

Posted by: Martini Farmer at June 17, 2023 02:04 PM (Q4IgG)

18 My wife is the gardener...raised beds...pickling some cukes now. She got a "handbook" for straw bale gardening...anyone tried that?

Posted by: BignJames at June 17, 2023 02:05 PM (AwYPR)

19 Getting lots of rain. Too much rain. Never thought I'd say that about the near desert I live in.

Posted by: Ronster at June 17, 2023 02:15 PM (YdKUO)

20 If it's dry, the flies are after water.

I have mulberries too. Most are too high up for me so the robins are eating them.

Posted by: Notsothoreau at June 17, 2023 02:17 PM (ouTlx)

21 Should run 🚜 around a bit, still not everywhere as a month of dry hasn't quite ended its wrath

Posted by: Skip at June 17, 2023 02:30 PM (xhxe8)

22 It is Hot, Hot, Hot, here in South Texas!

Posted by: SuperMayorSuperRonNirenberg-My Destiny Is To Rule You All, Rule In My Ultra-Buffness at June 17, 2023 02:30 PM (0BWiJ)

23 Slow day in Blogland....

Posted by: JT at June 17, 2023 02:46 PM (T4tVD)

24 Tap-Tap-Tap....is this thing on ?

Posted by: JT at June 17, 2023 02:46 PM (T4tVD)

Posted by: Infidel at June 17, 2023 02:48 PM (kHtnd)

26 Hssssss

Posted by: The Gorn at June 17, 2023 02:53 PM (aD39U)

27 RE my milkweed crop: I've tried several kinds but didn't have much luck until I tried this one. Swamp Milkweed (Asclepias incarnata) From the name you can guess that it likes moist soil. I have heavy clay in my backyard that drains slowly and I've directed my back porch downspout to empty its water in that direction. There's actually a shallow trench filled with sand and pea gravel parallel to that bed. But when I don't get any rain at all (like this month) I have to get my hose and water them every few days.

Posted by: badgerwx at June 17, 2023 02:57 PM (H9xjb)

28 I have a major poison ivy problem, might need chemicals

Posted by: Skip at June 17, 2023 02:59 PM (xhxe8)

29 Thx for posting the pictures, KT. The iris etc are but a distant memory, all cut down as of this week.

So I made a mistake. I covered my cabbages with a floating row cover. Trapped flea beetles inside and made the problem I was trying to solve worse.

Note to self: row covers go on before the problem pest presents. Should have done it when I planted them.

It's always sumptin'.

Posted by: Derak at June 17, 2023 03:02 PM (xXlxF)

30 Really can't say it's been hot up here in mid east coast, even no ran for over 4 weeks it was cool.

Posted by: Skip at June 17, 2023 03:03 PM (xhxe8)

31 Emmie,
The herbs seem to help somewhat against pests but the rose still gets some blackspot during the summer. This year something has been chewing little holes in the leaves so I'll have to see if I still have some Dead Bug brew left from last year. I also use that on my hardy hibiscus so the leaves don't look like lace by the end of summer.

Posted by: badgerwx at June 17, 2023 03:10 PM (H9xjb)

32
While mowing the yard, a fledgling cardinal (?) kept running to (and UNDER) my riding mower! I had to stop it, turn it off, and shoo it away! It finally hid in some tall weeds at the base of a large tree.

I used to have that problem with baby bunnies. They would just sit there while I was mowing. Maybe afraid. I had to give them a little poke in the butt with my finger and then they would hop out of the way of the mower. Haven't seen any baby bunnies since the neighbors got some outdoor semi-feral cats.

Posted by: Bertram Cabot, Jr. at June 17, 2023 03:12 PM (63Dwl)

33 Looks like we are dead in the water. Well this is plant related:
Furious Western Australian farmers fear sweeping new Aboriginal cultural heritage laws will 'hold us to ransom'
https://is.gd/K2fBub

I can see something like that here ...

Posted by: Ciampino - Have you botany plants lately? at June 17, 2023 03:15 PM (qfLjt)

34 Time to backwash and rinse the pool filter.

Posted by: Martini Farmer at June 17, 2023 03:18 PM (Q4IgG)

35 Haven't seen any baby bunnies since the neighbors got some outdoor semi-feral cats.
Posted by: Bertram Cabot, Jr. at June 17, 2023 03:12 PM

We have a few semi-feral cats that roam through the yard, so baby bunnies are always in danger, although we have several very overgrown brush piles they can shelter in. Wife is a hard-core birder, so she's not a big fan of those cats camping out by her feeders.

Posted by: Grimmy at June 17, 2023 03:22 PM (NCgXW)

36 Termites and mushrooms both like dame rotting wood

I believe there used to be some trees there and there are what looks like old dead roots...

Posted by: 18-1 at June 17, 2023 03:33 PM (lc5cP)

37 From Boise area: I just got back from a week away, and have only taken one quick walk through the garden, so not that much to say. Strawberries certainly came on fast - we harvested the ones under the lilacs yesterday.

The speed of lawn weed growth has dismayed Husband. Tall larkspurs have started blooming. Some nice patches of Johnny Jump-Up pansies. I'll need to harvest the beds of strawberries, check shelling peas since they're forming pods now, then weed raised beds, and cut down mildewing tall lupines. Removing lupine debris will help tall yellow columbines and Sweet William pinks to show to best advantage.

Tomorrow will be a garden workday - today is our neighbors' Summer Solstice party!

Posted by: Pat* at June 17, 2023 03:34 PM (td6Vu)

38 Not much here, everything is furiously growing besides the peppers I started from seed and the rose that was transplanted wrong.
Right now the wonder is the grapes that I finally pruned according to some instructions instead of winging it. They have stupid numbers of bunches now, and I am all impressed over the previous years' harvest. I have to prune the ancient Concords too, but those I want to go slow to not shock them too badly.

Posted by: Kindltot at June 17, 2023 03:51 PM (xhaym)

39 As always, thank you for this lovely thread & sharing such happy pictures. I'm learning from all of you!

Pepper plants & one cherry tomato growing in containers look good, as does one eggplant in the ground. For the 1st time in years, cucumbers don't look good & pea plants had been vining but are now wilting.

Had such dry breezes for so long, even with supplemental watering & moving pots around, seems certain young vegetable plants won't make it this year.

Only have crementis, a begonia, one rose in full bloom & hostas are beginning. Bought a new flowering plant today - lisianthus or eustoma - a lovely bloom - but I don't know how it'll survive in the region & if it's invasive. Impulse buying of plants is often my mistake.

Hope everyone has a lovely day! Thanks, again.

Posted by: L - very tired at June 17, 2023 03:54 PM (GshMh)

40 badgerwx at June 17, 2023 02:57 PM

The reason I asked about the cultivar name for the milkweed is that there's a named white one called 'Ice Ballet' that's supposed to smell like vanilla and a deep pink one with a white center called 'Cinderella'. Also vanilla-scented.

Posted by: KT at June 17, 2023 08:15 PM (rrtZS)

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