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Gardening, Puttering and Adventure Thread, Sept. 23

Sweet AutClem 2023frontview.jpg

Happy Autumn Equinox, everybody! Are you feeling the change? It really started for us just a few days ago.

In honor of autumn, we have the lovely photo above of Sweet Autumn Clematis from Mr. Jimm:

Hi Katy!

This beautiful Sweet Autumn Clematis was planted somewhere on our property when we moved into our current residence north of Chicago 9 years ago; we've since moved it around a couple of times trying to find a good spot for it.

We finally found the perfect spot last spring, looking for lots of sunlight and, most importantly, plenty of room to spread out. (My standard routine is to dig out a couple of cubic feet of clay and replace it with a mixture of compost, manure & topsoil with some sand mixed in.)

It probably suffered some planting shock last year but still looked impressive enough last autumn to get a few comments from people walking past our house down to the park at the end of our block.

2022 side viewSweet Aut Clem.jpg

Beautiful for a first-year transplant.

This year, having settled in quite nicely, it got fed during spring & early summer with high nitrogen (24-8-16) fertilizer, and when the flower buds started appearing in early August I gave it 3 doses of high potash (10-50-10) fertilizer 2 weeks apart. Some difference, huh? I had to take some sections of strong wire fencing, roll them into flattened tubes, and attach enough of them to the wooden fence to extend the trellis out 8 feet on either side, and it now measures 18 feet across.

The internet tells me it can actually reach 30 feet across, so look out next year!

On a side note, the elephant ear that you featured last fall survived the winter indoors and was successfully transplanted outdoors again, but instead of growing into a 10-foot monster as I had hoped it put all its energy into growing a couple of rather miserable-looking flowers. It's still an impressive plant; it's not a spectacular plant, though. But the clematis kind of makes up for it, I think.

Sweet Aut Clem2023 side view.jpg

The clematis is gorgeous. Bet it smells nice, too. Make sure the fence can support it.

The elephant ear may get bigger if it decides not to flower next year. Moving that gigantic plant last year was really a project.

*


Edible Gardening/Putting Things By

Rare seeds has a number of heirlooms and other open-pollinated seeds for fall planting, depending on your climate. Here are some colorful choices:

radish-sichuan-red-beauty.jpg

Radish Sichuan Red Beauty (winter radish)

pea_sugar_bon_snap_pea.jpg

Sugar Bon Snap Pea

cabbage_tete_noire.jpg

Cabbage Tete Noire

beet-golden.jpg

Golden Beet

beet-chioggia.jpg

Chioggia Beet


*

Ah, Nature

From MarkY:

We are overloaded with deer, and even with that, this old doe still has triplets.

Usually, it's thought doe will only have triplets when there is a low deer density, or really high level of browse.

She belies that.

triplets dy.jpg

Anybody else have deer or other wildlife to report?

*

Interesting bird - the Acorn Woodpecker:

A Woodpecker preparing for winter. First he finds a dead tree and starts making holes for the acorns. Each hole is made very thoughtfully, because if the hole is large other birds can easily steal the acorn. If the hole is narrow, the nut can break and deteriorate. By the end of summer, the Woodpecker's "jewelry" works ends, by this time the acorns ripen and take their places in the tree. The trunk of a large tree can hold about 50,000 acorns, allowing the bird a satisfying winter.

*

Farming

Harvesting wood:

*

Science, Climate, Food Supply, etc.

*

Our commercial tomatoes are holding some flavor, and we're getting some good avocados. It's getting a little cool for melons. Citrus will be coming on. First tangerines are sour. Gala apples are not storage apples, but are great soon after harvest. Time for Bartlett pears.

*


Gardens of The Horde

orchidlflorac.jpg

I bought this exotic orchid in HD 2 to 3 years ago. Can't remember the name of the species off the top of my head. If anyone wants to identify it that'd be great. It has bloomed about twice a year for the past two years. I find it beautiful and unique. It has in my eyes a sort of ethereal look to it.

Floridachick

Unique. Any clues to what it is from The Horde?

*

dwf fig.jpg

This is a fignomenal fig, a dwarf Ficus carica. It is self-fertile, and is said to grow about 30 inches tall with the same spread. This is a baby plant, in a two by three inch pot so it will be awhile before it gets that big! I have it under lights for the winter. Not sure about planting it outside next summer since some sources say it's zone 7 hardy and others say no.

Lirio100

Interesting find. It will be fun to watch it grow with you.


derak d.jpg

derak d2.jpg


Hi KT.
Glorious Fall day in North Idaho. The iris from spring gave way to late blooms of dahlias, zinnias and feather reed grass in all its gigantic splendor. Inter mixed in this chaos are all sorts of vegetables and herbs.

I'm dreading fall clean up but for now, rejoice! The harvest has been superb, with tomatoes, cabbage ,beans and peppers all yielding volumes. Tomatoes and peppers are notoriously hard to shepherd to fruition around these parts, but we were blessed with a hot summer and late soaking rains that were the perfect climate combo for success!

Thx for all your hard work. Appreciate the thread before the gardening thread too, always so in depth and relevant.

Derak in Idaho.

Thrilling. Love the backlighting.

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? Saturday Gardening, Puttering and Adventure Thread, Sept. 16


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 01:24 PM




Comments

(Jump to bottom of comments)

1 Pretty pictures!

Posted by: AZ deplorable moron at September 23, 2023 01:26 PM (4sOGU)

2 And thank you for the GT, KT.

Posted by: AZ deplorable moron at September 23, 2023 01:27 PM (4sOGU)

3 Okay, I'll go let them know.

Posted by: AZ deplorable moron at September 23, 2023 01:27 PM (4sOGU)

4 Notified them of the NOOD.

Posted by: AZ deplorable moron at September 23, 2023 01:27 PM (4sOGU)

5 I believe that the practice of "topping" trees (now nearly gone in the US) was a vestige of the Middle Ages' European cities.
It has now morphed into the "art" of pollarding (see Champs-Elysées). I.e. a way to harvest wood without killing trees.

Posted by: MkY at September 23, 2023 01:31 PM (cPGH3)

6 hiya

Posted by: JT at September 23, 2023 01:34 PM (T4tVD)

7 Thanks for the thread KT. I’m new to the garden scene. Recently got a house that is overgrown with ivy. It’s going to take some time to root it all out, but hopefully there will be some photo worthy gardens once enough time, labor and money go into the ground.

Posted by: Corona exile-back_in_exile at September 23, 2023 01:36 PM (nh1MA)

8 Howdy Greenthumbs
Finish up a batch of chili for lunch I made from my peppers and tomatoes

Posted by: Skip at September 23, 2023 01:37 PM (fwDg9)

9 Anybody else have deer or other wildlife to report?
Posted by: K.T. at 01:24 PM

Javalina come through to empty the bird baths in the evening and sometimes stay the night on the property.
The quail come in large coveys for the bird blocks and water twice daily.
The packrats *really* like to store junk on top of my frontier's engine. There seems to be a never ending supply of them!
The kangaroo rats are digging holes where the ground squirrels aren't (and that squirrel is sure to lose it's mortal coil soon!)
Now that the windows can be opened at night we hear the great horned owls almost nightly.
The coyotes come through about midnight.
And something is causing the movement sensitive camera to light; but, I have seen it yet. We've had bobcats and some other intermediate sized cat come through.
No larger animals.

Posted by: AZ deplorable moron at September 23, 2023 01:39 PM (4sOGU)

10
Tomatoes still producing like crazy here in SE PA. Been having trouble getting spinach seeds to grow. I have a 'hydro kitchen sprouter' with which I make sprouts for my wife. Tried putting some spinach seeds in and sure enough - it took many days - they're ready for planting.

Next year I'll probably try using it on some of my more problematic seeds.

Posted by: Divide by Zero at September 23, 2023 01:40 PM (enJYY)

11 Added some seed photos. Make sure to check climate adaptability.

Posted by: KT at September 23, 2023 01:41 PM (rrtZS)

12 I believe that the practice of "topping" trees (now nearly gone in the US) was a vestige of the Middle Ages' European cities.
It has now morphed into the "art" of pollarding (see Champs-Elysées). I.e. a way to harvest wood without killing trees.
Posted by: MkY

The 'cut your own Christmas tree' places ask you to leave the bottom branches so the trees don't start from scratch.
The trees are trimmed after new growth to foster a single 'tree' stem.

Posted by: AZ deplorable moron at September 23, 2023 01:41 PM (4sOGU)

13 Bamboo has been essential in our gardens this year as support stakes. You can use it to construct trellises. No, it will not last for more than one season.

Posted by: Miley, okravangelist at September 23, 2023 01:42 PM (Mzdiz)

14 Very pretty 'from seed' pictures.

Posted by: AZ deplorable moron at September 23, 2023 01:43 PM (4sOGU)

15 owdy Greenthumbs
Finish up a batch of chili for lunch I made from my peppers and tomatoes
Posted by: Skip at September 23, 2023 01:37 PM (fwDg9)

Beans ?

Posted by: JT at September 23, 2023 01:44 PM (T4tVD)

16 Golden Beets have a less earthy taste than red beets and may appeal more to people who don't really like beets. They may have a lower germination rate.

Posted by: KT at September 23, 2023 01:47 PM (rrtZS)

17 My clamatis is on an upright so it has blossomed into a huge, 7 foot tall snowball. I look at it and wonder why did I just put in one???

Meanwhile, yesterday was 76 and sunny. This morning the rain started and is in the forecast for the next week.
Yup. Fall is here.

Posted by: Diogenes at September 23, 2023 01:48 PM (uSHSS)

18 Here in Bourbon Country it's been pretty dry. No rain for about 10 days now. However we've been able to harvest a couple pounds of Roma tomatoes and a dozen green peppers as things seem to slow down a bit. The zucchini has one last hurrah left in it.

As for wildlife... a juvenile Redtail Hawk has been hanging out in the trees around the property.... making noise. Heard the coyotes the other night too.

Lastly, we were absolutely swarmed with toads this summer. Hundreds of them. Little guys, about the size of a quarter. Weird.

Posted by: Martini Farmer at September 23, 2023 01:48 PM (Q4IgG)

19 Lastly, we were absolutely swarmed with toads this summer. Hundreds of them. Little guys, about the size of a quarter. Weird.
Posted by: Martini Farmer

Amend your ways or it'll be locusts next!

Posted by: MkY at September 23, 2023 01:51 PM (cPGH3)

20 Should mention that a young employee took the first of 4 planned doe this morning.
We seriously are over-run.
It's an "earn-a-buck" year. Can't kill anything else til you take a doe.

Posted by: MkY at September 23, 2023 01:53 PM (cPGH3)

21 KT you may know the answer to this. We tend to grow the same beets year after year, but sometimes, when canning or pickling, they don't keep their "beet-red" color.
Water? Heat?

Posted by: MkY at September 23, 2023 01:55 PM (cPGH3)

22 Detroit Red is the variety.

Posted by: MkY at September 23, 2023 01:56 PM (cPGH3)

23 Still picking tomatoes. Better Boys and Early Girls. My deer repellent is a bar of Irish Spring soap cut into quarters and hung onto the tomato cage about deer nose high. Seems to work.

Posted by: Quarter Twenty at September 23, 2023 01:56 PM (NBVIP)

24 Still have tomatoes and lots of peppers in mini greenhouse, see if they ripen, doesn't get much sun these days even if it's out.

Posted by: Skip at September 23, 2023 01:59 PM (fwDg9)

25 Beautiful pictures as usual!

Posted by: Eromero at September 23, 2023 02:00 PM (z3WCn)

26 Golden Beets have a less earthy taste than red beets and may appeal more to people who don't really like beets. They may have a lower germination rate.
Posted by: KT at September 23, 2023 01:47 PM


Thank you for reminding me that I need to buy beets to roast.

Posted by: RedMindBlueState at September 23, 2023 02:03 PM (aQy7p)

27
Once a year I used to enjoy a hearty laugh when I drove off to work in King of Prussia. I knew when deer hunting season had begun by the hundred plus deer who would congregate on one particular hill in Valley Forge Park where hunting was prohibited. Every other day of the year you might see only one or two.

Posted by: Divide by Zero at September 23, 2023 02:06 PM (enJYY)

28 Was a lull but rain staring again

Posted by: Skip at September 23, 2023 02:09 PM (fwDg9)

29 Divide by Zero- I have noticed that too over tjd years

Posted by: Skip at September 23, 2023 02:10 PM (fwDg9)

30 I have a volunteer tomato that’s producing numerous blooms but no fruit. Is this normal?

Posted by: Duke Lowell at September 23, 2023 02:12 PM (a62lp)

31 Duke that's my experience, might get a few cherry or plum size tomatoes but not much more than that.

Posted by: Skip at September 23, 2023 02:16 PM (fwDg9)

32
Skip - thought you'd notice it too. Rats with antlers in a 'Sanctuary City'.

Just moved my backup battery into upstairs bedroom and plugged a night light into it. Looks like 'Oh! Feel ya!' is moving inshore more then predicted and tonight's winds could get sporty. I hate waking up in complete darkness with winds howling knowing it will be at least noon (at the very earliest) before power is restored.

Also - taking aim in the dark at the toilet is discouraged in this household for some indecipherable reason.

Posted by: Divide by Zero at September 23, 2023 02:16 PM (enJYY)

33 I have ~2 quarts of 700k ghost/cayenne pepper sauce that's too hot. So I'll cut it 50-50 with roasted red bell pepper to cool it down and to add some flavor.

Posted by: sTevo at September 23, 2023 02:17 PM (dLiGu)

34 Thanks, Skip. Might not matter anyway as these storms are knocking the crap out of everything right now.

Posted by: Duke Lowell at September 23, 2023 02:18 PM (a62lp)

35
I have a volunteer tomato that’s producing numerous blooms but no fruit. Is this normal?

Posted by: Duke Lowell at September 23, 2023 02:12 PM


At this point in the season you *might* get a few small tomatoes if you snip off all the blooms towards the top of the plant. No sense trying for more then a few. I suspect the plant isn't getting enough sunshine.

Posted by: Divide by Zero at September 23, 2023 02:36 PM (enJYY)

36 Lovely veggies in those photos!
I've spent almost every day since June cutting the plants on my property back, sometimes down to the stumps. I figure 20 truckloads of cutting.
Now they are all roaring back. The roses, the jasmine, the lantana.

Posted by: gourmand du jour at September 23, 2023 02:36 PM (MeG8a)

37 Anybody else have deer or other wildlife to report?'

Yes, in SC WI just South of JJS (Urban 'hood).
So far: Whitetail deer, turkeys, mallard ducks, Canadian geese, hawks, bald eagles, a Cooper's Hawk (terrorized the bird feeders for a while and nailed at least two fat, dumb squirrels, and in fact is more a falcon than a hawk), opossums, multiple bat types, coyotes, the occasional black bear, a puma came through a few years ago and 2? years ago a wolf pack, beavers, groundhogs... lots of birds, different kinds.

Which makes it all the weirder, I have NEVER seen a raccoon on my city lot property in 20+ years. Not once. I see them all over town but I have never even once seen one on Casa Neal. Never seen one. Not ever in 20+ years, on my own property.

Posted by: Too far? at September 23, 2023 02:43 PM (/BBNv)

38 37 Anybody else have deer or other wildlife to report?'

Mama bear and three cubs walked thru a neighbors yard Thursday. SIL saw it, I missed it though.

Posted by: sTevo at September 23, 2023 02:45 PM (dLiGu)

39 Which makes it all the weirder, I have NEVER seen a raccoon on my city lot property in 20+ years. Not once. I see them all over town but I have never even once seen one on Casa Neal. Never seen one. Not ever in 20+ years, on my own property.
Posted by: Too far?

Nocturnal, by and large. Try setting a game cam over trash or scraps.
I keep game cams out constantly, and have NEVER seen a bobcat on one... but have seen several by naked eye.

Posted by: MkY at September 23, 2023 02:46 PM (cPGH3)

40 Yay Bushes!

Posted by: Cicero (@cicero43) at September 23, 2023 02:46 PM (guGkK)

41 What kinds of game cameras are you Morons using and what do you like or dislike about them? I'm thinking of putting some up around my house.

Posted by: Helena Handbasket at September 23, 2023 02:47 PM (llON8)

42 Anybody else have deer or other wildlife to report?
Posted by: K.T. at 01:24 PM
----
Last week, a bear decided that the space between the shrubbery along the front of the house, and the house, would be a nice place to take a snooze. He was there for about an hour, then wandered over to the neighbor's house, where he took *another* snooze.

Posted by: Mike Hammer, etc., etc. at September 23, 2023 02:48 PM (rx603)

43 With critters there was a huge spate of abandoned animals during the Housing Bubble Collapse, where people moved and just turned their 'pets' loose.

I got a few nice cats out of it, still have the one, the dogs, mostly untrained pitbulls, fortunately weren't allowed by the remaining locals to turn into packs and the local Po looked away about the job that had to be done.

Right now in SC WI it's mow and Winterizing.

Posted by: LenNeal at September 23, 2023 02:50 PM (/BBNv)

44 Logees.com sells Fignominal. They often run out but they soon restock.

Posted by: Emmie at September 23, 2023 02:50 PM (Sf2cq)

45 Yay gardening thread!

Anyone know if jalepeno peppers dry as nicely as cayenne? I've always thought them best to use fresh, quickly.

I way over planted and have a bushel, at least.
That's a lot of pepper jelly and after the pickling fiascos, I'm hating the canning process. Makes me nervous, in addition to wrecking all that bounty.



Posted by: Derak at September 23, 2023 02:54 PM (ash3Y)

46 Years ago our neighborhood was at the edge of town with lots of undeveloped land. We would see deer, raccoons, and, best of all, a family of foxes who had a den under a huge fallen cottonwood. I also would see coyote tracks, and would hear them yipping in the evenings. Now we're surrounded by commercial developments, which sucks. I did see a young doe wandering around a couple of weeks ago.

We do have a lot of birds and skwerls though. And garter snakes.

Posted by: Pug Mahon, Lookin' for me wooden leg at September 23, 2023 02:55 PM (T/Lqj)

47 Nocturnal, by and large. Try setting a game cam over trash or scraps.
I keep game cams out constantly, and have NEVER seen a bobcat on one... but have seen several by naked eye.
Posted by: MkY'

I have had this conversation multiple times! I work nights and am outside and up at night, out, really, and have NEVER seen one on my city lot. Not once. In the alley, in neighbor's yards, walking to the office, oh I know they're out there but they are flatly not on my property. Doing tree trimming, on the roof, no raccoon shit in the valleys. I can see it on my neighbor's roof, but not mine. Utterly bizarre.

Posted by: LenNeal at September 23, 2023 02:55 PM (/BBNv)

48 > Anyone know if jalepeno peppers dry as nicely as cayenne? I've always thought them best to use fresh, quickly.
_____________

My wife has dehydrated a couple quarts of ours. Can't vouch for "nice" or not, but they're freakin' hot.

Posted by: Martini Farmer at September 23, 2023 02:56 PM (Q4IgG)

49 What kinds of game cameras are you Morons using and what do you like or dislike about them? I'm thinking of putting some up around my house.
Posted by: Helena Handbasket'

The Wyze cameras get rave reviews from my coworkers.

Posted by: LenNeal at September 23, 2023 02:56 PM (/BBNv)

50 a family of foxes'

Forgot about them yes, they turn up. There was one that lived at/on the McDonald's trash on my walk to work.

Posted by: LenNeal at September 23, 2023 02:58 PM (/BBNv)

51 Also on the pickling fiascos, I tried to ferment dill pickles. They never "bubbled" . They didn't ferment. I'm thinking I used tap water which may have had too high chlorination, impeding the growth of yeast which causes the ferment.

They're still sitting in the bucket four weeks later, doing nothing. *sigh*.

Posted by: Derak at September 23, 2023 02:58 PM (ash3Y)

52 Trail cam.
I have one that allows me to access it through wifi (it first connects by bluetooth, then wifi). The app runs on Android, I wish I could run the app on windows for the larger screen and better sound.
I bought one that demanded a link to the Internet before it would initialize. Nope, no way anything is 'dialing' out of my house, that one is sitting around here somewhere.
We had one that didn't do 'wireless' and you had to go out and get the memory card, just about daily otherwise you lost pictures.

I recommend getting a solar hookup for the cam otherwise you'll need to by Duracell stock as they all take 8 AA batteries.


Posted by: AZ deplorable moron at September 23, 2023 02:59 PM (ag7Ay)

53 There is a bottomless bucket of garden produce at the office I suspect the management might have to ban this practice shortly. Much like the zucchini stuffed in cars if you leave your door unlocked at the post office.

Posted by: LenNeal at September 23, 2023 03:01 PM (/BBNv)

54 Found it: GardePro E6 Trail Camera is the one we're using.

Posted by: AZ deplorable moron at September 23, 2023 03:02 PM (ag7Ay)

55 Much like the zucchini stuffed in cars if you leave your door unlocked at the post office.'

"Dad! Someone broke into our car!"
"Oh shit! Is anything missing??"
"No, it's worse! They left a bag of zucchini!"

Posted by: This has happened in Wisconsin at September 23, 2023 03:03 PM (/BBNv)

56 The big old oak out front is turning. Most leaves edged in brown, a few leaves completely turned.

I wasn't aware the oak had such a good awareness of the arrival of Autumn.

Posted by: mindful webworker - not ready for Winter at September 23, 2023 03:03 PM (Nfan7)

57 The big old oak out front is turning. Most leaves edged in brown, a few leaves completely turned.
I wasn't aware the oak had such a good awareness of the arrival of Autumn.
Posted by: mindful webworker - not ready for Winter'

Silver Maples I need to top.

Posted by: This has happened in Wisconsin at September 23, 2023 03:07 PM (/BBNv)

58 "No, it's worse! They left a bag of zucchini!"
Posted by: This has happened in Wisconsin

That's funny!

Posted by: AZ deplorable moron at September 23, 2023 03:09 PM (ag7Ay)

59 Still not bad out, breezy but not wind gusts

Posted by: Skip at September 23, 2023 03:09 PM (fwDg9)

60 Adventure!

Posted by: Aetius451AD Work Laptop at September 23, 2023 03:15 PM (zZu0s)

61 Still not bad out, breezy but not wind gusts
Posted by: Skip at September 23, 2023 03:09 PM (fwDg9)

Is the rain done ?

Posted by: JT at September 23, 2023 03:15 PM (T4tVD)

62 No raccoons?
Just not trashy enough.
Be better.
Game cams...
All work good for awhile. Never had any that worked for years. Went with cell cams for awhile. Great!
Then, the company changed the software and bricked my cameras... Going to replace slowly with other brand, but am watching reviews carefully.

Posted by: MkY at September 23, 2023 03:18 PM (cPGH3)

63 There are freezer-loads of new, whitetail bucks running across my brother's back yard. They will be delicious and tender.

The tasty bastards are also hanging out in my backyard, taunting me, but I live within the city limits and it would be unlawful to blast them from my door mat.

Posted by: Dr. Bone at September 23, 2023 03:21 PM (KVGVf)

64 They're still sitting in the bucket four weeks later, doing nothing. *sigh*.
Posted by: Derak

My wife, the pickle and canning expert, says it's hit or miss. Good vs. bad bacteria, good vs. bad yeasts.
She did two batches in a row. First was a dud. Second was vunderbar.
If there's no foamy, nasty crud on top... why do you think they're bad?
You don't have to see bubbles for them to pickle. Only foam for about 24 hours.
(Not my advice... the boss's).

Posted by: MkY at September 23, 2023 03:24 PM (cPGH3)

65 Freude an kleinen garten

Posted by: Skip at September 23, 2023 03:24 PM (fwDg9)

66 Was raining lightly so came back in

Posted by: Skip at September 23, 2023 03:25 PM (fwDg9)

67 The tasty bastards are also hanging out in my backyard, taunting me, but I live within the city limits and it would be unlawful to blast them from my door mat.
Posted by: Dr. Bone

We're archery only within the City limits. Doesn't stop the killin' none.
80% of my kills last 6 years have been off my porch. I'm a lazy hunter.

Posted by: MkY at September 23, 2023 03:26 PM (cPGH3)

68 We're archery only within the City limits. Doesn't stop the killin' none.
80% of my kills last 6 years have been off my porch. I'm a lazy hunter.
Posted by: MkY at September 23, 2023 03:26 PM (cPGH3)

Crossbow or Longbow?

*arched eyebrow*

Posted by: Aetius451AD Work Laptop at September 23, 2023 03:28 PM (zZu0s)

69 I'm having to mow the pasture lot a 2nd time this year. A lot of weeds have flourished since I mowed in early July. I'd love to burn the weeds, but I am too nervous to attempt it, lest the fire get away from me.

Would be cool if a group in the neighborhood wanted to trade off helping burn each others lots. I pulled a bunch of burrs, last weekend left them in cardboard boxes to party dry and burned them today with some branches and paper. Still had some of them making a a fair amount of smoke but at least they are gone and the fire dept didn't show up.

Posted by: PaleRider at September 23, 2023 03:29 PM (3cGpq)

70 Cap'n! There be whales Pet Threads here!
https://acecomments.mu.nu/?post=406197

Posted by: mindful webworker - Horde minded at September 23, 2023 03:30 PM (Nfan7)

71 From Boise area; lows have dropped from 61 to 45. Highs dropped from 88 to 64. So far only the linden has leaves turning; but the house is chilly and Fall is here. We did a little tree-trimming.

We've made 4 batches of peach jam - peaches are now done. Plan to try pear butter tomorrow (me), as well as make pickles from some gift cucumbers (Husband).

Green beans, ever-bearing strawberries, and all tomatoes (cherry, paste, slicers) still producing. Almost time to pick pears (we've gathered many fallen). Taste-tested apples are still a bit tart. Watching the cantaloupes and butternut squash ripen. Not sure when we'll pick poblanos.

We harvested 2 more potato bags today - 1 pound 12 of fingerlings, 8 pounds of russets.

I've been grabbing a few stems of basil and oregano each time I come in, to get more of it dried before Frost - which, at the end of Sept., is now something we have to watch the weather report for. I have a rosemary plant I'll want to bring in before Frost.

Note: Annular solar eclipse on Oct. 14th! Goes over part of the USA! Alas, not Boise. And my upcoming knee surgery will mean we can't travel to see it. Ah, well.

Posted by: Pat* at September 23, 2023 03:40 PM (wd7fb)

72 I have the GardnPro too. Set it up by the bird feeder. Takes decent night photos. Did not run out of space and I think I let it go three weeks on the last pictures.

Posted by: Notsothoreau at September 23, 2023 04:15 PM (Ds/Wi)

73 Okay, I may be late to the thread, but, that tweet about Japanese tree-trimming: that's not unique. Europeans had been doing that since the BC years. They called it 'Coppicing' (if they cut the tree at stump level) or "Pollarding" (when trimmed higher up). It just fell out of the popular perception because, well, probably because it got discarded when society became obsessed with all things 'modern.'

Posted by: Castle Guy at September 23, 2023 06:52 PM (Lhaco)

74 The orchid looks like Brassavola ‘Yellow Bird’

Posted by: AnabolicState at September 24, 2023 09:18 AM (T6tTz)

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