Saturday, October 24, 2009

Goodbye Garden

Well, as you all know by now, I've all but abandoned my writing here on a regular basis. Now it's not because I don't love it! For those of you who know Bill and I, you know the circumstances. Besides, all the exciting parts of this past year's garden were pretty much done with anyway, right? My herbs live on, even with me not out there everyday looking after things. That's the true beauty of them I guess. Once they get going, very little keeps them down. Let's hope I continue to be this way also.

When things come around again to a more normal time and I restart my adventures in the garden, I'll be sure to let you all know! Meanwhile, thanks for reading!

Friday, August 21, 2009

Time to Hit the Gym

Bill and I had the dead branches trimmed off of our oak tree in the backyard this past week and in the process uncovered the most unusual freak occurrence of nature. If you look closely at this picture you can see a cross limb that has grown between the two trunks of the tree. Both ends are completely grown into two separate trunks of the tree. So, I had to get a snapshot of this pull-up bar before it was gone. Who knew I had a Gold's Gym for squirrels in my tree? Now I guess they'll have to work out somewhere else! I'm sure my dog China would be glad to help with that - anyone up for a run?

Come on squirrels
fall in line
don't you know it's pull-up time?
What! No bar?
I guess that's done
Time instead to have some fun!

Yes...borderline corny but I couldn't help it.

Tuesday, August 18, 2009

It's a Jungle Out There

Well, what have I been up to lately? I've been hibernating...While bears hibernate in the winter, I tend to hibernate in the summer. Now I'm not sleeping all through the summer but I am certainly cocooning myself inside the air conditioned house! It's so hot here! Just 10 minutes or less outside and a person is just damp from head to toe. So, needless to say, I have not seen much of my garden in the last month. Today was very overcast with rain thanks to Storm Ana passing through, so it was the perfect day to go out and inspect what's been going on and - Wow! It's a jungle out there! I actually had plants in front of my porch door, making it hard to open. Anyone who's ever seen my backyard knows I like things kind of woodsy but it's gone from woods to jungle. Must be all the humid, steamy air! Maybe I'll compromise and say it's a rain forest. Anyway...so I was cutting back the plant invaders from in front of my door and guess what I found growing in between the pavers - a lemon basil plant! I was quite surprised and wondering how it managed to establish itself there all on its own and then I remembered that last year when I cut down the old basil plant I laid all the stalks with the seed heads on the pavers so I could group them together to keep for seeds. I guess some of the seed pods fell into the cracks and - presto! - like magic a new basil plant is born in its time. What a pleasant, unexpected surprise!

Lemon basil, from where did you come?
Yes from seed, but did you travel some?
No, no, no you were left in this spot
a long time ago and then forgot
but now you appear and I'm so glad
Welcome back to my backyard pad!

Friday, August 7, 2009

Calling All Gardeners!

Pop quiz for today! What is this?
This is what Bill and I asked ourselves today. We were casually eating lunch at the kitchen table when we both spotted this creature flitting about the flowers. It was pretty big, at least 2 to 3 inches long and a wing span of about 3 inches. We wondered, "Is it a really big bee?" I grabbed my camera and went outside to investigate. Well, as soon as I saw it close up I knew it wasn't a bee...okay...but what is it? It has a third little "wing" on it. That little thing on the back end was flapping just like the wings...never seen anything like it before. I'm thinking to myself that it moves like hummingbird - wings flapping so fast a person can't hardly see them and flitting from flower to flower...maybe a really big moth or butterfly? So I snapped a few pictures and then away he flew into the sky. Now Google is a wonderful thing. It took me a little while but I did find out about this mysterios creature. Are you ready for the answer (or maybe you already know the answer)?

This amazing little flying machine is indeed (drum roll please) - a hummingbird moth (a Hummingbird Clearwing Moth, Hemaris thysbe to be exact)! Who knew there was such a thing? I sense some skepticism from some of you. Just Google "hummingbirds/bird or bug" and you'll see.

This has been the most fascinating discovery this year in my garden. I'm completely enthralled. Now, if you'll excuse me, I have to go refill my hummingbird feeder!

Baby hummingbird?
Are you sure?
Can I take you at your word?
It has antennas don't you see?
It really is a mystery.
But look closer my dear friend,
wings fast as lightening
and a feathery rear-end!

Monday, August 3, 2009

Waterfall of Herbs

So my herbs are doing quite well on their own these days. With all the rain we've been getting, I barely even have to fill the planters with water. The chives, tarragon, and mint make this wonderful little cascade over the edge of the planters that I find really beautiful. They're just reaching for the sun, leaning and looking for the source of light. It's so similar to what our own souls do - always yearning and looking for the Source of Light, the Creator, our Maker, the One who shines on us. When it's dark in our lives we search, so it is with these little herbs. It's not surprising but it is wonderful how consistent and constant our Lord is with all of nature - including us!

Whether the sun be out or not,
Whether the clouds pass by my spot,
or the sun shines bright on a particular day,
My Creator is never far away.
So my soul look up and see
The gift of love that looks on me.

Friday, July 31, 2009

New in the Nursery

So here's nature at work. I cut back all my old tomato plants and look what I found below them - brand new tomato babies! I guess an unpicked tomato deposited its seeds in the planter and nature went to work. I'm so excited that I'll be having another crop of tomatoes.



And here are my cheap-o parsley seeds from Target. They're actually growing. I'll have fancy garnish in no time!

The wonders of my garden
oh how I have missed
all the little seedlings
growing in their bliss!

Thursday, July 16, 2009

Alternative Ending

Well, my tomatoes have come to an end. These are the last few that were on the vine, so I picked them off before cutting back all the plants to the core. They had a good run. Six months for tomato vines is pretty good. At first I felt a little sad that they were done but then I felt this wave of excitement that now I can start something new - anything I choose, including new tomatoes if I wish. Endings can be sad but sometimes an ending is just really an exciting beginning to something else. So that was my garden lesson for the day. I suppose it goes along with, "When God closes a door, he opens a window." So here I am at the window, looking out and feeling glad instead of sad.

Will keep you posted on my new developments.

Goodbye to this Spring's garden
Hello to Summer one
Such fun we had unburdened
Now to work in the sun!

Wednesday, July 8, 2009

Remeber Me?

I know, I've been gone so long you were beginning to think I wasn't going to write anymore! Things here have been pretty busy but I think maybe this month will finally be back to my normal life. My six-month-old garden is beginning to decline a bit, partly due to my neglect in the last couple of weeks, but mostly due to age and all the rain, rain, rain, rain! My pretty rain chain is doing its job, guiding all that wonderful water into my rain barrel.

Tomato plants are about done, so I'm getting ready to cut off some shoots and bury them for a second go-around, although I imagine the fungus will be fierce now. Pepper plants are still going strong, although I have way too many of them. Next year I think I'll plant two instead of four. Chives are in love with their spot and are still looking good. Tarragon is beginning to decline and mint is still fighting that strange disease/bug this year, although it continues to grow. After all, things have to be really terrible to kill off the mint! Strawberries seem done for now, though the plants are still proliferating and hopefully will keep spreading and growing for next season's harvest. The new babies are parsley. Will keep you posted on how they come along. I sowed those seeds in the window box a couple weeks ago, so will see how they do. The seeds were from the Target $1.00 section so I'm curious about their quality. I am thinking I'd like to plant some lettuce and garlic, but I have to check on the Florida growing schedule for those. Hopefully I'll be back out in the garden soon. At least when it's raining it's not 95 degrees (only 90!).

Anyway...
Thanks for checking back on me
No, I wasn't attacked by the bees
I've really just been busy so
I'm constantly on the go, go, go!


Tuesday, June 23, 2009

So How Hot Is It?

It's hot here! It's so hot here! I don't remember the last summer it was this hot...and it's only June. What will the temp be in August!? So, if you don't live here in Florida you now have the picture that, yes, it's really hot but, truthfully, how hot is it? It's so hot that my beehive is actually melting off the tree. It's been an interesting week in my backyard. My beehive hangs underneath a great big branch at the top of a big oak tree, and this week pieces of it area actually falling off the tree because the wax is softening due to the heat. Now the bees I'm sure are very unhappy about this but they continue to be quite docile. They even let me take the fallen pieces of hive to harvest for honey and beeswax.

From this -

To this -

Pretty cool! It took a lot of work to do this (and now I have another even bigger piece to work on) but it was such a neat experience. I waited two days for most of the honey to drip out of the honeycomb and then I melted down the wax and filtered it through a paper towel to remove all the impurities. I'm sure with proper equipment, etc., it would be much easier, but I had fun with it. I'm thinking I would enjoy being a beekeeper...but I probably don't have the time for that!

Poor little bees
your home is falling at the eaves
but can you move over please
so I can harvest what I sees?

Saturday, June 20, 2009

In the Eye of the Beholder

Justify Full
Yes, this is my current garden. It's gotten so big that it's actually getting hard to see out the kitchen window. What a wonderful surprise! Speaking of surprises...

This is my most recent harvest of peppers and tomatoes. I thought it was really the most beautiful shades of red, orange, and yellow - like a little fruit rainbow. It's too bad I didn't have a purple eggplant in there to really make it pop! The big tomato on the right was as big as my hand - definitely the biggest I've ever grown.

I guess I owe some thanks to Mr. Edward C. Smith, author of Incredible Vegetables from Self-Watering Containers, for all that I learned this year, and to Gardener's Supply Company (the great online company that provided most of my supplies) for such a fantastic garden...and of course I always think of our great Creator from which all life in nature flows. Wow! He has made everything beautiful in its time. I may be the caretaker but He is certainly the Creator. I continually stand amazed!

In the wonder of it all
I find a calming sense of peace
Of all that is created
In my little garden space!

Monday, June 8, 2009

Lunch Anyone?

I was so excited to make a sandwich from my very own veggies and herbs. This is from a recipe I posted about a month or two ago. It consists of eggplant (from my backyard) and basil (lemon basil in my case - yes, from my own backyard). Now I didn't make my own feta cheese or make the mayo from scratch. So I guess if I really wanted to go crazy I could have baked my own bread and grown my own garlic to mix in with my own homemade mayo! Then I could have really been ecstatic (Forget making my own feta cheese. That would just be over the top now wouldn't it?).

However, I was quite proud of my little sandwich. It made a very good lunch and I was happy to have it. I really thought about adding some tomato to it but thought I would try the recipe as written the first time. Next time I'm going to add the tomato and some sea salt to make it even better. There's rarely a recipe that I don't tweak in some form or fashion. Over the years I believe I've truly developed a love for food. It has a creative vein in it that I enjoy. You can always explore, test, and create with food! Yes, it can be a chore if I'm tired or extra busy, but when it's a chosen activity, I find it most enjoyable. The garden is certainly a big part of that whole world of food. From the Earth, tended and cared for, and then to the table. Again, I never cease to be amazed by the turning of the seasons before my eyes. Oh, I know, I'm waxing nostalgic. I can actually hear Elton John singing Circle of Life in my head just now...

Lord above and us below
from springtime buds to hint of snow
multi seasons present and past
sometimes the world seems oh so vast
and yet here in my quite small world
a peace and awe amidst the whirl

Thursday, June 4, 2009

Look at the Size of that Thing!

This was one massive tomato! I'm so happy about my garden this year. I have to say that I'm a firm believer in mixing one's own soil. I really believe that is why the garden has done phenomenally better this year than in previous years. I was careful to follow the soil "recipe" for proper nutrients and here are the results. My garden has had less pest problems and that fungus that was trying to take hold has been vanquished. My plants are bigger than me and the produce is amazing. Of course there's always room for improvement - my chamomile and dill will vouch for that. It seems that I'm having the most trouble with "wispy-type" plants. I think there is some small bug or some kind of disease that has been plaguing them this year. I went out and bought another dill plant but it's coming down with what the other one had, so I think I'm going to put my energy into planting some sweet potato slips and maybe root some tomato suckers for more plants/tomatoes in the fall. This is the time in the garden I work so hard for. The produce is rolling in and the only real work I do is make sure they have water (and of course daily checks for any upcoming problems). You go garden!

I'm so very happy
looking at my plants
They're not very sappy
and they resist the ants

Monday, May 25, 2009

In Disguise

Here it is - finished! My ugly blue food barrel is now this lovely looking rain barrel. The spigot is hidden at bottom left with hose attached. The only modification I may make is to buy another set of blocks to raise it up just a little more. The higher it is, the more gravity works for you and the better hose "pressure" you get (not that there's any true water pressure going on here).

This area I chose is a place where a lot of water runs off the roof. I'm used to getting a big hole in the sand in this spot, so it was the choice place for the barrel. Now most people put these under their gutter downspouts but we don't have a gutter system on the house, so this little corner works like a charm.
As you can see in the second picture, it's placed directly under the 90-degree corner where the walls meet. I am going to add a pretty copper rain chain that will hang from the roof and down to the barrel, to more directly catch the water, but that's on order from Amazon.com and I'm still waiting for it to arrive. However, my barrel is already 90 percent full from just one hour of rain yesterday!

Overall I'm so happy with how it turned out. I really wanted a rain barrel but I didn't want the ugliness that can some times accompany one, but I think the paint and the plants have made it look quite nice. Not bad for free (not counting the $25.00 I spent on spray paint)!

Go on clouds - drop your rain, I am ready for the same!

Thursday, May 21, 2009

Rainbow of Colors

It's time to start pickling some peppers!

Tonight I had enough peppers to fill a mason jar, so I decided I better get busy chopping them up and pickling them before they go to waste. I decided to mix all three types of peppers for an interesting blend (sweet yellow banana, red banana, and my one jalapeno). They make such a beautiful rainbow of colors in the jar! I know they look canned but technically they're not. I don't go through all the trouble of boiling jars, etc., etc. After all, there's only one jar, so I'm probably going to eat them all in the next few weeks anyway. So, I just pickle them and then keep them in the refrigerator. That way they last about three months and they're so great in salads!

It's so easy to do! Here's my pickling recipe:
~
Pickling Juice:
2 cups white vinegar
2/3 cup white sugar
1/2 teaspoon mustard seeds
1/2 teaspoon celery seeds
~
Place all pickling ingredients in a pot and bring to a rolling boil.
Place peppers in jar(s).
Pour in pickling juice and let cool.
Place in fridge and leave for one week.
Enjoy!
~
Rainbow of colors in my fridge, pickling, pickling now.
I just love your look and smell and taste you see, and how!

Tuesday, May 19, 2009

Over a Barrel


So, exciting news this week! Last Saturday was my rain barrel class through the Hillsborough County Extension Service, and yes this big ugly blue barrel is mine! China was helping me clean it out. Now all the barrels are food grade, so whatever was in there is completely safe, but when we drove it home in the car I wondered how many people thought we were transporting toxic waste! So we cleaned it out with vinegar and water, though it really wasn't all that dirty. The great thing is that the wonderful people at the extension service already drilled a hole and installed the spigot, so that was one less thing Bill and I had to do. The instructor did show us how to do it though, so if I get a second barrel I'll know what to do! Bill went to the class with me, which made it all the more fun. We were able to walk around their beautiful garden before the class. You would never guess when looking at the building that there is a gorgeous courtyard in the back complete with lighted gazebo, pond, and wonderful plants. We really enjoyed the morning.

Now I'm in the process of painting my barrel. I'm spray painting it with that special paint for plastic. Then we'll have to set it up in place to catch water. Will keep you posted with some more pictures as this project progresses.

Roll out the barrel
Roll out the barrel for rain
Roll out the barrel
For this drought has been a pain
Roll out the barrel
Roll out the barrel today
Now is the time to roll out the barrel for here comes the rain!

Monday, May 11, 2009

In Memory

There comes a time every year when I start to feel the garden is overtaking me. That such time is now. The tomatoes are bigger than me and literally engulf me when I go to water them, but this is a good kind of overtaking. My grandpa asked me today why they were so big and I honestly don't know. They must be the indeterminate kind that just grow and grow and grow until they're done and dead. They still have a little bit of fungus but I think they're so big and strong that they're overcoming that on their own. So I must say that the self-watering planter and special soil mix will be worth repeating next year - I just won't use the leftover mulch!
~
Now, the bad news. Little Dill is gone. Dill has not done well since being re-potted. Something about the pot I chose he did not like and so he began a progressive decline. Last weekend I transplanted him into a different kind of pot in hopes of saving him but, alas, it was not meant to be. And that's not all, my beautiful chamomile have done the same thing. I think I over-watered them a couple weeks ago. I have to be very careful with them in the self-watering pots. They like moist but not wet soil and if I completely fill the water reservoirs it turns out to be too much. However, one or two of the four might make it through, but that's still to be determined.
~
My peppers are in abundance, so I think I'll be pickling peppers soon. When I do I'll be sure to blog it, as that is part of the fun. Meanwhile...
~
I'll be in the garden
Hope that you can find
me in the vines
looking for tomatoes
or peppers for to dine

Wednesday, May 6, 2009

Harvest Time!

Well, you are looking at the very first picked tomato of the season and, wow, did it taste good! I know we've all heard it and said it, but let me say it again - Store bought tomatoes can in no way compare to homegrown. For the first time ever I noticed that they even smell different. Maybe I need to have a blindfold smell test (would I need to be blindfolded for that?). Well, you know what I mean. Can Lisa tell the difference between homegrown tomatoes and store bought tomatoes by smell alone?...
~
Anyway, it looks like I have a really big harvest this year. So I'm looking forward to much yumminess!
~
Ode to the homegrown tomato
To you no other compares
In the grocery store
you're extinct you are so rare!

Saturday, May 2, 2009

Birthday Garden



So for my birthday on Thursday Bill and I took a day trip to Epcot to see the flower festival. While there we toured the high tech garden of hydroponics and aeroponics, and this very perfect looking vegetable garden. I wonder how many people and how much machinery it takes to have the perfect garden...mmm

Check out our pics if you like:



~
4-30 was so special
off to Epcot we did go
they let me in for free
on my birthday, don't you know


Tuesday, April 28, 2009

The Sequel

Come on in, meet my fungus. So I thought maybe this year I wouldn't have to deal as much with this particular plague, as rain has been pretty scarce. However, here it is again, even after all my precautions of bleaching my container and sterilizing soil, etc., etc.
~
Now I've been pondering this problem of Attack of the Killer Fungus, Part Two, for the last week and have pinpointed my mistake. I had half a bag of leftover mulch from last season and so I used it on my tomatoes and peppers. I took a good look at my planters and realized that the fungus came from the mulch. I never even gave it a thought that after having sat in the garage for a few months the mulch may have fungus on it, but it did. So, okay, important lesson number two learned this year - If you use old mulch, inspect if carefully! Hopefully this won't take over my tomatoes. The peppers don't seem affected by it so I guess they're fairly fungus resistant.
~
So I have a new and exciting challenge. No more sitting around - Back to work!
~
Fungus, fungus go away
don't come back another day
I dislike you very much
for, alas, you do make such a fuss!

Wednesday, April 22, 2009

Hola!

So things are getting spicy around here! Last year's jalapeno pepper plant has its very first fruit. Now last year it had one pepper all season and that one was punctured by a bird beak, so I'm hoping I actually get to try some home grown jalapenos this year. Caliente!
~
Overall garden chores are lighter than they were a month ago. Not much to do but water (and water some more) and check for bugs and disease. I just watch and wait for fruit to eat - Sweet!
~
Jalapeno, jalapeno
You're the only one I've got
and I and assuming that you are very hot.
Ripen little pepper and be sure to make some more
So I can breathe some fire into recipes galore!

Wednesday, April 15, 2009

My, What Big Plants You Have!

So yesterday was Goldilocks and today is Red Riding Hood. I find my mind often reverts to fairy tales when I write. I guess our brains retain what we love, and yes, what big plants I have! Behind me (and taller than me) are the Big Boy tomatoes. In front of me are the banana peppers, and to my left are the grape tomatoes that I seeded in March, already over a foot high. So far I'm feeling quite satisfied with this year's garden. I'm still watching the fungus among us and keeping ever vigilant for tomato horn worms, but thus far all is quite well. There are many, little green fruits, both in pepper and tomato form, just bursting forth, so my salads are going to be great in no time!
~
A little love
A little care
and plenty of bounty
soon to share

Tuesday, April 14, 2009

Goldilocks

Someone's been eating my chives!

As the three bears in Goldilocks were perplexed, so am I as to what is eating my chives. Perhaps a couple squirrels or oppossums decided they needed a little kick to their evening meal. Whatever the culprit, it is just munching off the top three inches or so, saving some for me I guess. How considerate...

The garden truly brings new challenges every day. That's part of the enjoyment, trying to be in harmony with nature instead of battling against it. We've been in our usual drought this time of year, although a little more severe than normal, but today we had wonderful rain all day. The grass is unfolding and the living plants and creatures all seem to be giving a sigh of relief. We should start the rainy season soon in May, so just everybody hold on!

My Goldilocks, I doubt you're blond

disappearing chives, family of onion

lizard, oppossum, squirrel, rat

I just want my chives back!


Friday, April 10, 2009

Cast Out the Nets

Well, there it is, little beak holes punched into my tomatoes. The birds have begun to peruse my garden (a gray cat bird in particular). Yesterday I saw him steal a strawberry - plucked it right off the plant himself and had a little snack. Now I have better tolerance for the disappearing strawberry than I do for the "holy" tomatoes. After all, the little gray cat bird actually ate the strawberry. The tomatoes on the other hand are just pecked to death. So I think it's time to get out the bird net. I'll continue to share the strawberries, as I had a nice time watching the snack encounter at my kitchen window, but whatever pecked my tomatoes has gone too far! If you want it, take it, but don't waste it!
~
Birdie beaks have gone to far
peck, peck, pecking in my yard
leaving holes in tomatoes firm
just as if they were little worms!

Thursday, April 9, 2009

On the First Day of Spring

My garden brought to me:
One really great dog.
~
On the second day of Spring my garden brought to me:
Two eggplants and one really great dog.
~
On the third day of Spring my garden brought to me:
Three peppers, two egg plants, and one really great dog.
~
On the fourth day of Spring my garden brought to me: Four round tomatoes, three peppers, two eggplants, and one really great dog.
~
On the fifth day of Spring my garden brought to me:
Five strawberries!
Four round tomatoes, three peppers, two eggplants, and one really great dog.
~
On the sixth day of Spring my garden brought to me: Six sprouting dill buds -
Five strawberries!
Four round tomatoes, three peppers, two eggplants, and one really great dog.
~
On the seventh day of Spring my garden brought to me:
Seven oranges hanging, six sprouting dill buds -
Five strawberries!
Four round tomatoes, three peppers, two eggplants, and one really great dog.
~
On the eighth day of Spring my garden brought to me:
Eight sprigs of spearmint, seven oranges hanging, six sprouting dill buds -
Five strawberries!
Four round tomatoes, three peppers, two eggplants, and one really great dog.
~
On the ninth day of Spring my garden brought to me:
Nine peppermint leaves, eight sprigs of spearmint, seven oranges hanging, six sprouting dill buds -
Five strawberries!
Four round tomatoes, three peppers, two eggplants, and one really great dog.
~
On the tenth day of Spring my garden brought to me:
Ten long lean chive sprouts, nine peppermint leaves, eight sprigs of spearmint, seven oranges hanging, six sprouting dill buds -
Five strawberries!
Four round tomatoes, three peppers, two eggplants, and one really great dog.
~
On the eleventh day of Spring my garden brought to me:
Eleven tarragon shoots, ten long lean chive sprouts, nine peppermint leaves, eight sprigs of spearmint, seven oranges hanging, six sprouting dill buds -
Five strawberries!
Four round tomatoes, three peppers, two eggplants, and one really great dog.
~
On the twelfth day of Spring my garden brought to me:
Twelve lemon basils, eleven tarragon shoots, ten long lean chive sprouts, nine peppermint leaves, eight sprigs of spearmint, seven oranges hanging, six sprouting dill buds -
Five strawberries!
Four round tomatoes, three peppers, two eggplants, and one really great dog.
~
Whew!

Tuesday, April 7, 2009

Sweet Pea

Well, Bill and I have been on our journey and back. The garden does a lot of growing in five days! Peppers, tomatoes, and chives are popping out all over. So I definitely missed some garden growth here at home. HOWEVER...I have been watching another little sweet pea growing while we were gone:
~
Our new little niece!


No, she's not from the garden, but she's certainly sweet!
~
Little sweetie, special girl
Will you have many curls?
Eyes of dad and ears of mom
Smile that's as bright as sun.
Watch you grow and send our love
Blessings of the Lord upon
all your life and days to come!

Wednesday, April 1, 2009

Metamorphosis

Wow! Okay, I've been AWOL for a little while. It's been a busy, busy couple of weeks. The garden is in full force and Bill and I are getting ready to take a mini trip out of town - so I'll be missing in action again for the next four or five days!

However, I did stop and smell the roses, or in this case when cleaning out my perennial bed I stopped to admire this beautiful cocoon. I almost hacked the poor thing down before I noticed it. Whew! If you look quite closely you can actually see the orange and black butterfly wings inside. I figured it would be emerging soon and I was really hoping to see that.
~
HOWEVER...No such luck. I checked back the next day and the butterfly had already emerged and disappeared. I guess he was AWOL too.
~
So as spring has sprung, so too has my time clock - just picture little gears popped out all over the place! However, the garden in its unending work is also an unending joy and respite from the craziness that goes on out there in this world. So gardeners rejoice - it's time to get out there and grow!
~
Butterfly butterly
in your cocoon
Emerge you did
and oh so soon!

Monday, March 23, 2009

Pepper Parade

Look at all these buds - We'll be eating peppers soon! Now really I'm probably the only one excited about that in my household, but that's okay. I love to pickle my peppers. Yes, I'm a pepper pickling person. It's so very easy and quite yummy for salads and such.

I'm keeping a close eye on these guys. Some pest was eating holes in the leaves but I recently found a little worm, so once I got rid of him I haven't seen any new holes - one down and a few hundred more to go before summer's over!

Meanwhile, the garden is actually beginning to look like a garden:

The tomatoes in the plantar box are almost as tall as me and the little grape tomatoes in the green box that were sown from seed just three weeks ago will be looking like good sized plants in no time.
~
So, on you grow
little garden of mine
we'll be eating your harvest in no time!

Friday, March 20, 2009

New Arrival


The first tomato of the season has now appeared. This little guy is about an inch in diameter but he's looking good. I noticed him two days ago in last year's garden along with many other flower buds. Since the winter garden has been much ignored, it seems that what I have to do to be successful is to pretend like I don't care! Ha! Nature doesn't need me to grow wonderful fruit. This is not the first time I have had really good luck with a tomato plant that lived past its season. Any time I have kept last year's tomato plant alive, trimming it back in spring and letting it go for another round, I have always had really good luck, probably because by then it has a phenomenal root system!
~
Sometimes plants are not too old
to rebloom and sprout fruit gold
Old is just a state of mind
for which this plant knows no time!

Wednesday, March 18, 2009

Yummy!


So what is one to do with too many strawberries? Is there such a thing as too many strawberries? My answer is equivocally no. Since I had a refrigerator full of these little fruits last night, and they were on the verge of declining from their optimum strawberry-ness, I was trying to come up with a creative way to use them with what I had on hand in the pantry. By coincidence there was a recipe for strawberry vanilla cake on the side of Ms. Betty Crocker's cake mix. Now, like most recipes, I doctored it up and changed it a bit to fit what I had and what I wanted. This yummy cake has a strawberry jam filling in between the layers (suggestion of Betty Crocker) but I used lemon flavored frosting and decorated the cake with the remainder of my strawberries. Bill and I couldn't wait until dinner to try it, so we had a piece at lunch. I could hear him making yummy noises from the other room, so I guess we're in consensus that it's really good. However, I guess I've blown my dessert allowance for the rest of the day!
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What a sweet treat
Lemon and berries
but, oh, now how that sugar tarries!

Tuesday, March 17, 2009

Spring is Sprung!

I am happy to report that all the seedlings are now in their permanent homes. Bill and I spent this weekend putting up window boxes for the herbs (Mint, Chamomile, and Chives). Now I had not intended to buy window boxes this year but Gardeners' Supply was selling the ones I wanted for 75% off, so how could I refuse that? Overnight my little mint rhizomes have just perked up and are looking great. Not to mention that my previously dying spearmint all of the sudden is looking great again, so maybe it was just the cooler weather. Spearmint wanted to be warmer!

Check out my beautiful boxes:
So in the end my garden turned out much like the plan - window boxes included!
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Window boxes all in a row
for the seeds that I did sow
Now on cue, as if for show
Growing tall, the herbs I know

Thursday, March 12, 2009

Pop Quiz

Can you name the fruit that
corresponds to these flowers?




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Here are your answers with
fruits in the same order as flowers.




How well did you do?
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Today's pop quiz
on flowers and fruit
was only for fun
and meant to be cute!