Showing posts with label zucchini. Show all posts
Showing posts with label zucchini. Show all posts

Saturday, June 1, 2013

June Boom!

It's June 1st and, just like calendar work, the plums are ripening.  We enjoyed sharing the 1st juicy goodness for dessert a couple of nights ago.  Santa Rosa plums are the 1st trees to break bud in the spring and the 1st trees to have fruit ripe in the summer.  Makes sense.  Duh!
Santa Rosa Plum
Next up are the Blenheim apricots.  Netting was moved from one of the spent boysenberries to the apricots for protection for those pesky garden birds.  Is it just me?  Or do you get annoyed by birds pecking from one fruit to the next leaving many damaged fruit rather than simply destroying one fruit?  Birds.
Blenheim Apricot
Farmer MacGregor's tomato patch is coming along.  His Better Boy tomatoes have improved in vigor as the heat turned up.  Some tomatoes are large and should be turning red soon; while still others are just developing.  They were planted in early April. Salsa!
Better Boy Tomato
Unfortunately, I did not note when the Black Beauty seeds were put in the ground.  I may stumble across a scrap of paper with the information or perhaps I noted it on the seed package

Farmer MacGregor planted Black Beauty Squash (zucchini) on April 21, 2013.  Regardless, I still maintain that the world's hunger problem could be solved by providing each person 2 mourning doves (male & female) and a few zucchini seeds.  Bounty.
Black Beauty Squash (zucchini)
There is plenty more going on in the garden; but this is what I captured before the temperature knocks on 100°F and the battery runs dry on my camera.  Time to close the house up and stay inside until the sun kisses the Pacific.

Sunday, July 8, 2012

Whoops!

So it's been hot.  So there has been a lot of chores to do in the garden.  So I hate getting my arms scratched up by the hairs on the zucchini plant.  So...

I didn't harvest the Black Beauty Zucchinis for a few days.  This is only further proof to my hypotheses:
  1.  Give each person on Earth two zucchini seeds.  This will end world hunger.
  2. Grow zucchini and watch your neighbors and friends disappear.



Saturday, June 16, 2012

Lazy Daddy

Busy in the garden before the heat wave rolls in this weekend.  Looks like garden time will be reserved for very early morning and late evening as temperatures scream into the 100s.

Farmer MacGregor really got busy.
  • Leveled the garden fence that was sagging in spots.  It happens to all of us.
  • Painted the garden fence and gate.  No surprise here.  Farmer paints religiously.
  • Washed the entire outside of the house - windows included.  Everything sparkles.
  • Edged and mowed the yards.  Better to do before the heat hits hard.
  • Gets up extra early on the weekdays to make sure all the irrigation is done before 7am.  Excellent.
  • Rigged a gizmo up so one of the spider plants can hang in the shade of the Chinese Elm tree.  Just don't bash your head into it when you mow.  Ouch!
  • Got all the grocery shopping done so I can BBQ on Fathers' Day.  Thanks?
  • Installed new rollers on the sliding glass door.  An oversite on my part omitted this stupendous task.  Old man MacGregor pointed out this flaw.
    • Removed the double pane for cleaning.  Now I can open the clean door with just a push of my pinky finger.
  • MacGregor, if you're reading this, prepare to go shooting early on Fathers' Day.  The ammunition has been purchased.  BBQ when you return.  Happy Fathers' Day even though you're not MY father.  It's better than an Hawaiian shirt right?
Good to get it done and enjoy the most wonderful invention ever...air conditioning.

Garden Update:
  • Tomatoes are ripening.  Harvesting Celebrity and Gold Current.  The Gold Currents are all volunteers that grow vigorously in zone 8-9.  They grow so well that I need to dig some out because they are growing too big.
  • Boysenberries are done.  Bird netting was removed.  Next - tie up new canes and prune out the old.
  • Netting moved to the apricot tree.  It really burns me up when a bird pecks at one piece of fruit then moves on to another.  Can't they at least finish the piece of fruit they started with before moving on?  Honestly.
  • Carrots are booming and need to be pulled.  Carrot cakes?
  • French Marigolds are thriving with the heat.  During the evening garden inspection, seed heads are pulled and the seeds are scattered wherever the ground is bare.  Take THAT nematodes.
  • Zucchini is the king of the garden now.  Black Beauty is a bush variety and grows well here.  The plants stay neat and dark green.  Squash are harvested when they are small to enjoy tender, tasty babies.
  • Kentucky Wonder Green Beans are kinda puny.  Very disappointed that they have not gone wild with the heat.  Even used a soil inoculant with hopes of a bountiful crop.  I'm unimpressed.
  • Nasturtiums (Dwarf Cherry Rose) were planted on May 28 and have not germinated yet OR if they have something ate them down to the nub.  Puzzling.
  • Sadly, another fruit on the Split Leaf Philodendron has aborted.  Only one fruit remains on the plant.
Stay in from the heat and avoid swamp pants.  Time to do indoor housework.

Tuesday, May 8, 2012

Garden Update

A quick post for a garden update using pictures (mostly) with few words:
Sweet Peas
Sweet Peas continue to bloom but seed production is increasing.  I've been taking bouquets to work for sometime now.  Sweet Pea bouquets will soon be replaced with Lavender bouquets.

Crookneck Squash
Crookneck Squash is trying produce despite some chewing varmint.  I'll need to make a midnight investigation to determine the culprit.

Black Beauty Zucchini
Zucchini was planted on April 29 along with radishes and parsley. Seeds germinated a couple of days later.  I must now start my search for some unsuspecting neighbor or work associate to flood with gifts of abundant squash.
Thornless Boysenberry
Boysenberries are starting to ripen.  Bird netting has been installed to shoo away pesky birds that mistake the garden as their own personal fly-in diner.  Scare tape works on most birds but hungry birds and those building nests laugh at the fluttering tape.  Perhaps scare tape works like a neon sign to those birds saying, "Let's Eat" or "Vacancy".  There are 3 known Mourning Dove nests directly adjacent to scare tape.  Phooey.
Beets
Sadly, the beets are about finished.  I have no idea what variety I've grown.  Whenever there was a bare spot, I would find a pack of seeds and plant.  There's a complete mix growing; but they are starting to bolt.  Supplies and the local Farmers' Market have dwindled too.  Thankfully, I have a nice big jar of pickled beets in the refrigerator to carry me through until I find a source for the summer.
Carrots
Some spent carrots were removed over Cinco de Mayo weekend and replaced with hills of green beans and marigolds.  There are still carrots producing well in the former "Salad Bed".  Once they have finished, they may be replaced with more onions.  You can never have too many onions.
White Lisbon Onions
White Lisbon and Spanish Utah onions were planted on April 16.  White Lisbons are used as bunching onions and the Spanish Utah will be used for storage.  However, all onion varieties are used as green onions as they are thinned.
Granny Smith Apple
Most all the fruit trees have fruit - plum, peach, apple, apricot, grapefruit, orange, mandarin, lemon.  They are all fertilized regularly and get pruned as needed.  Those growing espalier require more attention than the citrus.
Strawberries
I've lost track of the varieties of strawberries in the garden.   Sweet Pinky was one variety and I can't find the name of the other.  Nonetheless, the strawberries are popping and the birds know it.

Note:  I still cannot post using Live Writer and am relying on Blogger (mostly).

Sunday, May 24, 2009

ZUCCHINI STATE OF MIND

Zucchini May 29, 2009

I can't believe anyone would ask me how to grow zucchini. This is my first successful season. It's so successful that I had to transplant my neighboring cantaloupe because these beasts were creating too much shade. Here's a look at the progress of these Black Beauties:

I planted 12 plants from seed directly in the ground in mid March. Unfortunately, I did not keep a garden journal. This is something I need to remedy quickly. Fortunately, I took photos and make sure to file them properly by subject and date. I know. Sometimes my butt cheeks get a bit tight.


March 29, 2009 approximately 7-10 days from planting.



May 2, 2009 approximately 50 days from planting.

Left to right: Ace tomatoes, Black Beauty zucchini, Heart of Gold cantaloupe, Crimson watermelon. The cantaloupe were moved on May 24, 2009, due to shading/crowding from zucchini.

May 12, 2009 approximately 60 days from planting.


Squash is harvested every evening and incorporated into dinner. Memorial Day BBQ will include a zucchini casserole. I'll try to remember to share the recipe soon. It's pretty danged good.

Wednesday, May 6, 2009

Success!


Never before have I been successful at growing zucchini. I know. Who could suck at growing something that most every home gardener ends up giving away? Me. That's who. This season is different. These Black Beauty zucchinis were planted from seed and really took off as the heat turned up.
I may regret being a successful zucchini farmer, but that's the risk I'm willing to take.