Lots of action lately, not much blogging! Here's catchup, with some photos.
The garden is filling in nicely. We put bird netting up last Wednesday (May 23); with David, Claudia, and I working together it went a lot faster than I expected. We also got some tomato cages for the three biggest plants; there's no room for cages around the smaller ones (planted too close).
To the right: that corner of the garden a month ago.
Along with the netting, we bought replacements for the cucurbits that the birds ate: three pots of "burpless" cucumbers (which came to five plants total), some vining zucchini and a bush-type zucchini, some new Sugar pumpkin plants, and a couple of the "Sunburst" type scalloped squash. I have another half a dozen of those (called "Sunny Scallop") coming up from seed, but when I saw two great big ones in a pot, I saw earlier gratification and had to have it!
This time I put some bone meal at the bottom of each hole before I set in the plant, and I also worked some bonemeal in around the surviving zucchini and pumpkin from the April 28th planting.
Two of our zucchinis on May 5; I thought they were doomed.
Here is one of the new zucchinis I put in on May 22 -- and one of the two little zucchinis I thought were dying on May 5th! Bonemeal did it! (The other one didn't make it, though, even with bonemeal.)
I also set out some seedlings I had started indoors to protect them from the starlings: ten lemon cucumber seedlings, a dozen spinach seedlings, and two dozen beet seedlings. They hadn't gotten much sun indoors, though, and were pretty weak. None of the beet seedlings made it; a few of the spinach seedlings took hold; and four of the lemon cucumbers are still thriving. Here on the left are two
of the strongest lemon cucumber seedlings.
My friend and fellow Raging Granny Shirley Morrison gave me some chard Saturday morning, the 26th, after our Seattle Raging Granny meeting. I went home by way of City People's Garden Store and bought two lavender plants to fill out the corner where the birds nibbled our first lavender; an Italian basil, because I just can't wait for our basil seedlings to get big enough to start harvesting; and three pots of arugula, which were absolutely the last salad greens they had
out in pots.
To the left there is some of the Swiss chard, filling out one of the vacant spaces in the Salad Patch.
Left is the new Italian Basil; right is a closeup of some of the Sacred Basil I planted from seed.
And here to the left is the lovely new lavender: two kinds, "Goodwin Creek Gray" and "Grosso."
Here's some new arugula set in on May 26 near some of the mesclun plantings we put in on April 28. You can almost make out the yellow flowers of the mizuna plant starting to bolt. The first arugula is starting to get leggy and bolt, too.