Sunday, August 4, 2019

Weekend at the Farm August 3-4, 2019

This picture is looking down on the top of an amaranth stalk.  This one, as evidenced by the pink-y tone of the leaves, is going to throw off pink seed heads.

This is the first time we have been here in three weeks.  We got back from Alaska last Sunday.  And, of course I had to work all week.  It was so good to be back in the garden.
  • It didn't rain for the three weeks we were gone.  Before we left Bert accidentally left the water off in the Medicine Garden after he changed out a hose, and everything small was dead - my Columbine, etc.  The shrubs and trees were half dead.
  • Dry, dry, dry everywhere.  So I started watering which is the usual activity in August anyway.
  • I started early Saturday morning in the Vegetable Garden.  I pulled up the last of the tomato plants.  I usually pull them up sooner since they host nematodes.  As soon as they stop producing I pull them up, but I haven't had a chance until now.  I did lots of weeding (of course) and filled the cadet up full of weeds.  I fertilized the asparagus.  I raked, then sprayed herbicide.  I'm planning to get some compost next week or the week after to begin my fall and winter garden. 
  • I sowed some more sunflowers, a packet of various varieties.
  • The sunflowers are blooming.  The amaranth has gotten tall.  The morning glories that I sowed are all puddled on the ground even though I sowed them against an arbor.  Strange.  I stuck a tomato cage in the middle of them that they can climb.
  • I weeded in the Star Garden next.  It was weedy, but not a disaster since I had worked so hard three weeks ago.
  • I cleared a space in the long bed in the Star Garden and sowed some Heavenly Blue morning glories on a metal trellis.  I think I have enough time to have a show of them before the first frost.
  • I sowed lots of zinnia seed in the Star Garden.
  • I watched a Monarch butterfly lay eggs on my butterfly weed.  
  • One of my La Marne roses has died.  And one is half-dead.  I dug up the dead one and trimmed back the other one.  Sowed zinnias in the spot where the rose had been. That rose was growing in a really large space, and I don't want to leave it empty for sowing flowers for springtime.  It will be too hard to keep weeded.  It's a really large area.  I'm not sure I want to grow roses, though.  La Marne was an excellent bloomer, one of the best I've ever had.
  • Carol came over for dinner.  She got bit by a copperhead 3 nights ago.  On her heel.  That's my worst nightmare.  One thing I will say for her experience, it was dark and she was walking in Crocs to go turn off the hose.  She probably stepped on it or disturbed it pretty bad.  But she didn't see it. I'm terrified that I will see it strike and have not only a snake bite, but also a heart attack.  Because it will surely get me on the hand.  I'm always sticking my hand into vegetation. She said it felt like a wasp sting (which hurts really bad).  But when she got into the house and looked at it, she saw two puncture wounds.  And, her leg swelled up and got purple right away.  She drove herself to the emergency room.  She is 89 years old.  She's made of stronger stuff than my generation!
  • Sunday.  I moved back and forth to the Rose Garden, the Medicine Garden and the Orchard as I continued to water.  But I spent the biggest part of the day working in the Orchard.  
  • I weeded, weeded, weeded.  I spent a lot of time cleaning up the grape vines and blackberry vines.  The grape vines were draped all the way to the ground.  I cut them away so that I can see under them.  There are lots of grapes - green and half ripe, so hopefully soon I can gather enough to make jelly.  I think they need more than one week.  I wrapped and wove the blackberry vines around each other so that they were out of the paths.  And I cut lots of dead canes and pulled them out of the bramble.  It was cloudy today, so pruning my blackberries was not horrible like it usually is.  I cut my salvias down to the ground hoping to get another showing in the fall.  The bergamot was spent, so I cut it down to the ground.  Removed lots of dead vegetation.  I had the loppers with me, so I cut away a large-ish dead branch on my crabapple tree that has been bugging me for months.  I raked the paths.  Then I sprayed herbicide.  I fertilized a couple of the roses. I deadheaded my zinnias and spread the seed.  I spent most of the day working in the Orchard.  There are still lots of weeds and lots of clean-up as we head in to fall, but I made good headway.
  • Bert replaced the boards in the 16 x 4 foot bed in the Vegetable Garden.  The sides are really tall now.  It will take a helluva lot of soil to fill it up, but once I've done that work I will be able to use this bed for all my veggies that grow under the ground like beets (which performed terribly this year), garlic, and onions.  
  • I staked all my amaranth.  I have two varieties growing in the garden right now.
  • The little agastaches that I planted before I left for Alaska have either been decimated by the voles or killed from lack of water.  The ones gasping look a little bit green at the bottom, so maybe if I keep them watered they will bounce back.
  • After lunch I worked in the Star Garden.  A light rain started to fall, and because of it I was able to work until 4:30. I cut back some of my salvia, but I left some for the bumble bees.  They are crazy for it.  Weeded.  Spread seed from my Strawberry Fields Gomphrena.
  • Bathed the dogs.  Bathed myself!  I was filthy, but I always am.
  • Headed to work on Monday morning.

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