Annie Moved Out!
The Farm Report
05-29-2020
Joyce moved these Star of David flowers to the farm when we moved here from Wisconsin. They were thick all over our lawn there. These are surviving, but not as happy as they were in 'Sconie.' |
Bud's Red Weigelia are in bloom. So pretty. Thanks for the start, Chris. |
The hydroponic strawberry patch has been a learning experience. Beginner's luck is a dangerous trap! My first plants did SOOOOO well. I was enthused! |
We used a little horse hair 'softener' brush I have for gold leaf work to pollinate the blossoms. |
They set fruit and began to bear these huge - and I will add my personal testimony - delicious berries. |
But I wasn't paying attention. See the burnt edges of the leaves? Note to self: This is not good! |
This is Rex buttercrisp lettuce. It is really good. |
Paris Island romain. It is good, too. All hydroponic from a Kratky sweater pan. |
Summertime head lettuce in a dutch bucket. The hole is where I add water. There is a wick inside that draws the water up to the plants. |
Here is the Summertime lettuce 4 weeks later. |
The outdoor strawberries are looking great, too. These are all June bearers. One heavy crop and you're done until next year. Delicious! |
The wind whipped off some of the solar cones, but you can see how it works. |
Here's my trick, by the way. I cut the bottoms out of 5-gallon buckets and use that to hold the W-O-W heaters up. Without the bucket, the W-O-W are prone to blow over onto the plants. |
I'm also building an 'Iowa' version of a Victorian Lantern Cloche. It is just concrete reinforcing wire bent to fit. The lid is held on with hog rings. Keep it Iowa! |
I'm putting egg plant and peppers in these. When the plants are established, I'll remove the plastic. |
Four egg plants per lantern. |
Four peppers, too. |
The Grosbeaks are back! They are so pretty, but so mean! They use their hard/sharp beaks to cut away the nest shells I have out - and then they eat the young ones they find inside! |
The tree frogs are out, too. 'Kermit' is usually green, but today he's hiding and grey. |
Wow, I learned a lot about potatoes from your post! I haven't had much success with them (seed potatoes) so I don't bother anymore, but this year I'm going to try yams because I had some that started sprouting. If the sprouts I pulled off and put in water grow some roots, in the ground they go.
ReplyDeleteAnnie moved out; Poppy would like to move into our bed. Rick says no, which is fine. But she doesn't have the coat Annie has, and likes to cuddle (when she's not go-go-go).
Annie indeed has a heavy coat. She isn't long haired like a collie, but she has the double hair layer like a lab and takes the cold like a champ. Heat? We'll see this summer.
DeleteYams like it hot! Father's Day is my 'set out' date for sweet potatoes. Black plastic on the ground will be your friend. Heat, Heat, Heat! One author I like says that if you don't crowd them together a little, they won't make potatoes as well. My experience has proven this out. Good luck!
Oh, and Annie is NOT a cuddler! She's a happy playful loving dog, but not a nuzzler. She works, she plays, then she's off duty.
When I was growing things hydroponically, I used a float valve to keep a constant water level. I used an EC meter (electrical conductivity) to test nutrient concentration. I only changed out the mixture at the end of a growing season. I used a submersible pump in a paint strainer bag, which had to be cleaned intermittently, and since I was using drip irrigation components, I also had an online filter.
ReplyDeleteThanks for the comments. I'm doing pretty much the same thing as far as EC, pump, filters etc. Since I can use the spent solutions for my outdoor plants and flowers, I've decided to just follow my 'book' advice and do a total change out once a month. Very little cost and very little bother for me to do. I'll actually only change out about 2/3 of the solutions due to convenience, so it won't be a total shock for the plants when the change happens. Once burned, twice cautious!
DeleteInteresting info on the potatoes. Seed potatoes were sold out every place I checked this year so decided to use my past-the-point-of-being-edible organics from the grocery store. So far the russet and golds are sprouting but nothing is happening with the reds. All were the same brand. I wonder if maybe certain varieties are better keepers and don't get as big a dose of clove oil to ward off sprouting? It's been raining so much here in WA state that the slugs are chowing down on everything so I may never see results anyway. I feel like I'm running a slug buffet.
ReplyDeleteI'll be posting more on this soon. After a really long time, nearly all the potatoes I planted have come up. VERY delayed though. So now, we'll see if I get any spuds. Japanese Beetles will be here soon. That is my nemisis.
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