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One of the joys of getting a bit older is having the time to putter around in the garden. Below is my garden blog. This site also contains sections of recipes and features about specific, and often obscure, gardening lore. Friday, September 3, 2010 - Squash Bugs
Our pumpkins were an afterthought. I had moved our compost pile to a new location mid-summer, and on a whim, popped a few pumpkins seeds in the ground where the compost pile had previously been. I didn't do any more soil preparation than loosening the soil a bit with a garden trowel, and have been pleasantly surprised that they've grown so well.
I put down a good spray on the entire pumpkin patch and both of our yellow squash plants. When I checked the area later in the day, I hand picked and squashed a few survivors. I'll need to check the plants daily for a while, and if necessary, come back with something even more potent. But for now, it appears the rotenone-pyrethrin and hand picking will save these plants. I really don't need another crop failure in the East Garden! Broccoli On the Way
I was out spraying them this morning with Thuricide The other biological I used this morning was Serenade Random Thoughts
One of the things we've grown this year that has been especially satisfying is our row of zinnias. Zinnias were one of my mother's favorite flowers. I've used them for years at the ends of rows of sweet corn, but this is the first year I've just put in a whole row of them. They've dazzled us over the summer. Wednesday, September 1, 2010 - Compost
I usually just shovel up the finished compost and apply it wherever I want. But I'd added some evergreen trimmings and some other hard to digest material to the pile early this summer. Not wanting to spread the undigested stuff, I decided to screen the compost using some half inch hardware cloth I'd picked up at the hardware store just for that purpose. I remember seeing Jim Crockett on Crockett's Victory Garden using something similar, only his tool had a nice frame around it.
We put lots of stuff into our compost pile. Weeds and spent garden plants add a lot of volume to it. All of our corn stalks get chopped and put into the pile, even though they'll take a long time to break down. When we can spare grass clippings, they help add nitrogen and heat up the pile if mixed in. I often topdress with grass clippings to hide the somewhat unsightly pile! We don't put any meat or dairy products into our compost piles, as that is sure to get our dogs or some wild critters interested in it. We do put moldy bread, kitchen vegetable trimmings and peelings, and during melon season, a seemingly unending supply of melon rinds. If I have a knife or something sharp with me, cull melons from the field get cut and go into the pile. If not, they go in whole. They'll break down pretty quickly. We also add commercial fertilizer and lime to the pile. The fertilizer feeds the microbes that break down the plants. The lime helps neutralize what is an acid producing process. I also use one of the many variants of a Jerry Baker Compost Tonic. The one I use to get the pile cooking includes a 12 ounce Coke (regular, not diet), one cup of household ammonia, and a quarter cup of dish detergent. I mix about a cup of that mixture into a two gallon watering can and sprinkle it on the pile. Getting back to the project at hand, I'd originally planned to use the compost from this pile for our fall lettuce area. I decided today that our asparagus patch could use both the nutritional boost the compost gives, plus the organic matter. And...there was still a good bit of the pile left. I won't be able to work in a layer of it for the lettuce, but there will be enough to sidedress the plants.
I ended up adding one to four inches of compost to the asparagus raised bed. Some areas of the bed had settled more than others. Since our asparagus is pretty dense, I had to sneak shovelfuls in between stalks, throw it through the stalks, and sometimes just put it at the edge and get down under the foliage and push it in by hand. I also brought in our Waltham Butternut Squash today, added the vines to the new compost heap, and tilled the area where the squash had grown. Our plants got zapped early on by something, probably squash bugs. But by the time I got to that chore, I was hot and had already put away the camera. My hard work was rewarded this evening, as we had a brief shower. We only got about a quarter of an inch of rain, but even that little amount was welcome.
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