What Are Some Tips for Successful Gardening?

In summary, we put in a huge garden and had a green thumb from the get-go. We still have a garden, although it's a little smaller now. We mainly grow vegetables, fruits, and flowers. I've been a pretty avid gardener at times but not for eating, just for looking.
  • #946
~christina~ said:
http://img117.imageshack.us/img117/6209/imgp3810it8.jpg

my garden ^_____^ (backyard)

Still got tulips in your garden, Christina? Right here the season is long past.

Borek, the white flower could be Viburnum?
 
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  • #947
Andre said:
Borek, the white flower could be Viburnum?

No, for sure not. It doesn't have fruits like viburnum. Besides, smell is very distinctive.
 
  • #948
Christina and Borek, those are just beautiful!

Ok, I have to post an update on my little patio garden. I saw some beautiful rose bushes yesterday and it reminded me of the 80, yes 80 rose bushes I had in raised beds with walkways between the rows. And I don't have any of the pictures. :cry:
 
  • #949
Very nice gardens Christina and Borek. Beautiful flowers.

We just had a nice downpour from a thunderstorm. Just good enough to drench the various plots.

We found some squash plants from seeds from last years plants. They survived!

I have two garlic plants from last year, so I need to study up on how to deal with them.

We've some herbs, tomatos, peppers and peas growing. I'll probably plant more chile (chilli) peppers.

Our strawberries are ripening, and we've already harvested some. I really need to improve that patch. The blueberries have fruited, and the blackberries and raspberries are flowering.


Evo said:
80 rose bushes in raised beds with walkways between the rows.
Wow, that took some work. Must have been a nice garden.
 
  • #950
Ok today's plants.

I found some tomatillo plants, but I read that they can only be pollinated by flowers from a different plant, the flowers on the same plant don't work. So I bought several, we'll see if I get lucky. They were only $1 each and they are already blooming.

camerapictures152wy5.jpg


camerapictures136mx2.jpg


a jalapeno plant

http://img249.imageshack.us/img249/2856/camerapictures121dy9.jpg
 
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  • #951
My eggplants are budding - YAY!

camerapictures153rq7.jpg


I have baby tomatoes

camerapictures147dr3.jpg


My bell peppers are doing great

camerapictures154vw0.jpg
 
  • #952
My squash have survived getting squashed.

camerapictures135uo3.jpg


and here are tiny cucumbers

camerapictures125gm4.jpg


I also bought a gypsy pepper plant. I'll post pictures of those after they produce, they look very pretty. I did not know that they were sought after by frou frou restaurants, I might not have bought them, but too late.
 
  • #953
Andre said:
Still got tulips in your garden, Christina? Right here the season is long past.
I'd like to say yes but this was taken somewhere within the past 2 months. (I never got around to posting the pic)
Right now, only the roses and lillies are in bloom.
Evo said:
Christina and Borek, those are just beautiful!
Thanks Evo
Wow that's a lot of vegetable plants. You look like you could have a vegetable sale :biggrin:
Astronuc said:
Very nice gardens Christina and Borek. Beautiful flowers.
Thanks Astronuc
 
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  • #954
Thank's to everybody who wrote my garden is beautiful.

Long live the art of picture cropping :wink:
 
  • #955
Anyone considering buying Schultz's "Garden Safe" Fungicide for "Organic Gardening", do not buy it, save yourself $6. You might as well just spit on the plant for all the good it does.

I have been following the directions religiously for about a month and the powdery mildew seems to be feeding on the stuff and has spread like wildfire.

Unfortunately it was the ONLY fungicide sold at the store I was at.

I just bought some real fungicide and hope it's not too late to save my plant. :cry:

I hope this saves someone else the anguish this product has caused me.
 
  • #956
Did you identify the kind of mildew? Evo. Right here we have false mildew (most on the back of the leafs) and the normal mildew (on top of the leafs) with several different features. There are probably more. Each may require different cures.

Best to inspect plants daily and remove infected parts immediately.
 
  • #957
Made 5 jars of strawberry jam today. This is the first year the critters left me enough to do something with.

Nice photos everyone.
 
  • #958
I need to get out and get some photos of my plants. My deck is lined with tomato plants in pots (all have flowers on them now, my mouth is already watering in anticipation), some basil and oregano, a few annual flowers, my hibiscus which is finally recovering from a rough winter indoors (white fly and cat attacks), and a small plot of zucchini on the ground (with all the rain we've been getting, those plants are noticeably bigger every day...no buds yet, but the seed was only planted about a month ago, and at the rate they're growing, I hope to find them budding any day).

I like Borek's and Christina's gardens. I think there's something very nice and charming about a small backyard that's entirely a garden. It was something I really liked when I visited New Orleans (pre-Katrina). Every building had a tiny backyard, and they would be filled with flowers and a small sitting area, and the fences covered with flowering vines made it feel very private in spite of there being another building so close. It was kind of cozy...if you wanted your own quiet retreat, you sit in the backyard, if you want to be social and friendly with the neighbors, you sit on the front porch. I'm considering a neighborhood like that here as a place to move (I was originally thinking of living further out in the country, but with rising gas prices, am reconsidering adding more commuting time...we have a neighborhood close to campus where a lot of faculty live that's very quaint like that and the yards are just big enough for a small vegetable garden and some flowers and some guests for a backyard bbq, which is all I really need in a yard).
 
  • #959
Application of powdered elemental sulfur takes care of every type of powdery mildew that my garden has been hit with, including a really nasty infestation that showed up during wet weather in string beans that had been planted a bit too thick. It also knocked down an infestation in my Black-Seeded Simpson leaf lettuce and another one that started invading my tomato plants. I made the mistake of planting things too densely last season, and when we got weather that impeded air-drying during the day, the mildews hit.

I just weeded the entire garden - the sun came out this morning finally. While out there, I noticed some insect damage to leaves of beans and peppers, as well as the previously-known rhubarb leaf damage, so I mixed up a watering can with BT (baccilus thuringiensis) to give those bugs belly-aches. The active ingredient is a natural non-toxic spore that paralyzes the guts of many leaf-eating insects. Since the rains have stopped, I intend to mix a little BT with my canola-oil tree spray to protect my fruit trees. I just killed my first Japanese beetle of the season, and I am NOT too happy to see any of those around. They attacked my raspberry bushes, peach tree, and others last year. Hopefully, I can get ahead of them this year and kill them off with BT before they have a chance to breed.
 
  • #960
I have some lilies blooming

yellowlily.jpg


Ants seem to find something sweet, like the sap on the buds of peonies.
ants.jpg


The hollyhocks are starting to bloom too
hollyhock1.jpg


hollyhock2.jpg


Hollyhocks are perennial. They live for about 5 years.
 
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  • #961
turbo-1 said:
While out there, I noticed some insect damage to leaves of beans and peppers, as well as the previously-known rhubarb leaf damage, so I mixed up a watering can with BT (baccilus thuringiensis) to give those bugs belly-aches. The active ingredient is a natural non-toxic spore that paralyzes the guts of many leaf-eating insects. Since the rains have stopped, I intend to mix a little BT with my canola-oil tree spray to protect my fruit trees. I just killed my first Japanese beetle of the season, and I am NOT too happy to see any of those around. They attacked my raspberry bushes, peach tree, and others last year. Hopefully, I can get ahead of them this year and kill them off with BT before they have a chance to breed.

Do you know which variety(s) of BT are you using?

Here are some examples and what they target. (http://www.nysaes.cornell.edu/ent/biocontrol/pathogens/bacteria.html )
Bacillus thuringiensis
var. tenebrionis - Colorado potato beetle and elm leaf beetle larvae
var. kurstaki - caterpillars
var. israelensis - mosquito, black fly, and fungus gnat larvae
var. aizawai - wax moth larvae and various caterpillars, especially the diamondback moth caterpillar

I would probably go with some BT tenebrionis to go after the coleopterans on your vegetables.
 
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  • #962
hypatia said:
Made 5 jars of strawberry jam today.
Nice photos everyone.
Yummm, I love strawberries :-p
I wonder, have you had any success making jam that is low in sugar?
 
  • #963
rewebster said:
I have some lilies blooming

yellowlily.jpg

Nice ones :smile:

Too early for lilies here, they need some more time. But once they start to bloom I will post pictures as well.
 
  • #964
Ouabache said:
Do you know which variety(s) of BT are you using?

Here are some examples and what they target. (http://www.nysaes.cornell.edu/ent/biocontrol/pathogens/bacteria.html )
Bacillus thuringiensis
var. tenebrionis - Colorado potato beetle and elm leaf beetle larvae
var. kurstaki - caterpillars
var. israelensis - mosquito, black fly, and fungus gnat larvae
var. aizawai - wax moth larvae and various caterpillars, especially the diamondback moth caterpillar

I would probably go with some BT tenebrionis to go after the coleopterans on your vegetables.
I'm using kurstaki, since most of the damage seems to be done by caterpillars. It may have no real effect on the Japanese beetles, but they are easy to smother with soapy water, anyway.
 
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  • #965
Beautiful lillies rew!

I was reading the "stupidest gardening mistakes" on the GardenWeb site and thought I would share it. This is the funniest I've read so far, lots more stories at the link.

* Posted by: MrsBeasley 4a Northern Ont on Wed, Feb 20, 02 at 21:56

My MIL had a big, beautiful garden on the side of a hill, and as her family was getting smaller, she offered me all the space I wanted. I planted a lot of vegetables, but the mistake I made was that I planted the whole packet of turnip (rutabaga) seeds. I had a row of turnip 50 feet long. I had the nicest crop of turnip you could imagine. There was only my husband and myself to eat them, but I know lots of people that like them, I could give some away.

When it came time to harvest them, I worked my heart out. I'd cut off the root and leaves, and fill the wheelbarrow, trot the wheelbarrow down the row and pile the turnips on the grass. I worked for hours!

Finally, I was done, I took the knife into the house and washed it off, and went back out to the garden to admire my turnips. I had a pile of turnips as tall as I am. I was almost up to this great pile when a few turnips at the bottom of the pile moved, the whole lot of them started rolling down the hill. I was chasing after them, I'd gather a few in my arms and when I'd reach for another the ones in my arms would get away and continue down the hill. I must have made quite a sight, because my brother-in-law was laughing at me. "You'd better catch them," he called, "They're going to wipe out the neighbor's house"!

I eventually got them rounded up, but it turns out everyone doesn't like turnip the way I do! :-) I wound up serving turnip at least once a week in every way you can imagine. I served them boiled, fried, in stew, I cooked them up and added pumpkin pie spice and made fake pumpkin pie! I thought it was rather inventive of me, but it was the turnip fritters that finally did me in. My husband took one bite and gasped. He had thought that he was biting into an apple fritter. He said he didn't care if he NEVER ate another turnip! I was NOT to grow them ever again! I guess he just doesn't have a sense of humor! LOL

http://faq.gardenweb.com/faq/lists/peren/2002092316009274.html
 
  • #966
It's that time of year, again! Garlic-growers eagerly anticipate this season. This is when the curved central seed-stalk (called a scape) emerges from the garlic. Scapes must be removed to encourage more robust growth in the bulbs, but that's not the good part. The good part is that they taste kind of like onion tops, with a wonderful mild garlic flavor. You can use them in salads and stir-fries, and I found a recipe for scape pesto on the 'net, and I think we're going to try that, too.

scapes.jpg
 
  • #967
thanks, borekevo----


hey, turbo,-- 'scape'--hmm---I hadn't heard that term before, interesting term--do they have a recipe with goat?
 
  • #968
Meanwhile, I visited my... errm ...remote island garden to find this beautiful darkest red rose.

deep-red.JPG


the picture doesn't begin to express it's very delicate velvet apperance. Well it's the best I could do.
 
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  • #970
Today, my wife and I ripped out the first crop of spinach, which had bolted (you can see a bit of it in the garlic picture) and hoed up that row and planted several more flats of habanero plants and tomatoes. I also re-planted buttercup squash for the 2nd time - this darned rain is rotting the seeds and germination is poor. We had torrential rains again last night, lightning, and severe winds that broke one of my neighbor's lilacs. The greenhouse planted LOTS of vegetable seeds this year in anticipation of the high demand, and we got some pretty good deals on seedlings yesterday. If we're swamped with tomatoes and chilies - well, I'll just make more salsas and freeze the vegetables for soups and sauces over the winter. The salsas in the store are just nasty compared to mine, and my nieces and nephews love to butter me up when they visit for cookouts, etc, so I'll send a jar home with them. I'm trying to encourage them to make their own, but it seems that people in their 20s are just not "hooked in" to gardening, cooking and food preservation.
 
  • #971
Andre said:
Meanwhile, I visited my... errm ...remote island garden to find this beautiful darkest red rose.

deep-red.JPG


the picture doesn't begin to express it's very delicate velvet apperance. Well it's the best I could do.
Andre, it's gorgeous, do you know the name?
 
  • #972
Andre said:
Meanwhile, I visited my... errm ...remote island garden to find this beautiful darkest red rose.

deep-red.JPG


the picture doesn't begin to express it's very delicate velvet apperance. Well it's the best I could do.

that IS a really attractive variety



(I don't exactly know why, but I thought of one woman's cheek that I used to go with (the woman, not just the 'cheek') when I saw that rose---(the 'cheek' between the nose and the ear))
 
  • #973
Evo said:
Andre, it's gorgeous, do you know the name?

Most certainly, Evo

black-magic.JPG
 
  • #974
ahh-hemm---you're pretty thorough about you putting labels for your flowers at your garden--(it's still one of the nicest varieties I've seen)
 
  • #975
here's another color of lily that opened:

redlily.jpg
 
  • #976
rewebster said:
ahh-hemm---you're pretty thorough about you putting labels for your flowers at your garden--(it's still one of the nicest varieties I've seen)

Please try to figure out what this introduction seems to be telling:

Meanwhile, I visited my... errm ...remote island garden to find this beautiful darkest red rose.

Hey I paid for visiting the place many times, so I consider it a little bit 'mine'

Anyway to make up, here are little crops of all the pics I took of "black magic" today

BM1.JPG


bm2.JPG


bm4.JPG


bm5.JPG
 
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  • #977
those are great, absolutely great--I'm going to have to look for that variety locally

(I did get the '... errm ...' part)

got any more photos?
 
  • #979
turbo-1 said:
It's that time of year, again! Garlic-growers eagerly anticipate this season. This is when the curved central seed-stalk (called a scape) emerges from the garlic. Scapes must be removed to encourage more robust growth in the bulbs, but that's not the good part. The good part is that they taste kind of like onion tops, with a wonderful mild garlic flavor. You can use them in salads and stir-fries, and I found a recipe for scape pesto on the 'net, and I think we're going to try that, too.

Is the same true of elephant garlic? I've got some 5 foot tall scapes right now, and they don't look like they're going to curl. Do you cut them all the way down, or just the tops?

pfelephantgarlic.jpg
 
  • #980
OmCheeto said:
Is the same true of elephant garlic? I've got some 5 foot tall scapes right now, and they don't look like they're going to curl. Do you cut them all the way down, or just the tops?
I snap them at the base where they emerge from the leaves. The section from the base until the swelling of the seed-pod is the good part. I remove mine as soon as I start to see a swelling in the scape. Yours are further along, but the base of the stalks may still be tasty. Get them off the plants ASAP, though, so the resources of the plant will go toward building bulbs, not toward producing flowers, seeds, etc. You need to neuter garlic as soon as it looks like it's going reproductive.
 
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