Tuesday, July 21, 2020

Better Flower Photos. 7.21.2020

These are some better flower photos this morning.  I took them with the Nikon ESLR instead of cellphone.  Mostly poppies.  I think the artichoke flower falls somewhere in the "stunning" category. 

Shirley Poppy.  7.21.2020

Artichoke Flower.  7.21.2020

Dahlia.  7.21.2020

Dahlia.  7.21.2020

Dahlia.  7.21.2020

Shirley Poppy.  7..21.2020

Flower Border.  Deer avoid these.  7.21.2020

Echinacea.  7.21.2020

Shirley Poppy.  7.21.2020

Shirley Poppy.  7.21.2020

Monday, July 20, 2020

Flowers and Some Honeybees. 7.20.2020

A lot of flowers bloomed while I was in the hospital.  I had decided to leave the artichokes, because I don't know how to cook them anyway and they have cool but weird looking flowers.  It turned out that the honeybees like them, some had 6 or more bees per flower.   It was like a honeybee party among strange blue trees.

Artichoke with honeybees.  7.20.2020

Artichoke with Honeybees. 7.20.2020

Dahlia.  7.20.2020


Mixed flowers.  7.20.2020

Home Made Daylily Hybrid.  7.20.2020

Petunia, Grown From Seeds.   7.20.2020

Peach Bud Grafts. 7.20.2020

I was hospitalized and had abdominal surgery last week.  Last night was the first time I was able to get into the garden for a look and not much else.  Here are the "Sunny Day" leaf curl resistant Peach grafts on Lovell rootstock.  They took.  I unwrapped them.  It was a little late, and my wrapping technique might have been a bit tight or uneven but they might be OK.  I can't believe I was able to graft peaches.  Its hot and dry outside so they will need good watering.

Peach Bud Graft, about 4 weeks later.  7.20.2020

Peach Bud Graft, about 4 weeks later.  7.20.2020

Sunday, July 12, 2020

Babycakes Blackberry. 7.12.2020

Here is how Babycakes Blackberry is doing for me.  I bought the plant last Spring at Tsugawa.  It already had blossoms at the time.  Those fruits did not fill in well.  If I remember correctly, the later fruits, on new floricanes, filled in better.

This year, the floricanes again seem to have less than complete pollination on at least the earliest fruit.  The earliest fruits, again, are not well filled in at all.  This may be due to chill and rain when they were first blooming.  The seller claims they don't need a pollinator, but did they really test that?  If they do need one, then that could be a factor.  This Babycakes bloomed long before any of my other blackberries did. 

It looks like the later berries will be better filled in.  We will see.  Plus, there are new primocanes growing.  I want this one to work out.  It is small enough to have in my miniature tree garden, which is nice.

Babycakes Blackberry.  7.12.2020

Babycakes Blackberry.  7.12.2020

Flowers. 7.12.2020

Lots of flowers blooming now. It's turning out that a lot of them are from seeds I saved myself, but also seeds I bought, and plants that I've grown over the years.
Oriental lilies.  I don't know the name any more.  They only survive here in containers.  7.12.2020

Echinacea, grown from seeds about 4 years ago.  7.12.2020

Cosmos from 3rd generation volunteers, cilantro from saved seeds.  7.12.2020

A daylily I created by pollinating two varieties that I liked, a few years ago.  7.12.2020

Chives, wild petunia, cilantro, and rose moss.  7.12.2020

A flower basket that Ning put together.  7.12.2020

My first attempt at growing poppies from seeds.  Now I know how.  7.12.2020



Crocosmia, descended from some I planted 20 years ago.  7.12.2020

Saturday, July 11, 2020

Grafts That Didn't Work. 7.11.2020

The vast majority grafts this Spring worked fine.  The apple - on  - apple were all successes, except for Pristine on Geveva 222. 

Pears on odd rootstocks generally didn't work out.  It looks like Bartlet-type on Chinese Haw will be OK.  The same pear on Serviceberry, Bud-9 with Winter Banana Apple, or Aronia, did not take. 

I grafted 3 chestnuts cultivars onto the Marisard seedling.  It may be too soon to know, because there might be delayed graft failure.  They all grew.  When I unwrapped Marivale, it still looked OK, but when I unwrapped Marigoule, the graft fell off even though there was a foot of healthy looking growth.

Cleft Graft of Small Pristine Graft, onto Geneva 222.  There was good growth, but it fell apart when unwrapped.  7.11.2020

Whip & Tongue Graft Marigoule Chestnut onto Marissard Seedling Chestnut.  It grew well but fell apart when unwrapped.  7.11.2020

Whip and Tongue Graft of Marivale onto Marissard Chestnut Seedling.  Looks OK.  7.11.2020

Saturday, July 04, 2020

Apple Grafts. Progress Report. 7.4.2020

These are the apple varieties that I grafted onto either Bud-9 or Geneva-222 highly dwarfing rootstocks.  Most are on Bud-9 but I tried to use Geneva 222 on ones that I thought might have too little vigor.  On taking of the tape, there was slight constriction of stem girth but not severe, and not girdling.  Going by memory, which isn't perfect, here is a list.

Here are the varieties that took and grew quickly:
Jonagold - most vigorous. (Bud-9)
Jonared - less vigorous (Geneva-222)
Gravenstein -less vigorous (that was a surprise) (Bud-9)
Winter Banana - very vigorous (Bud-9)
Black Oxford - very vigorous (Bud-9)
Macoun - somewhat vigorous (Bud-9)
Beni Shogun Fuji - less vigorous (Geneva-222)
Porter - quite vigorous. (Bud-9)

I tried a tiny graft of Pristine on Geneva-222.  This was the only cleft graft.  The growth was vigorous, but when I removed the binding tape, the graft broke off.

I tried a pear on Winter Banana intergraft on Bud-9.  That grew a little but died.
I tried pears on Amelanchier.  Those failed.
I tried pear on Chinese haw - that appears to have taken and is growing somewhat vigorously.

Apple Grafts on BUD-9 or Geneva 222.  7.2.2020

Healing Whip and Tongue graft on Bud-9.   7.4.2020

Healing whip and tongue graft, apple on Bud-9.  7.4.2020

Apple grafts on Bud-9 and Geneva 222.   7.4.2020

Wednesday, July 01, 2020

Some Daylilies that I grew from seeds, from hand-pollinated flowers. 7.1.2020

A few years ago I transferred pollen from daylilies that I liked onto other daylilies that I liked. I grew out some of the seeds. Here are a few of those hybrids, photos taken yesterday. They are quite nice.





Patch Grafts, Peach and Cherry. 7.1.2020

Here is one of the "Sunny Day" peach patch grafts that I did a week or two ago.  The leave has abscissed, leaving a green bud.  7.1.2020



A close-up of the same "Sunny Day" peach graft.  7.1.2020


Local Black Cherry Stick for bud wood.  7.1.2020

The bud patch that I cut.  Cambium is slipping nicely now.  7.1.2020

Fitting the black cherry patch to some first year growth on Surefire Cherry.  7.1.2020

Patch graft all wrapped up.  7.1.2020

Bee Forage Flowers. 7.1.2020

Over the years, I've tried to plant lots of forage plants for honeybees and native bees. Now that there is a successful beehive in the yard, that interest is renewed. Here are a few blooming now. I know that the vast majority of their forage comes from traveling around the area, with lots of dandelions, daisies, blackberries, and other flowers blooming. We also have some big areas of those on our two acres. I also think it doesn't hurt to add some of our own forage.
Bees like almost any herb.  This is cilantro in bloom.  7.1.2020

When garlic chives are blooming, they are almost always hosting honeybees and local bees.  7.1.2020

Lots of pollen here for honeybees.  The pollen sacs are filling up - rear legs.  7.1.2020

Probably not a significant source of nectar, but bees sometimes forage the daylilies.  7.1.2020

I planted these European lindens in 2012.  They are getting some size now.  Honeybees love them  7.1.2020

Linden flowers are quite fragrant.  7.1.2020

The lindens are buzzing with bees.  7.1.2020

This is a Greenspire European Linden that I planted in 2012.  I wondered if these would grow.  They did.  7.1.2020