These are Shirley poppies. It's interesting how many seeds one can collect from the pods, even though the pods seem small. I'll continue saving them, since the honeybees like them so much and there aren't as many other bee forage plants blooming now.
Tuesday, August 11, 2020
Saving Poppy Seeds. 8.11.2020
Some Flowers. 8.11.2020
The Four O'Clocks are all volunteer. I moved a few seedlings this Spring and left the rest where they were. I think they are a few generations past the original seed packet now. There were only two yellow flowered plants. I want to save those seeds, so I labeled them. They are open-pollinated so who knows what the seedlings will be. Honeybees don't seem to like them. Despite being Four O'Clocks, they seem to bloom best in the am so should be "Nine Am O'Clocks". :-)
This dark one is especially brilliant. It's not a pure red. I think the marble types interbred with the pure color types.
These are wild petunias. The flowers are the same size as the Four O'Clocks, but the leaves are very different. Also, they stay open in the afternoon, when the Four O'Clock flowers are closed.
I just like taking photos of flowers with bees.
I didn't think the honeybees were into dahlias, but this time there were a few.
Rufus Got A Haircut. 8.11.2020
Before and after. I wanted to take him to a groomer because he is very strong and Mr. Squirmasaurus and I'm still recovering from surgery. However, when I took him there, the waiting area was a tiny enclosed space and there were three women struggling with three very large pitbulls. And none of those people were wearing masks. Not wanting to contract coronavirus just to have him groomed, I took him home and did it myself and here we are. Not the best grooming job, but then again no viruses were contracted in this bath and haircut. All that wool will go into the compost, lots of Nitrogen and Sulfur.
After. I guess in the time of coronavirus, casual clothes are accepted.
Before the haircut. Where's the dog under all that wool?
Garden Update. 11 Aug 2020.
Lots of food and collecting seeds. Shirley poppy seed heads are becoming light brown, so I cut them off and place them, pod down, into glass jars. The dry seeds fall into the jar for collection. It works out almost the same for garlic chives.
Harvest: beans, potatoes, cucumbers, a few peppers, blackberries, a few figs, Asian pears.
Here is a cucumber salad I made, all but onions from the victory garden.
Friday, August 07, 2020
Garden Update 7 Aug 2020
I haven't been posting everything. We have had some good stuff for the kitchen, out of the garden. I guess since this is the "Coronavirus war", this is my "Victory Garden". In addition to the photos, we are getting a lot of bush beans, especially Dragon's Tongue, a spotted thicker Roma type bean.
Breba figs are ripening. The big brown fig is a Brunswick, which rarely gives anything. The others are all Desert King, very flavorful and sweet. Both trees are cutting-grown. Neither gets any supplemental water any more.
The first tomatoes of the year. Sungold and Bush Early Girl. OK, Early Girl did beat the other slicing tomatoes, with no other ripening ones on the vine yet. Haven't tasted it yet.
Wednesday, August 05, 2020
Gardening Update. 5 Aug 2020.
Tuesday, July 28, 2020
Sempervivum and Sedum. 7.28.2020
| This spring I stuck cuttings of sedums, and a start of sempervivum, into this planter by the mailbox. 7.28.2020 |
Chestnut Graft. 7.28.2020
This tree is upwind of the others. I want it to at least produce some pollen for those trees. Marissard is not considered a pollen producer, although it's hard to know what a seedling would do. If I had it to do over again, I would not have used that variety or a seedling, but I don't have it to do over again. So attempting grafts is the next best thing to try.
| Maravale Graft on Marissard Seedling Chestnut Tree. 7.28.2020 |
| Maravale Graft on Marissard Seedling Chestnut Tree. 7.28.2020 |
Saving Seeds. Taiwan Sugar Snow Pea. 7.28.2020
| These are the dried and drying snowpea pods. I think the ones that are not fully dry will be OK once they are dried out. 7.28.2020 |
| These are the shelled snowpea seeds. I will let them dry some more then store them in an envelope. 7.28.2020 |
Flowers and Some Honeybees. 7.28.2020
| Volunteer Cosmos. Very pretty white. 7.28.2020 |
| Tigridia, survived the winter and now blooming. m 7.28.2020 |
| Dahlia. I think this was a tuber in a box at Winco this winter. 7.28.2020 |
| Shirley Poppies. These seeds were a couple of years old. First time growing them. Honeybees love them. 7.28.2020 |
| I grew these Echinacea from seeds a few years ago. I didn't know if they would survive. They did. 7.28.2020 |
| I grew this rose from a cutting about 15 years ago. I forget the name. 7.20.2020 |
| These gladiolus were from a box at Winco. They should survive the winter, so I"ll leave them there. 7.28.2020 |
| Yellow Cosmos, a volunteer among the squashes. 7.28.2020 |
| Another Dahlia from a grocery store box. 7.28.2020 |
| Zinnia from a 6-pack. I had trouble getting the seedlings to grow this year and something ate them. 6.28.2020 |
| Another zinnia from that six pack. 6.28.2020 |
| Another Shirley poppy full of honeybees. 6.28.2020 |
| French marigolds from an old seed packet. 7.28.2020 |
| African Marigolds from an old seed packet. So far they don't look great. 7.28.2020 |
| Another rose I grew from a cutting about 15 years ago. 7.28.2020 |










