Sunday, November 04, 2012
Garlic, Shallots, Potato Onions. Progress Report.
Potato onions are almost all up, and 6 to 8 inches tall. The earlier ones are ahead of the later ones, by a few inches. Only one of the earlier ones has not sprouted. Several of the later ones have not sprouted. Egyptian Walking Onions are a little smaller but virtually all of them have also sprouted and grown to about 4 to 6 inches tall. The bed is a little weedy. I've been pulling weed seedlings. More of that effort is needed.
Inchelium garlic. I think it's at about 50% sprouted now. Keeping track of the growth will help me plan timing for next year. About half of the later-planted Inchelium garlic has also sprouted. Not clear the earlier planting is advantageous.
The german porcelain garlic. Growth is excellent. Next question will be, is faster growth more, or less, susceptible to the freezes to come.
The Holland Shallots are about 50% sprouted. The Safeway shallots are 0% = none have sprouted yet. I guess that's an effect of germination inhibitor, used for produce.. I wonder what germination inhibitors might do to the people who eat treated produce.
Labels:
garlic,
heirloom garlic,
heirloom onion,
heritage vegetables,
Raised Beds,
shallot
Plum Seeds
These are the wild plum seeds I opened 2 months ago and placed into the fridge in a moist paper towel, sealed in a plastic ziplock sandwich bag. That was July 8th. So germination is about 3 1/2 months. One looks rotted. The other 2 are slightly moldy but growing. This was one week ago.
Here they are today. I planted them in seed starting soil. No problem from the mold. Seems like wrong time of year to be sprouting. Will grow in window.
Irises.
The 3rd raised bed is completed. Soil is from a pile behind the house. Again, mixing with compost as I filled. Maybe about 20% compost by volume. This time it's for flowers. Saving space for the spring shipment of irises. Plus added a row of Anemone rhizomes at the front. No idea if they will grow. They were like little rocks. Dry and hard. Could have soaked them first. In this climate, with rain expected for the next 4 months, that seems excessive. So I did not soak them. I"m growing the Irises in a grid. I'm not interested here in them as landscaping. I like the flowers for themselves. The bed is just under 4 X 8, and the irises are about 7 across and 3 deep. So a little more than a square foot each. The smaller growing ones are toward the front.
The three iris rhizomes here with, white leaves are from dried-out shipments / store bought. No confidence they will grow planting so late. The far right, back one is Red Zinger, a medium size iris I wanted to try. The lower right one is a rescue, I saved from bacterial rot this summer. Diety. Between them, I planted 2 rows of iris seeds from this summer's hybridization effort. By planting them in the beds, there is minimal maintenance.
I planted some of the containerized irises. I've been coddling them for months. Four have died from bacterial rot. None of the in-ground irises did. Maybe that means, container method is not so good? The potting soil is not so good? Mostly I want this bed for heritage irises, but some are modern. I did not water them in. I planted a little shallower than they were in containers. They had excellent root growth. I tried not to disturb the roots. No use spreading the root out. Iris roots are deciduous, die off and are replaced as new rhizomes grow.
The three iris rhizomes here with, white leaves are from dried-out shipments / store bought. No confidence they will grow planting so late. The far right, back one is Red Zinger, a medium size iris I wanted to try. The lower right one is a rescue, I saved from bacterial rot this summer. Diety. Between them, I planted 2 rows of iris seeds from this summer's hybridization effort. By planting them in the beds, there is minimal maintenance.
I planted some of the containerized irises. I've been coddling them for months. Four have died from bacterial rot. None of the in-ground irises did. Maybe that means, container method is not so good? The potting soil is not so good? Mostly I want this bed for heritage irises, but some are modern. I did not water them in. I planted a little shallower than they were in containers. They had excellent root growth. I tried not to disturb the roots. No use spreading the root out. Iris roots are deciduous, die off and are replaced as new rhizomes grow.
Labels:
Anemone,
Hybridization,
iris,
Raised Beds
Trees, leaves, planning for bees. Plant trees in fall. Ginkgo.
That back yard ginkgo. The leaves are yellow now. Beautiful! I say it over and over, but I'm proud I grew that from a seed!
The big maple at the battleground place. So beautiful. Dropping leaves. They will make lots of great compost.
Found this little leaf linden, "Greenspire' at HD. Marked down from sale price of $39.99 to $8.00. Can't beat that price. With plans to start beehives, linden trees are a great choice. I read that linden pollen makes the best honey. This tree had a great root mass. Not too root bound. I did have to prune a few. There is no central leader. It will need corrective pruning for 2 or 3 years. But at that price, who can complain? I cut off a couple of small rubbing branches, that's all. Wait for bloom, prune after that next Spring.
About 8 feet tall once planted. The ground was very easy to dig now. No more summer dry soil. Not too much work. It will be a great source of pollen for the honey bees.
What does it take to make me happy? Leaves for compost is a good start. It's like a christmas present. Leafmas.
Labels:
bees,
compost,
ginkgo,
honey bees,
leaves,
Linden,
maple,
orchard mason bees,
tree planting,
trees
Wednesday, October 31, 2012
Progress Report. Mostly Allium family vegetables.
No pics today.
Today I built raised bed #3. Filled about 3/4 with soil/leaf compost mix. The top soil was muddy - not the best way to build a garden bed, but not much choice. I did not tramp it down, kept my feet off, and mixed in about 25% compost, so it should be OK. When it is filled, this bed will contain ornamentals that need fall planting.
I noted last weekend that the Chinese chive seeds I planted have germinated, and are 1 inch tall. Not sparse. The germination must be approaching 100%. Issue now is will the seedlings survive winter? I'm betting yes. But I have more seeds to plant in spring, in case they don't.
Yellow Potato Onions in the first bed are 100% sprouted. Most are about 4 inches tall.
Yellow Potato Onions in the 2nd bed are about 50% sprouted.
Egyptian Walking Onions in both beds are 100% sprouted, and about 4 to 6 inches tall.
Inchellium Red garlic in the first bed is about 1/3 sprouted.
German Porcelain garlic in the 2nd bed is 100% sprouted and about 5 inches tall.
Some of the Dutch Shallots in the 2nd bed have sprouted. Three plants so far.
So far none of the Safeway Shallots have sprouted.
Cilantro seeds are also sprouting in the onion "bucket" planters. Planted at the same time as the onions.
Not bad for late October.
Labels:
chinese chives,
garlic,
garlic chives,
multiplier onion,
multiplier onions,
onion
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