These are the multicolor leaf heirloom variety that I brought out of dormancy.
The main plant has grown a lot of new leaves. It does not receive supplemental light , so the leaves are mostly just green with yellow borders.
These are the multicolor leaf heirloom variety that I brought out of dormancy.
The main plant has grown a lot of new leaves. It does not receive supplemental light , so the leaves are mostly just green with yellow borders.
All but one of the grapes are pruned
Most look like this. They still need a couple more years to develop. This one is a red seedless, Einsetl
This one is Buffalo, the Pacific NW answer to Concord. I added a bamboo bar to the trellis, pruned quite a lot, an tied to the trellis.
At one month, the onion and shallot seedlings are looking nice. They usually look like this at one month, so all is OK so far.
Red Wethersfield Onion
Ambition Shallot Heshiko Japanese Bunching Onion. All of the other onion and shallot seedlings look about the same.Dwarf apple trees are usually created by grafting a "normal" apple scion onto a dwarfing rootstock. There is a history of doing that going back at least a century. Genetic dwarf varieties do not need a dwarfing rootstock. They have a mutated gene, such that the length of stem is significantly shortened. This is called "brachytic dwarfism". This is not genetic engineering, it's just a mutation that is passed down through generations of breeding. Brachytic dwarf tree scion can be grafted onto much more vigorous rootstock, so they are more deeply rooted and need less, if any, support. The disadvantage is, you can's grow your favorite variety as a brachytic dwarf.
I saw One Green World nursery was offering a brachytic dwarf apple variety called "Apple Babe". I don't know if it will be good, but the general idea might be nice in my minidwarf apple orchard. The brachytic dwarf tree should max out at about six to eight feet tall, smaller with pruning. It's more likely to have excellent leaf cover, similar to brachytic dwarf peaches.
I ordered one as a Christmas present to myself. It came today. Merry Christmas!
Happy 2/2/22! But it's not Tuesday!
Today I made a holster for garden tools. The fabric came from the scrap bag. It was formerly the top part of some trousers. Normally I throw that away, but saved for this little project. I ripped out the seams (how unseemly!), removed the belt loops, opened it up, cut the pieces, ironed flat, sewed back together. I sewed on the button before sewing the strap to the holster.
Then I sewed the holster to a pair of garden pants, so it won't get lost.
This holster is good because now I won't poke hokes in pockets, lose the pruners or scissors - which I do a lot - and it doesn't require a belt.
If I like this, I can make a couple more for other garden pants.