The original rhubarb plants are quite lush now.
I forgot a photo of the divisions so that will need to happen another time.
The original rhubarb plants are quite lush now.
I forgot a photo of the divisions so that will need to happen another time.
This is Zestar. Last year I grafted Rubinette to make the top two tiers. It needs to fill in but this is a good start. I haven't installed weed barrier and mulch here yet. Soon (LOL).
This is Redlove (TM) Odysso (TM). I grafted something else (Freedom. I made a mistake in the prior post and said Liberty). to the top a couple of weeks ago. Not a great grafting job but buds are starting to swell. This is my first bloom for Odysso. Lubera nursery in Switzerland, who created the Redlove varieties, claims Odysso is the sweetest of their red flesh apples.
Last year, the areas where I installed drip irrigation were so much easier to water. For areas without the drip lines, I had to carry buckets of water or haul garden hose around. I'm not always up to all that work, especially in the heat when it is needed the most.
Plus of course, drip is considered more water conservation friendly. So win/win.
However, I had to pull out the lines to install and repair the raised beds.
Time to get to work before summer. Waiting too long made it harder for me last year.
This year, each of the beds will have a shut off valve. So when water isn't needed for a particular crop, I can turn off that bed's water supply and still water the others. Or, when one needs less water thN the others, I can control that.
This is the start of the system for the tall raised bed. Next it will need lines to distribute water to each plant. I may wait until the lettuce and radishes are done, and tomato plants are in place. It's not needed yet.
Here are some of the tomato plants now. I'm glad I did not plant them as early as last year, although I could probably have waited one or two additional weeks.
Reisentraube and Dwarf Johnson Cherry. It's interesting that, at least at this stage, Reisentraube is growing a lot like a dwarf variety. I didn't expect that. It will be fun to compare it to other varieties.
Most of the other dwarf varieties. They have shorter, stockier stems compared to non-dwarf types, and the leaves are more compact and stockier too. Brandyfred and CC McGee (not shown) have potato-type leaves.
"Bush" type (Early Girl Bush). These are not dwarf type, but grow multiple stems that in the end don't grow as tall as regular tomato plants. To confuse matters, "Extreme Bush" is both dwarf and determinate. The blue labeled plants, "Honeybee" and "SunGold" are regular height varieties that I planted a few weeks later. I had those varieties planted at the same time as the others, but gave them away to someone who I think will appreciate that they are already blooming.