Tuesday, December 06, 2022

Kitchen Curtains For The Holiday. 12.6.22

 We don't do much for the holiday.  This fabric was end-of-bolt so the price was very inexpensive.  It's just the valence, so the view of the duck yard is unobstructed.


The kitchen window gets a different curtain for each holiday or season, so it doesn't become too boring.  I have some fabric on order for Chinese New Year, for the first time, but that's doesn't start until late January.  

This valence only takes about an hour to make.  Very straightforward project.

Schlumbergeras in Bloom. 12.6.22

 These are looking nice.  This is such a rewarding plant.  They require very little care, and make such a show at the right time.


Edit - here's another one.  I started this one from cuttings, about a decade ago.




Bagging Leaves for Leaf Mould. 12.6.22

 The five vegetable raised beds either have something growing in them, or a soil "therapeutic" cover crip (mustard), or will soon (winter onions).   I still want to add leaf compost to them, but this time it will have to be as they do in UK, by making leaf mould.  Leaf mould is made by storing wet leaves in large leaf bags, letting them moulder for a season into something like an intermediate stage between compost and peat moss.  It's a fungal dominated process instead of bacterial (whatever that indicates).  I still have some large areas that need a thick tree leaf mulch but there is also make a bag of leaf mould for each raised bed.


The truckload made five big bags of leaves.  I tied the tops and laid them in an out of the way, out of direct sun.  Various sources state it will take six months to a year to become leaf mould.  I'm in it for the long haul.  One thing that's great about using these leaves, is I don't think they carry any vegetable plant diseases or parasites.  Just healthy humus.

Tuesday, November 29, 2022

Overwintering Pepper Plants. Update. 11.29.22

 Here are the pepper plants so far.  We are at just over one month now.   No more fungus gnats, aphids, or any other visible insects.  They were becoming noticeably light (dry) so I gave each a cup of water.  Not enough to run out the bottom.

Tabasco.  I'm not aiming for any growth, bit this one has the most and largest new shoots so far.


Serrano.


Early JalapeƱo.  A few small new shoots.  Basically dormant.


Cayenne.  Quite a few small shoots.


Banana.  No much going on here.  Still green, which seems like a good thing.



Thai Dragon.  I left the leaves on for ripening peppers.  I thought they might die and fall off.  So far they are still there.  No insect problems, so I'm leaving them alone.


These are all in a south facing window, in a cool (usually 50s F) room.




Sunday, November 27, 2022

Nikita's Gift Persimmon. 11.27.22

 This persimmon tree always produces a generous crop of nice persimmons.