Saturday, May 25, 2024

Rolling Garden Stool. Nearing Completion.

 I assembled the parts for the garden stool.  I used liquid nails adhesive, before using deck screws to give a good, strong bond.  I cut holes to slightly reduce the weight, since this is heavy solid wood or plywood.  Also, the holes provide hand-holds and let light into the inside shelf.





Then I sanded for smooth edges, and to remove splinters, and give a good surface for stain to bond.  Then I applied the first coat of deck stain.




I think it needs an edge, to hold the cushioned sitting pad in place.  Then a second coat of stain, a pull rope, and the casters.  

Tomatoes Are Mulched With Cardboard. 25 May 24.

 Both tomato beds have their cardboard mulch now.  Slicing / dwarf / heirloom - type, and the sauce - type tomato plants.



They are not pretty, You-tube and master gardener - style beds, but the cardboard does a great job keeping them clear of weeds, and preventing soil fungal spores from splashing onto leaves and giving the plants diseases.  It also cool the soil in the summer and helps retain moisture. 

The tomato plants seem to be doing well despite some chilly, rainy weather during the past week.

Bearded Iris Woes. 25 May 26.

 Bearded iris always give me a particular kind of joy.  But only when they thrive.  That's a conundrum for me.  Why do these, usually tough, carefree, plants seemingly never do well in my garden?

The "rules" for growing bearded iris are well known and often repeated - keep the soil clean, no weeds, let the rhizomes bask in the sun.  So this is what I get, year after year.


And this.


These are just the latest attempts.  Usually it's the same, but in the ground instead of containers.  My hope this time was that, in clean potting soil, the leaf diseases would not take over.

Meanwhile, irises I gave up on, in the duck yard - no weeding, and they god a layer of wood chip mulch - look like this.



Beautiful and thriving, and much less leaf disease.

In the narrow garden border, I tried (more or less successfully) to keep some colonies weeded, and mulched with arborist chips.  They look like this.


Not perfect, but way better than the ones I grew "by the rules".   Others, more crowded by other plants, also bloomed and look better.





I don't intend to leave the weeds in there, but it's interesting that these irises are doing as well as they are.  Also, more extreme and mostly not blooming, here are the irises I've yet to rescue from the decommissioned bed - more crowded and definitely at risk of weed takeover, but the leaves don't look bad.


So here's my theory.  I think the bare soil contains fungus disease spores or bacterial disease spores.  When it rains, those splash onto the leaves, where they thrive, infect, and spread.  The disease only happens here with the heavy rains and chill, after initial Spring foliage has grown.  Grasses and clean mulch don't allow the diseases to splash onto leaves.  (I've seen lots of bark mulched irises doing fine in town, too).  These issues might not be the case elsewhere, who am I to say?  But here, neglected irises in grasses and weeds, or with clean mulches, seem to do better.

So now my plan is this.  I'll try to rescue the remaining rhizomes and plant them on a slope, around a recently removed fir tree stump.



They'll get a good layer of clean arborist chip mulch.  I'll keep them  weed free, but I won't do much else.  

We'll see what happens.

Thursday, May 23, 2024

Geranium Cutting In Water. 23 May 24.

 My geranium cuttings in potting soil didn't grow.  I think the main issue was, they were weak, unhealthy cuttings to begin with.

I don't "need" any more geranium plants, but that failure annoyed me.  So I cut off a wayward stem from another geranium plant, and placed it into water.  Maybe, 3 weeks ago?  Not certain.

Here it is now.  I need to pot it soon.


Follow Up (25 May 24):  Yesterday I planted this cutting in potting soil.  It's ready for a gentle entry into "full plant-hood". There were two flower bud clusters.  I removed those.  It's not ready yet for blooming.



Tomato Cutting In Water, Update. 23 May 24.

 Here is that tomato cutting today.


I noticed root primordia last night.

Now that roots have started growing, I think progress will be fairly fast.