Earlier this summer, Ning gave away 2 of the post-menopausal hens for pets. Then another died of unknown causes.
Three weeks ago, I bought 3 Rhode Island Red pullets. They are growing nicely.
Then some mysterious person or persons, added 2 Leghorn roosters to the chicken yard. Which resulted in battles and discontent and bloody feathers. I found someone to take the roosters off my hands, and we are at peace.
The rooster and hen won't let me near the pullets. They are very protective. I think we will start getting eggs again in a month.
Saturday, July 25, 2015
Stone Fruit Seeds. 7.25.6.15
El Dorado Genetic Dwarf Peach Seeds. 7.25.15 |
Peacotum Seeds. 7.25.15 |
A Vice-grip works almost perfectly every time. One precaution: This needs to be done with the seed, vice-grip, and hand, in a plastic food bag. The seed snaps open so suddenly, the seed and pit parts can fly across the room if not contained.
I was surprised at how puny and dried out looking the El Dorado seeds were. Maybe they are not viable. I placed them on a wet paper towel, folded, placed into a jam jar, and they are now in the refrigerator.
Not shown, two regular size peach seeds were a bit bigger, but still didn't look great.
Maybe this is an issue for early ripening peaches. Or maybe I should not have let them sit for a few weeks. Or maybe this is how they should look.
The peacotum seeds, same duration, are a little bigger but not much.
The apricot seeds, one week less, look much more robust. That's either because they are better seeds, or more air-tight pit, or the shorter time.
Apricot Seeds. 7.25.15 |
I have the peacotum seeds soaking in some water overnight. Maybe they will plump up. If so, the same might be helpful with the El Dorado seeds.
Labels:
apricot,
fruit trees from seeds,
peach,
Peacotum
Thursday, July 23, 2015
Veggies 7.23.15
Veggies. 7.23.15 |
As usual with zucchinis, we have too many. We can shred some to feed the chickens. I have given some away.
Labels:
Roma,
summer squash,
yellow beans,
zucchini
Tuesday, July 21, 2015
New Daylilies, 10 days later in the heat. 7.21.15
Daylily Carefree Peach, 10 days later. 7.21.15 |
These are tough plants. I don't know of a lot of perennials that would take digging up, hosing to bare root, chop roots and top, then plant and expose to 100F sun.
Daylily Strawberry Candy, 10 days later. 7.21.15 |
Daylily Siloam Virginia H. 10 days later. 7.21.15 |
Starting Buckwheat for Green Manure / Cover Crop / Bee Forage. 7.21.15
Bed prep for buckwheat. 7.21.15 |
The borage has dried out and was done blooming. I wanted to collect seeds, but not up to it. It pulled out very easy, leaving an almost weed-free bed. Quite a bit of water was needed to soften the soil, then worked it shallowly, smoothed with garden rake, spread buckwheat seeds, smoothed a little more, and watered.
Original book source: Prof. Dr. Otto Wilhelm Thomé Flora von Deutschland, Österreich und der Schweiz 1885, Gera, Germany. Image via commons.wikipedia.org |
The seed package was very large - 5 pounds. Plan: pull the weeds out of the 3 raised beds I lost to weeds, and plant buckwheat. The area planted here is about the same as 1 1/2 raised bed. Ditto for the garlic bed, once the garlic is harvested. Ambition and energy, those are the limitations.
Labels:
bee forage,
buckwheat,
cover crop,
green manure,
honeybee forage
Sunday, July 19, 2015
Saving Seeds and Making Hybrids. 7.18.15
Many flowers are setting seeds now. For ornamentals, there is a choice between, letting them do their own thing, or deadheading to stimulate bloom and allow photosynthetic energy to go to root and stem storage, or let the seeds ripen and save the seeds.
For some plants, it takes intentional pollination.
My plan is to save the following seeds.
Ornamental Alliums - already discussed. Cutting off dried seed-heads and shaking/rubbing the seeds into a bowl, then save in envelope.
Chives - same as Ornamental Alliums.
Peaches - saving seeds from genetic dwarf tree to play with and experiment. Those are dry in an envelope. I need to crack them open and stratify some, plant others for nature to do its own stratification.
Peaches - from locally grown RedHaven, also dry in a bowl. I want to grow one for a peach tree, maybe. The others are for rootstock.
Apricots - see if I can sprout a couple to use as scion on a plum tree.
Peacotum - ditto as for apricots.
Marigolds - save yellow and rust red varieties. They are open pollinated so doubtless have mixed. I'm not crazy about the more common orange ones, so I won't save those. If orange dominates yellow or brick red, I could wind up with mostly orange again.
Tigridia - I've been pollinating each, either self or with other color blooming at the same time. no rhyme or reason. I like the yellow/red mix the best. I should cut off the seed pods for the others, why grow the ones I'm not crazy about.
Dayilies. Cross pollinating Chicago Apache (triploid) with Fooled Me (triploid). Each gets the pollen from the other. I am not emasculating them, so there could well be some self pollinating going on.
Also pollinated mystery variety "Vigoro" which has a triploid look, with pollen from Chicago Apache and Fooled me.
Also some others among the diploids. Pardon Me with Stella De Oro, and with Luxury Lace. Luxury Lace with Pardon Me. Selfed the pale yellows. I don't know if the one sold as Daring Deception is a mutant of that variety, or if in tissue culture it lost its polyploidy and became diploid, or was mislabeled, or is a seedling of Daring Deception that was mistaken as the real thing. Still, it's the only lavender daylily in the bunch, so I used pollen from both diploids and triploids to see what sets.
No real strategy. Only one currently with a contrasting eye color, which would be nice to pass on to progeny.
That's a lot of seeds. It's all experimentation, doesn't matter if they don't grow, or if there is nothing worth while. I bet some will grow, and there will be something worthwhile.
For some plants, it takes intentional pollination.
My plan is to save the following seeds.
Ornamental Alliums - already discussed. Cutting off dried seed-heads and shaking/rubbing the seeds into a bowl, then save in envelope.
Chives - same as Ornamental Alliums.
Dried El Dorado Peach Seeds. 7.21.15 |
Peaches - from locally grown RedHaven, also dry in a bowl. I want to grow one for a peach tree, maybe. The others are for rootstock.
Apricots - see if I can sprout a couple to use as scion on a plum tree.
Peacotum - ditto as for apricots.
Marigolds - save yellow and rust red varieties. They are open pollinated so doubtless have mixed. I'm not crazy about the more common orange ones, so I won't save those. If orange dominates yellow or brick red, I could wind up with mostly orange again.
Tigridia Early Seed Pod. 7.21.15 |
Seed Pods Among Flower Buds on Daylily "Fooled Me" 7.21.15 |
Chicago Apache Early Seed Pod. 7.21.15 |
Also pollinated mystery variety "Vigoro" which has a triploid look, with pollen from Chicago Apache and Fooled me.
Also some others among the diploids. Pardon Me with Stella De Oro, and with Luxury Lace. Luxury Lace with Pardon Me. Selfed the pale yellows. I don't know if the one sold as Daring Deception is a mutant of that variety, or if in tissue culture it lost its polyploidy and became diploid, or was mislabeled, or is a seedling of Daring Deception that was mistaken as the real thing. Still, it's the only lavender daylily in the bunch, so I used pollen from both diploids and triploids to see what sets.
No real strategy. Only one currently with a contrasting eye color, which would be nice to pass on to progeny.
That's a lot of seeds. It's all experimentation, doesn't matter if they don't grow, or if there is nothing worth while. I bet some will grow, and there will be something worthwhile.
Labels:
allium,
daylily,
Hybridization,
marigold,
peach,
Saving Seeds,
Tigridia
Freezer Jam. 7.17.15
Cut up enough plums for 2 cups. |
Mix in 1 teaspoon of fruit preservative, vitamin C. |
I did the same thing with King figs, except chopped them by hand into about 1/2 inch pieces. That was my first try, and I used 1 cup of sugar, which was too sweet.
Dissolve 1 1/2 teaspoon low-sugar pectin in 1 cup water. |
Heat to boil while stirring. Boil one minute while stirring. |
Mix the fruit with the pectin solution. Mix in 1/2 cup sugar. |
I like to pulse a couple of times in food processor but leave lots of chunks. |
Ladle into fruit jars. I used 4 ounce. |
Cap, label, chill or freeze. |
King Fig Jam. 7.17.15 |
Saturday, July 18, 2015
A Couple More Irises. 7.17.15
Iris Shipment from Schreiner's. 7.17.15 |
I bought -
Owyhee Desert. 1997. Again. Unusual flower, with white edges on falls and white standards, with falls washed with rusty brown and violet stippling. Previous one never bloomed, and died in the bacterial rot epidemic. It might not be suitable for her but I want to try again. This time around, using chopped evergreen mulch, no summer water after the first planting, keep most other plants out.
Sea Power. 1999. Highly ruffled blue. Fragrant.
Kinkajou Shrew. 1999. Highly marbled, grape purple, fragrant. Reported as vigorous.
Other than watering them in now, intent is no further summer watering. Nor, any of the others.
I also planted another of my own hybrids, in the iris bed. This one has not bloomed yet, so I don't know what it will look like. Probably also hybrid of Immortality X Spiced Custard, although there were others. If I name them, I would like something colorful, such as "Yellow Caterpillar, Shivering in the Snow", or "Happy Puppy, Rolling Around in the Dust".
Irises Quickly Planted. 7.17.15 |
Labels:
bearded iris,
Kinkajou Shrew,
Owyhee Desert,
Sea Power
Thursday, July 16, 2015
Bearded Iris Beds. 7.16.15
Bearded Iris Bed. 7.16.15 |
Bearded Iris Beds 2 and 3. 7.16.15 |
Sempervivum. 7.16.15 |
I gave up on companion planting, except for Sempervivum. Sempervivum do not shade other plants, they do not crowd other plants, and they are happy with the hot dry conditions, same as bearded irises.
I have a shipment of 3 varieties coming in a day or two. I also added back a seedling that I grew by hybridizing "Immortality" X "Spiced Custard", that bloomed this spring, nice white flower, yellow beard, not too large. There is room for a couple more seedlings from that cross, that might be entirely different.
Tuesday, July 14, 2015
This and That. 7.13.15
Yellow Beans. 7.13.15 |
Begonia. 7.13.15 |
The begonia tubers I bought this spring all grew. Some much faster than others. This is the first, about to bloom. On North side of the house. No direct sun at all.
Daylily Luxury Lace. This is a group of 3 starts, that I planted together in container when they came in the mail this spring. They were fairly dried out. They got some TLC, then into ground. Blooming now. I'm impressed, blooming first year. This is considered a historic variety. 1959. Which also makes me a historic variety. According to OldHouseGardens, this variety"was bred by Edna Spalding of rural Louisiana who grew her seedlings in the vegetable garden and culled the rejects with a kitchen knife"
Daylily pink is kind of a different pink. I don't know how to describe it. Daylily red is the same way - not what I would consider a true red, but I like it very much.
Daylily "Luxury Lace". First bloom. 7.13.15 |
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