Plantings and Cleanings
Nov. 7th, 2007 04:29 amI first planted my raised-bed garden in February. I had a variety of plants, some of which did well, and others of which didn't. I finally got around to planting another batch of winter greens, including spinach, arugula, and two varieties of lettuce in the extra space left over from harvested and failed crops. All six of my tomato plants are still producing, and probably will continue to do so until first frost. If I protect them, they may go longer.
The largest remaining mystery is what to do with my citrus fruit. I've got one orange and one grapefruit tree, both in pots, and both bearing between 3-6 fruit. The fruit is only now really starting to change color from green to yellow-ish, which I was expecting some time ago. Both plants are hardy to 15 degrees, and I'm considering planting them in the yard in place of existing, non-fruit bearing trees.
What worked:
Tomatoes (several varieties)
Lettuces (several varieties)
Arugula
Marigolds (for pest control and pollination)
Basil
What didn't work:
Carrots (took forever, were scrawny, didn't taste good)
Japanese Radishes (ditto)
Scallions (ditto)
Cabbage (formed head, but got eaten by worms)
Cauliflower (ditto)
Time to start looking for that first frost date...
I also finally started really unpacking from Burning Man, emptying one of my 20 gallon bins and cleaning the playa dust off the contents. In the process I reclaimed the necessary rechargeable batteries and biking lights to trick out my ride for night riding. Since I was actively yelled out for nighttime invisibility recently, this is well-timed.
The largest remaining mystery is what to do with my citrus fruit. I've got one orange and one grapefruit tree, both in pots, and both bearing between 3-6 fruit. The fruit is only now really starting to change color from green to yellow-ish, which I was expecting some time ago. Both plants are hardy to 15 degrees, and I'm considering planting them in the yard in place of existing, non-fruit bearing trees.
What worked:
Tomatoes (several varieties)
Lettuces (several varieties)
Arugula
Marigolds (for pest control and pollination)
Basil
What didn't work:
Carrots (took forever, were scrawny, didn't taste good)
Japanese Radishes (ditto)
Scallions (ditto)
Cabbage (formed head, but got eaten by worms)
Cauliflower (ditto)
Time to start looking for that first frost date...
I also finally started really unpacking from Burning Man, emptying one of my 20 gallon bins and cleaning the playa dust off the contents. In the process I reclaimed the necessary rechargeable batteries and biking lights to trick out my ride for night riding. Since I was actively yelled out for nighttime invisibility recently, this is well-timed.
no subject
Date: 2007-11-07 03:15 pm (UTC)I'm not there yet, but at some point, I'm going to track down a copy of Neil Sperry's gardening in TX book; apparently it's like the bible for gardening here.
That's good to know...
From:no subject
Date: 2007-11-07 05:34 pm (UTC)I had an herb spiral half-built...
From:Orange
Date: 2007-11-12 05:00 am (UTC)Here's one of my 4 baaaaaby oranges from my baaaaaby orange tree :)
Re: Orange
From: