Sunday, July 8, 2012

Heat and the Garden

The garden seems to be handling the heat much better than the gardener.  Then again the garden is probably more intelligent than the gardener!

Yesterday was the hottest day so far this year.  The temperature was going to be in the triple digits.  What does the gardener decide to do,  but divide his 4 foot wide clump of 'Immortality' iris.  Not one of my brightest moves.  I did get most of the clump removed and replanted some of the divisions temporally until I can give them away.  I can now get to the front of the potager.  Now that the first step has been taken in clearing the area, the task does not seem as daunting.

Like Granny, I've been over watering too.  Since my growing area is small I can give it a good watering daily and survive the heat. The pole beans and tomatoes seem to be getting taller each time I go out to the garden.  The peppers have finally decided to fill out and start blooming and the basil is growing like weeds!  I do share Granny's conclusion that over watering results in bland tomatoes.  I'm going to try and water mine less often.  Not easy to do when everything is planted so closely together.

Potager basking in the morning sun.

The bush bean patch.

'Inuk's Wang Kong' runner bean has reached the top of the trellis in one week.

The 'Reisenstraube' tomatoes have the biggest flower clusters that I have ever seen.


The 'Velour' bush beans are covered in attractive purple flowers.


My best sweet peas are the ones interplanted with the tomatoes!


The 'Silvery Fir Tree' tomato growing in a pot is loaded with fruit.


Pay no attention to the date stamps on the pics.  My camera decided it would be great fun to reset the date stamp, and I'm too lazy to reset it...

10 comments:

  1. That's one overloaded tomato plant! beans and pea flowers are lovely :)

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    1. Jenny, I am surprised at the amount of fruit on that plant and the photo did not get all of it. It's a great variety for containers as it has attractive foliage ans should look even better when all that fruit ripens.

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  2. I thought my French green beans were prolific, but this week, from a 10' row of each, I got just over 2 pounds of the green, and over 4 1/2 pounds of Velour in one picking. And it was too hot out, so I probably didn't get all the Velour picked. I think I'll be saving Velour seeds for next year :-)

    I got the first two ripe little Victors today!

    I want to water my garden, it looks so sad. I'm waiting until tomorrow morning though.

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    1. Wow! Those 'Velour' beans must love all that water. LOL. Mine have tons more bloom than the other varieties of bush beans.

      My 'Victor' plants are loaded with fruit. but it will be a while before they ripen.

      I was hoping for a storm or two today, but they all veered around us. I guess I'll be watering tomorrow.

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  3. Your garden is looking great Ed. I am thinking of starting figs in the future.
    Lisa

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    1. Thanks Lisa! I lived in house once that a huge fig tree in the yard. It was great to be able to wonder outside and much on fresh figs. I say go for it!

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  4. Great looking tomato plant, it has got some big ones on it.

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    1. Thanks Kris, the tomatoes are not that big, it's just that the picture is a close up. The plant is only 16" tall.

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  5. Your garden is looking good Ed. So does the tomatoes. Mine are getting end rot. Ugh! What do you do for that?

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  6. What pretty bean flowers; looks like a good crop of tomatoes coming on too.

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