About
Welcome to my garden! Join me in the trials, successes and errors of my newest passion. I plan for this to be fun, healthy and rewarding!
Currently, I'm a Real Estate Investor, mother of two, and serious blogger at KarensPerspective.com.
Categories
- Asparagus
- Beans and Potatoes
- Birds
- Black Raspberries
- Blueberries
- Broccoli
- Butterflies
- Cabbage
- Cantelope
- Carrots
- Citrus Trees
- Container Gardening
- Creatures Great and Small
- Cucumber
- Dogwood
- Fall plantings
- Farmer's Almanac
- Fiddle Leaf Fig
- Flowers / Flowering plants
- Fruit Cocktail
- Fun Stuff
- Garden Organization
- Garlic
- General
- Getting Started
- Ground Cover
- Herbal Tea
- Herbs
- Hostas
- Japanese Maple
- Kale
- Lawns
- Lettuce
- Mason Bees
- Meyer Lemon Tree
- Moss
- Onions
- Organic
- Planting
- Pond
- Potatoes
- pumpkins
- Raspberries
- Resources
- Roses
- Seeds
- Shade Plants
- Soil and Mulch
- Spinach
- Strawberries
- Successes
- Tips & Suggestions
- Tomatoes
- Trees
- Waiting
- Watering
- Watermelon
- Weather & Climate conditions
- Weeds
Archives
- February 2016
- October 2015
- September 2015
- May 2015
- March 2015
- November 2014
- September 2014
- August 2014
- May 2014
- April 2014
- March 2014
- January 2014
- October 2013
- September 2013
- August 2013
- July 2013
- June 2013
- May 2013
- April 2013
- March 2013
- February 2013
- January 2013
- November 2012
- August 2012
- July 2012
- June 2012
- May 2012
- April 2012
- March 2012
- November 2011
- September 2011
- August 2011
- July 2011
- June 2011
- May 2011
- April 2011
- March 2011
- August 2010
- July 2010
- June 2010
- May 2010
- April 2010
- March 2010
- February 2010
Tomatoes!
Got this email and couldn’t resist putting it here.
My green tomatoes, by the way, are as happy and healthy as can be. My concern now is that I will have a ton of tomatoes all turning ripe at the same time!
Thanks to Daryl for this letter:
Karen:
Are you aware your gardening site doesn’t have any readily available information or tips on how to grow tomatoes? Big, small, red, yellow, fried green, etc. Nothing there. I’ve been trying to consistently–and that’s the operative word–grow tomatoes for years, on and off. Mostly, off. Here in Oregon, we get some strange spring and early summer weather–we’ve only had a half-dozen, if that, days over 80 this year–and that makes transplanting a hazardous undertaking.
Several years I’ve had flowers, lots of flowers, but few tomatoes. Of course, bees are fewer and fewer, but my neighbor has bee hives. So, you’d think I’d be first in line. Not so.
Last year I went to the Oregon State University (our traditional agricultural college) web site to explore what the academicians knew about tomatoes that I didn’t. As it turned out, plenty! But the funniest thing, which they presented very seriously, was about the sex life of the typical tomato plant, right up there with “the birds and the bees.”
The key nugget I took away was that the smallish tomato blossoms, hanging upside down, make it difficult for bugs to help with the pollination. And bees don’t particularly give them first preference, for some reason. However, I did discover that if you take an electric tooth brush and use it to shake or vibrate the blossom, particularly around the mid-mornings hours, you will help in a huge way with the fertilization process. Who would’a thunk it?
Now one can flick the stems or tops of the flowers with their fingers or a stick, but the vibration of the toothbrush more closely mimics the vibrations–sonic vibrations-of the bees wings as they often continue to flutter as the little bugs climb around the blossoms.
The season was past its prime last summer as I learned this gardening tip. I tried it and, shortly, found that I had many more tiny green tomatoes than in the earlier weeks. I had so many green tomatoes in late September, when tomatoes quit growing here, that I pulled them up by the roots and hung them upside down in my basement for “Thanksgiving tomatoes.” This worked 20 years ago and I hadn’t tried it since, but I thought I’d give it a shot.
I forgot about the plants until I was in that particular corner of the basement around Christmas! Guess what? I had a ton of red tomatoes!! But,…they were well past their prime. Fortunately, none of the gushy ones fell on the carpeting. But, they were all a beautiful, bright red!
The notion of helping tomatoes with their “social” life might make a good blog story for you. Be careful–it could cost you some followers (as well as gain you some you might not want). And you may not have much in the way of tomato-growing issues in N.C.
I still have a dozen or so relatives around Reidsville (e.g., Hall Pump Service, Monroeton) and they never seem to lack for great vegetble gardens, even in that red clay. Why do you suppose that is? I’ll have to get back there and steal a few soil samples for OSU to analize for me.
Thanks for your blog and fun information. Feel free to talk about tomatoes and their social life in N.C.
Darryl Love
Posted in Tomatoes
3 Comments
Lettuce, Broccoli & Spinach are Gone
Well, it’s finally happened. I pulled up the last of the lettuce. sigh…
I loved having the fresh salads daily for the last 7 weeks but, alas, 90* temps have overtaken the lettuce, broccoli and spinach. I will certainly be planting these wonderful, easy to grow crops again in the fall.
Until then, they will truly be missed!
June Garden
The lettuce is almost gone. The spinach is gone. I’ve pulled up the broccoli but the tomato and bean plants are flourishing as are all the herbs.
Potatoes are looking a bit ragged. They were my favorites, so gorgeous at their peak leaf season!
Waiting to add pumpkin and watermelon until Farmer’s Almanac says I can.
Posted in Garden Organization
3 Comments
Beans, beans everywhere beans!
I planted beans when the Farmer’s Almanac said not to and I waited in anticipation for weeks. I got nothing.
I planted a second time when the Almanac said to plant beans, I had sprouts within 4-5 days!
Gotta love Farmer’s Almanac. Now, how long until harvest?
Posted in Beans and Potatoes, Farmer's Almanac
Comments Off on Beans, beans everywhere beans!
I love my Roman Chamomile!
Chamomile is a common term that is most frequently used for two distinct plants, Roman Chamomile and German Chamomile.
Both are collected and used medicinally and for the famous cup of relaxing Chamomile tea. Both have bright, sunny, daisy-like flowers with yellow centers and white petals. Both have soft delicate foliage that is pleasingly scented (thought the scents differ slightly). With both, it is mainly the flower that is used dried for medicinal use or tea.
Roman Chamomile is three or four inch high perennial that prefers cool summers. Roman Chamomile doesn’t really flower all that much, which is probably why more harvesting is done from the German Chamomile. Roman Chamomile sometimes needs to be divided and replanted after three or so years.
Roman Chamomile can be used to make a fragrant pathway or a nice aromatic surprise tucked among other garden plants. If it pushes against other plants it can get up to a foot high with bloom or it can be mowed to the ground to keep it flat.
And while Chamomile is best known for its soothing medicinal properties, some folks can be allergic or sensitive to Roman Chamomile. Those most susceptible are those who are allergic to members of the ragweed family.
Roman Chamomile is an evergreen in zones 4-8 (we are zone 7) and can be used as an aromatic thick 6″ mat ground cover. I love the refreshing smell, like green apples! The fresh flowers can be used as a garnish. Just be sure to remove the green bitter leaves under the flowers.
I cut the stems, put it in hot water and drink it in the evening. Try it. You’ll never get a better night’s sleep!
I have Black Raspberries!
Several of the bushes are already producing berries! Yay! I didn’t expect any this season. Actually, I read not to pick them the first season but to let the bushes go through their entire cycle and expect fruit next year.
Well, I will have to at least try a few when they’re nice and ripe… if, that is, I can beat the birds.
Posted in Black Raspberries
Comments Off on I have Black Raspberries!
Great Gardening Videos
Posted in Resources
Comments Off on Great Gardening Videos
Pumpkins!
I chopped down the remainder of the broccoli plants today. I’ve read about trying to get the plant through the heat and the possibility of some “side heads”, but it all seemed like a lot of time and effort for very little result. Broccoli likes cool weather and we won’t see that again for months so, I pulled them out to make room for something new!
But, what? I’ve decided to try pumpkins! I think it would be so cool to have my very own jack-o-lantern for Halloween. Can I do it? Who knows! But, one thing’s for sure, this weekend I’ll be planting pumpkins!
Posted in pumpkins
2 Comments