2025 gardens

   / 2025 gardens #141  
I think there was an ownership change, iirc. I don't think it's in the family anymore.


We have Roma tomatoes blooming. I like them better for sauces and salsa. Potatoes are in bags this year, so we'll see how that works out. Various hot peppers and onions are growing as well. We have perennial herbs (sage, oregano, rosemary) doing nicely. Lavender didn't do as well. Also have some mint out near the fence line. That way it can spread as much as it wants. Basil is a bit behind.

Wife is trying some melons this year, too. This climate is new to us. We get 12" more rain annually here than in Ft. Worth. Soil is different, too.
I have the usual full garden planted, but growth is behind for this time of year. We’ve had too many cold fronts and cold nights this spring. Back in late April I planted the cold weather veggies (onions, potatoes, greens. Then we had hail on May 4. The following weekend I replanted everything except onions and potatoes. Then 2 weeks ago I planted the warm weather crops. Everything is growing, but slowly because of the cold nights. But normally the cold fronts quit after Memorial Day, so I’m expecting the plants to perk up and growth to accelerate.
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   / 2025 gardens #142  
I think there was an ownership change, iirc. I don't think it's in the family anymore.


We have Roma tomatoes blooming. I like them better for sauces and salsa. Potatoes are in bags this year, so we'll see how that works out. Various hot peppers and onions are growing as well. We have perennial herbs (sage, oregano, rosemary) doing nicely. Lavender didn't do as well. Also have some mint out near the fence line. That way it can spread as much as it wants. Basil is a bit behind.

Wife is trying some melons this year, too. This climate is new to us. We get 12" more rain annually here than in Ft. Worth. Soil is different, too.
We planted some Roma tomatoes and can't recall the last time I did. How do you stake or cage those?
 
   / 2025 gardens #143  
We dug our potatoes Saturday. Really bad growing season for them and then got 2.5" of flooding rain at the end over a 2 day stretch. We got probably 150 pounds.
 
   / 2025 gardens #144  
We dug our potatoes Saturday. Really bad growing season for them and then got 2.5" of flooding rain at the end over a 2 day stretch. We got probably 150 pounds.
Haven't even planted taters yet, 2-3 weeks late, and they're predicting rain for the next few days at least. Temps at least 10-15 degrees F below normal.
Nothing better than fresh young taters fried in butter and a sprinkle of dill and some sour cream.
Mmm... Doggies!
 
   / 2025 gardens #145  
We like them all kinds of ways but stewed by themselves or in a pot of green beans is my favorite for new potatoes.
 
   / 2025 gardens #146  
I have some russet style taters planted 6-8 weeks ago. Tater bugs got hold to a dozen or so, sprayed them with seven. So I decided to try and get some new taters. I dug up two vines notta... Only thing there was the original piece. Some of them have bloomed (not the bug eaten ones. Gonna let them sit a while longer. Then I expect I'll have to do something. I was worried fire ants would come in and start molesting them like they did last year. Haven't seen any activity of that yet. Maybe cause their ain;t nothing under them... ???
 
   / 2025 gardens #147  
We planted some Roma tomatoes and can't recall the last time I did. How do you stake or cage those?
I have 5’ tall cages made of concrete reinforcement mesh. The holes are large enough to reach through and the wire is sturdy enough. I hold them up with rebar. Been using these for years for all kinds of tomatoes.
 
   / 2025 gardens #148  
I don't understand the Florida weave or what holds it up. I do remember the thread and was impressed by it but somehow it got away from me. It's a great idea.
Youtube videos will show you how to do the Florida Weave. I just tie them off every post.
 
   / 2025 gardens #149  
Are all those leaves from your place? I wonder how adding mulch would do in my garden spot? I would have to use something like chip drop. Just not sure if they contain herbicides/diseases etc.
No, neighbor brings a lot of them, and I have a buddy who works for a lawn service that Vacs up leaves. Not sure what chip drop is, but wood chips will take nitrogen out of the soil to decompose if stirred in the soil itself.

My buddy tried wood chips and his only complaint was in a heavy rain they will float and make mounds that need to be scattered afterwards.

I let my neighbor use my leaf vac to gather his. It has a 12' hose on it. Years back I gathered them myself, just had him blow leaves in windrows with his mower. Easiest is to get hooked up with a lawn service that does leaf pickup. A local town used to take leaves in for free to make compost, then sell in the Spring. Now they charge $50 for a 1 ton dump truck with sides to dump. Matt brought 10 loads last year, so saved them $500 on dumping fees by dumping here.
 
   / 2025 gardens #150  
Broke out one of the David Bradley's yesterday to cultivate the cabbage patch. Had to set 18 new plants because either the crows or Starlings pulled some smaller plants out. Ground temps are pretty cool yet here at 65º. Great for cool weather plants, but I'm pretty sure my beans I planted 10 days ago rotted. Picked up another pound yesterday to try later.


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