Veggie Tales >>> August 2024
7 months ago
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Veggie Tales - August 2019
Comments (447)I replaced the belt on my mower today. It was easy, buy the correct belt, start over"; 2 hours and done. Well I still want to drain the hydraulic fluid and replace the filter. I replaced the belt myself. My neighbor came over early in the morning and worked on it some more and made the flat statement. Wrong Belt! I had fed the manufacturers number into the Bay and one sellers listing said that PN was a 52 inch belt. The one I bought today measured 52 3/4. The interim belt measures 52", what I asked for at the auto parts store. Can't take it back. Had BLT's for dinner tonight. I swear by crop rotation. Either that or garden rotation. Only problem with rotation is you need 3 or 4 times the space of your largest crop. I fenced in a 34' x 64' space this year and amended about 450 sq ft. A lot of the space is taken up by fruit trees already there. I would say this has been my best year since I started having Septoria/blight about 8 years ago. Out of 25 tomato plants 2 have the problem. The Mortgage Lifter had the problem early on, then I thought it had shucked off the problem. Now it's only on the north side of the plant. The Belgium Gigant only started showing the problem about the time it started ripening. I've harvested about a dozen huge tomatoes off that plant in the last week or so. Re-enforces my theory that the problem is triggered by the ripening process.... maybe. So I have 23 plants without the problem. I never used any product on the tomatoes, no insecticides, fungicides, herbicides fertilizers. I amended the soil with mushroom manure, wood ash, lime and a tablespoon of bone meal for each plant. I haven't trimmed a single plant, even the ones showing the problem. I did water only the base of the plant with a garden hose, maybe a half dozen times. The rest of the watering was via rain. Another benefit of my huge space is 43 potato plants. I never grew them for space reasons. I would never grow potatoes without rotating. It cost me $43 for seed potatoes. I'd like to plant future crops with seed from the previous years production. Not rotating is just asking for trouble....See MoreVeggie Tales >>> March 2024
Comments (63)Got pepper seedlings pricked and repotted. Just pepperonchini, I need to do a round of canning this year. A dozen pots, hopefully I'll be busy later this summer. Lots of flower seed started, some herb seed. Daffs are up and yellow all over the place. Haven't opened any of the caps in over a week. Been busy at work and then we got some of that cold snowy crappy. Only a scant inch. It's supposed to warm up more this week so I'll start peeking then. Rain is coming in and I need to open the garden caps to make sure everything is good and wet out there. I need to do some cleaning out on the porch. Wormwood cuttings I took too late last year and didn't really take need to be sorted out from the lots that are doing well. Why can't they do that neatly so I don't have to sort the pots out, lol. Some of my flower seedlings are getting big enough that I need to start their sheltered hardening off with the cooler temps and night hours out in the porch. So cleaning I must do. Been sorting out the gardening supply stock. I've got plenty of dried toothache blossoms on hand and some hot peppers to use up... so once it's sunny I'll put out some jars of tea for spraying the new tree planting out back. The combo of hot from the peppers and numbing from the toothache plant can be disturbing to critters that want to nibble. Running low on sugar ferments so I'll have to make more this year....See MoreVeggie Tales - April 2024
Comments (55)Just a few sprinkles here today Cindy, so little that I could finish off planting my tomatoes, sweet potatoes, and cantaloupe transplants without really getting wet. Only thing to plant now are the watermelons to finish off the garden jigsaw puzzle. More corn and late tomatoes will be down the road a bit. Mid-80s are predicted for all next week with scant rain in the forecast. Picked, blanched, and froze the first broccoli heads. Also had a nice multi-variety of lettuce in our shrimp salad last night, hope the coming heat doesn't bitter it up, got more late lettuces coming along too. Saw the first pea blooms today and the 2 cheatin' tomato plants are also in bloom. Will need to thin out the pear trees soon, no sign of fire blight so far......See MoreVeggie Tales >>> September 2024
Comments (18)Richard, here we are-you need rain and we need rain out here and the SE has a catastrophe. We got 0.40" here and felt lucky to have that. Vgkg I wondered if you would catch some of that torrential rain from Helene, glad you didn't. I picked one of the Tromboncino squash young to use like a zucchini, it's very firm and mild tasting. That whole long neck is solid since the seed cavity is in the very bottom. I should try using it in a zucchini bread recipe, there wouldn't be any of the extra moisture that zukes have though. It would hold up to deep frying well I think. Sharon, I would send you some seeds of it, just know that it is a monster of a plant! One of the runners is 25ft long and still growing (our weather has been good), another runner going the opposite way is almost as long, plus all of the other runners. It roots at every leaf node and can grow on from there. Do you still want seed of Pineapple and Kellogg's Breakfast tomatoes? Lea...See MoreRelated Professionals
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