Search
Latest topics
» Indoor Lighting for Kitchen Herbs & Lettuceby OhioGardener Yesterday at 6:58 pm
» Catalog season has begun!
by OhioGardener Yesterday at 3:35 pm
» Happy Birthday!!
by AtlantaMarie Yesterday at 4:13 am
» Interesting Marketing for Compost
by OhioGardener 11/21/2024, 7:29 pm
» How does green turn to brown?
by OhioGardener 11/21/2024, 4:58 pm
» Ohio Gardener's Greenhouse
by OhioGardener 11/21/2024, 12:16 pm
» N & C Midwest: Nov. Dec. 2024
by OhioGardener 11/21/2024, 7:40 am
» Tree roots, yeeessss.....
by sanderson 11/20/2024, 2:21 am
» The SFG Journey-Biowash
by has55 11/19/2024, 7:37 pm
» What are you eating from your garden today?
by OhioGardener 11/19/2024, 8:27 am
» Cooked worms?
by KiwiSFGnewbie 11/19/2024, 1:04 am
» New SFG gardener in Auckland
by KiwiSFGnewbie 11/16/2024, 11:25 pm
» Kiwi's SFG Adventure
by KiwiSFGnewbie 11/12/2024, 7:10 pm
» Thanksgiving Cactus
by OhioGardener 11/12/2024, 5:40 pm
» Need Garden Layout Feedback
by markqz 11/9/2024, 9:16 pm
» Thai Basil
by Scorpio Rising 11/8/2024, 8:52 pm
» How best to keep a fallow SFG bed
by KiwiSFGnewbie 11/8/2024, 8:11 pm
» Preserving A Bumper Tomato Harvest with Freezing vs Canning
by plantoid 11/7/2024, 11:36 am
» Mark's first SFG
by sanderson 11/6/2024, 11:51 pm
» What Have You Picked From Your Garden Today
by OhioGardener 11/5/2024, 2:29 pm
» Greetings from Southeastern Wisconsin
by sanderson 11/5/2024, 2:01 pm
» Spinning Compost Bin-need some ideas
by rtfm 11/2/2024, 7:49 pm
» Growing fruit trees in Auckland
by OhioGardener 10/31/2024, 4:23 pm
» Vermiculite -- shipping sale through 10/31/2024
by markqz 10/30/2024, 2:27 pm
» N & C Midwest: October 2024
by Scorpio Rising 10/30/2024, 10:38 am
» Old Mulch and Closing Beds for Winter
by sanderson 10/26/2024, 11:00 pm
» Hello from Land of Umpqua, Oregon Zone 8b
by sanderson 10/25/2024, 3:14 pm
» Hello everyone!
by SFGHQSTAFF 10/24/2024, 3:22 pm
» Senior Gardeners
by sanderson 10/23/2024, 6:09 pm
» Hello from South Florida
by markqz 10/23/2024, 10:30 am
Google
May 2013 New England
+14
Lavender Debs
mollyhespra
hruten
Nicola
dvelten
edfhinton
sdugas164
camprn
judyj
DeborahC
NHGardener
philct
CapeCoddess
quiltbea
18 posters
Page 6 of 7
Page 6 of 7 • 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7
Great time to plant
When do you folks think you'll plant out?
I couldn't stand it anymore. We're going to have 5 days of rain and for the next 10 days it isn't going below 45 degrees. I planted. My transplants always do better when I put on my slicker and go plant in the rain.
DeborahC- Posts : 28
Join date : 2013-04-25
Location : Southern New Hampshire
Re: May 2013 New England
Deborah....Like you we're going to have 5 days of rain, but right now the sun is out and its 64 and just ideal for planting. I might get in a couple more things today myself.
You have to take your chances in between rain showers. The transplants and new seeds sown love the rain.
You have to take your chances in between rain showers. The transplants and new seeds sown love the rain.
quiltbea- Posts : 4707
Join date : 2010-03-21
Age : 82
Location : Southwestern Maine Zone 5A
Re: May 2013 New England
Tomato & pepper this morning (the chicken wire wasn't there before):
Came in the house for a 1/2 hour, went back out and found this:
...along with more tomato leaves gone!
I didn't realized that rabbits ate peps & toms, especially with all the lettuce surrounding them. But I'm thinking rabbit so I'm putting up a little fence, but could it be that tomato worm QB feels for? I didn't see any. What say you?
Also, will the peppers bush out? Is that what you mean by pinching, Camp...taking their heads off?
CC
Came in the house for a 1/2 hour, went back out and found this:
...along with more tomato leaves gone!
I didn't realized that rabbits ate peps & toms, especially with all the lettuce surrounding them. But I'm thinking rabbit so I'm putting up a little fence, but could it be that tomato worm QB feels for? I didn't see any. What say you?
Also, will the peppers bush out? Is that what you mean by pinching, Camp...taking their heads off?
CC
CapeCoddess- Posts : 6811
Join date : 2012-05-20
Age : 68
Location : elbow of the Cape, MA, Zone 6b/7a
Re: May 2013 New England
Grr. You know, that just makes me mad. Esp. when the plant is already that big.
I would think slug, cutworm.
I would think slug, cutworm.
NHGardener- Posts : 2305
Join date : 2011-02-25
Age : 63
Location : Southern New Hampshire
Re: May 2013 New England
That pepper plant is going to get big & juicy & lush.
43 years a gardener and going strong with SFG.
https://squarefoot.forumotion.com/t3574-the-end-of-july-7-weeks-until-frost
There are certain pursuits which, if not wholly poetic and true, do at least suggest a nobler and finer relation to nature than we know. The keeping of bees, for instance. ~ Henry David Thoreau
https://squarefoot.forumotion.com/t1306-other-gardening-books
Re: May 2013 New England
camprn wrote:That pepper plant is going to get big & juicy & lush.
YEAH!!! Thanks!
Is this the culprit? I have it in a jar waiting for ID.
Does he get a reprieve?
CC
CapeCoddess- Posts : 6811
Join date : 2012-05-20
Age : 68
Location : elbow of the Cape, MA, Zone 6b/7a
Re: May 2013 New England
I highly doubt it. That plant looked like it was munched from above, to me. BUT, I wasn't a witness to the fact, so I cannot say for sure.CapeCoddess wrote:camprn wrote:That pepper plant is going to get big & juicy & lush.
YEAH!!! Thanks!
Is this the culprit? I have it in a jar waiting for ID.
Does he get a reprieve?
CC
43 years a gardener and going strong with SFG.
https://squarefoot.forumotion.com/t3574-the-end-of-july-7-weeks-until-frost
There are certain pursuits which, if not wholly poetic and true, do at least suggest a nobler and finer relation to nature than we know. The keeping of bees, for instance. ~ Henry David Thoreau
https://squarefoot.forumotion.com/t1306-other-gardening-books
Re: May 2013 New England
Camp, do you have one of those bug ID links handy please? I've been doing searches and can find one. This time I'll bookmark it!
CC
CC
CapeCoddess- Posts : 6811
Join date : 2012-05-20
Age : 68
Location : elbow of the Cape, MA, Zone 6b/7a
Re: May 2013 New England
Look at the stickies in the Pests forum. It's a moth worm, I think.
43 years a gardener and going strong with SFG.
https://squarefoot.forumotion.com/t3574-the-end-of-july-7-weeks-until-frost
There are certain pursuits which, if not wholly poetic and true, do at least suggest a nobler and finer relation to nature than we know. The keeping of bees, for instance. ~ Henry David Thoreau
https://squarefoot.forumotion.com/t1306-other-gardening-books
Re: May 2013 New England
camprn wrote:That pepper plant is going to get big & juicy & lush.
Cutting in from the PNW (we LOVE Quilt Bea on the PNW Forum, she's like family), Your comment caught my eye camp. This is my first year growing peppers (new greenhouse). Should I be trimming them back if nature won't do it for me?
TIA
Peppers to the right (a week ago)
Re: May 2013 New England
I typically pinch the center terminal end to the next node when pepper plant is about 14" tall. Then I do not prune again unless there is a reason other than promoting growth.
http://wiki.answers.com/Q/The_difference_between_lateral_and_terminal_buds
http://wiki.answers.com/Q/The_difference_between_lateral_and_terminal_buds
43 years a gardener and going strong with SFG.
https://squarefoot.forumotion.com/t3574-the-end-of-july-7-weeks-until-frost
There are certain pursuits which, if not wholly poetic and true, do at least suggest a nobler and finer relation to nature than we know. The keeping of bees, for instance. ~ Henry David Thoreau
https://squarefoot.forumotion.com/t1306-other-gardening-books
Re: May 2013 New England
Oh man - I don't know about you all, but rain city for the next few days here. This is why I went to raised beds to begin with. I planted squash today in the field because it's too congested for my raised beds, and 4 inches down I hit the water table. Should've done raised mounds.
Dry spring, now the deluge...
Dry spring, now the deluge...
NHGardener- Posts : 2305
Join date : 2011-02-25
Age : 63
Location : Southern New Hampshire
Re: May 2013 New England
NHGardener wrote:4 inches down I hit the water table. Should've done raised mounds.
Is that why we do raised mounds??? Hehe...I just do them because I...I don't know why...just thought that's what we were supposed to do. *shrug*
I planted cuc seeds a few days ago. I'm guessing all this rain will be good for them. Not so sure about the 45 degree nites coming up tho. I'm considering putting milk jug cloches over the peppers, maybe some black plastic over the cuc seeds.
Is anyone covering toms and such for the coming cold?
CC
CapeCoddess- Posts : 6811
Join date : 2012-05-20
Age : 68
Location : elbow of the Cape, MA, Zone 6b/7a
Re: May 2013 New England
Forecast is for 38 Sunday nite here so I think I'll cover my toms, hopefully, one last time. If they predict less that 40, I cover. Otherwise, they have to take care of themselves.
That also tells me to hold off til Mon or Tues to put in my potted determinates so I don't have to cover all of those also. I don't have that many extra towels and blankets to spare.
I even unwrapped my ultra early tomato experiment plants for the day. Warm and humid today. I'll clip back the plastic before evening tho. I don't want to lose the fruits and blossoms I've already got.
I want to put 3 more indeter toms out in my flower garden but its too darn wet today and too cold Sun nite. Another task awaiting Mon or Tues. I guess that means reading and watching TV for me today. I already shopped for the long weekend and got home before the big crowds that were heading to the 3 grocery store chains in our area as I was driving home.
I wish you all a wonderful Memorial Day Weekend!
That also tells me to hold off til Mon or Tues to put in my potted determinates so I don't have to cover all of those also. I don't have that many extra towels and blankets to spare.
I even unwrapped my ultra early tomato experiment plants for the day. Warm and humid today. I'll clip back the plastic before evening tho. I don't want to lose the fruits and blossoms I've already got.
I want to put 3 more indeter toms out in my flower garden but its too darn wet today and too cold Sun nite. Another task awaiting Mon or Tues. I guess that means reading and watching TV for me today. I already shopped for the long weekend and got home before the big crowds that were heading to the 3 grocery store chains in our area as I was driving home.
I wish you all a wonderful Memorial Day Weekend!
quiltbea- Posts : 4707
Join date : 2010-03-21
Age : 82
Location : Southwestern Maine Zone 5A
Re: May 2013 New England
Hmm. I don't think I'd cover for 45*, only for freezing.
I did put gallon jugs over the squash plants I put out there. Went out today to plant some more and sunk 4" in mud, it was almost like quicksand - bleh. And inches more rain predicted. I would've held off till after this weekend, but they're starting to yellow as it is... I think I'll hold off the pumpkin transplants till after the weekend.
However, the raised beds are 100% planted, so yay. And I don't worry about drainage issues in them because MM is great for drainage, combined with raised beds, it's a great system for soggy soils.
Edit: Oh, I guess QB says 40*. Hmm. I see two 38* nights coming up. Hmm again.
They'll freeze in 38*?
I did put gallon jugs over the squash plants I put out there. Went out today to plant some more and sunk 4" in mud, it was almost like quicksand - bleh. And inches more rain predicted. I would've held off till after this weekend, but they're starting to yellow as it is... I think I'll hold off the pumpkin transplants till after the weekend.
However, the raised beds are 100% planted, so yay. And I don't worry about drainage issues in them because MM is great for drainage, combined with raised beds, it's a great system for soggy soils.
Edit: Oh, I guess QB says 40*. Hmm. I see two 38* nights coming up. Hmm again.
They'll freeze in 38*?
NHGardener- Posts : 2305
Join date : 2011-02-25
Age : 63
Location : Southern New Hampshire
Re: May 2013 New England
Uh oh. Looking around on the web, I see that tomatoes can suffer stunting/production issues if it drops below a certain temperature, the one I saw was 45*. I guess this is why gardeners always tell you: don't rush your hot weather veggie plantings.......
Okay, so I am definitely going to cover with agrabon on those 2 cold nights, but I hope that's enough to keep them from being underachievers.
Also, I'm seeing "stressed at 55 or below" - which will be daytime temps tomorrow & next day. SO - I think I'll put agrabon row cover over the tomatoes and leave it there for 48 hrs. I don't have a hoop, so I guess I'll just drape it over - you think that's okay?
Plus the peppers/eggplants, I'll agrabon those too. Cukes too?
Okay, so I am definitely going to cover with agrabon on those 2 cold nights, but I hope that's enough to keep them from being underachievers.
Also, I'm seeing "stressed at 55 or below" - which will be daytime temps tomorrow & next day. SO - I think I'll put agrabon row cover over the tomatoes and leave it there for 48 hrs. I don't have a hoop, so I guess I'll just drape it over - you think that's okay?
Plus the peppers/eggplants, I'll agrabon those too. Cukes too?
NHGardener- Posts : 2305
Join date : 2011-02-25
Age : 63
Location : Southern New Hampshire
Re: May 2013 New England
I just finished planting out seeds of zucchini & bush beans. I topped them off with unfinished compost from the bottom of the pile, so it seemed mostly finished and it was very warm. I wanted them in for the rain that we're getting here until Sunday afternoon/evening.
The roads here are like parking lots with all the folks coming to the Cape for the weekend. If I'm smart I won't venture off the property til Tuesday morning. Guess it's rain gardening for me for the next few days.
CC
The roads here are like parking lots with all the folks coming to the Cape for the weekend. If I'm smart I won't venture off the property til Tuesday morning. Guess it's rain gardening for me for the next few days.
CC
CapeCoddess- Posts : 6811
Join date : 2012-05-20
Age : 68
Location : elbow of the Cape, MA, Zone 6b/7a
Re: May 2013 New England
quiltbea wrote:
I even unwrapped my ultra early tomato experiment plants for the day. Warm and humid today. I'll clip back the plastic before evening tho. I don't want to lose the fruits and blossoms I've already got.
I have the Victory Garden book out of the library and saw how he does early toms. He eats tomatoes by June 1st! I'm going to buy that book...it's a keeper! Thanks for the heads up on that one, QB!
You have a happy & safe holiday also.
OH, I forgot to show you guys my very first ever baby broccoli head:
Also, my first ever fenced in SFG...this is my lowest bed and the one the rabbit savagely attacked. I used most of the grids as stakes for the chicken wire. This bed contains toms, peppers, onions from sets & seed, lettuce, garlic and radishes:
CC
CapeCoddess- Posts : 6811
Join date : 2012-05-20
Age : 68
Location : elbow of the Cape, MA, Zone 6b/7a
Re: May 2013 New England
I lit my woodstove again.
43 years a gardener and going strong with SFG.
https://squarefoot.forumotion.com/t3574-the-end-of-july-7-weeks-until-frost
There are certain pursuits which, if not wholly poetic and true, do at least suggest a nobler and finer relation to nature than we know. The keeping of bees, for instance. ~ Henry David Thoreau
https://squarefoot.forumotion.com/t1306-other-gardening-books
Re: May 2013 New England
NHG... I take 40* as a guide because in micro climates it can sometimes drop to around 32 even when 'they' tell us 38 or 40. I just want to be prepared for a nasty drop.
CapeC.....I like your anti-rabbit protection. It sure looks like it'll work. Good luck. I love rereading Bob Thomson's book every spring and summer by the month.
More rain expected here all weekend including Monday. It isn't stopping the vacationers tho. The Mem'l Day weekend influx to the lakes is happening. I like to shop early on a weekday morning starting now or the parking lots are crowded as are the checkout aisles. I may have mentioned that I live just up the road from beautiful Sebago Lake, the 2nd largest lake in our state and that means many tourists from Mem'l Day to Labor Day each year. Scattered around us are about 6 more smaller lakes. Our highway consists of only two lanes plus breakdown lanes so it gets pretty crowded. I don't begrudge them enjoying our fine wooded lake areas. Its a perfect place to spend summers being a lot cooler than south of us and with many lake and ocean beaches and super seafood restaurants. Who wouldn't love it here for the summer.
My SFG beds are doing fine with the rain but my flower beds aren't so lucky. They aren't raised and my several herbs planted in those beds plus the brassicas are getting might water-logged right now. I hope it lets up a little as I do for all of my gardener friends here on the forum. At least the Irises are loving it. They like to be kept moist anyway and they are loving this rain and the calyxes are filling out beautifully which means blossoms very soon now.
Let's hope our rains slow down a bit and a a little sunshine peeks thru this weekend.
CapeC.....I like your anti-rabbit protection. It sure looks like it'll work. Good luck. I love rereading Bob Thomson's book every spring and summer by the month.
More rain expected here all weekend including Monday. It isn't stopping the vacationers tho. The Mem'l Day weekend influx to the lakes is happening. I like to shop early on a weekday morning starting now or the parking lots are crowded as are the checkout aisles. I may have mentioned that I live just up the road from beautiful Sebago Lake, the 2nd largest lake in our state and that means many tourists from Mem'l Day to Labor Day each year. Scattered around us are about 6 more smaller lakes. Our highway consists of only two lanes plus breakdown lanes so it gets pretty crowded. I don't begrudge them enjoying our fine wooded lake areas. Its a perfect place to spend summers being a lot cooler than south of us and with many lake and ocean beaches and super seafood restaurants. Who wouldn't love it here for the summer.
My SFG beds are doing fine with the rain but my flower beds aren't so lucky. They aren't raised and my several herbs planted in those beds plus the brassicas are getting might water-logged right now. I hope it lets up a little as I do for all of my gardener friends here on the forum. At least the Irises are loving it. They like to be kept moist anyway and they are loving this rain and the calyxes are filling out beautifully which means blossoms very soon now.
Let's hope our rains slow down a bit and a a little sunshine peeks thru this weekend.
Last edited by quiltbea on 5/25/2013, 12:02 am; edited 1 time in total (Reason for editing : spelling)
quiltbea- Posts : 4707
Join date : 2010-03-21
Age : 82
Location : Southwestern Maine Zone 5A
Re: May 2013 New England
Wow Capecoddess! that broccoli looks great!
Mine are still just leaves although they do look happy with the days of deluge and overcast that we are having!
I am only zone 3b so even with transplants and hoop coverings i am still a bit behind a lot of you i think. But, i do have a lot of things sprouting and growing and have managed to not kill a single transplant by forgetting it while i was hardening it off this year!
So far the only things i have been able to pick have been rhubarb which is plentiful and chives which are simply indomitable.
Mine are still just leaves although they do look happy with the days of deluge and overcast that we are having!
I am only zone 3b so even with transplants and hoop coverings i am still a bit behind a lot of you i think. But, i do have a lot of things sprouting and growing and have managed to not kill a single transplant by forgetting it while i was hardening it off this year!
So far the only things i have been able to pick have been rhubarb which is plentiful and chives which are simply indomitable.
Re: May 2013 New England
I ate most of the leaves this morning in my weekly soup pot. Hoping I left enuff to keep that head growing.morsel wrote:Wow Capecoddess! that broccoli looks great!
Check out this freakin' lettuce my neighbor gave me - to the top left is my blender:
It filled up my whole weekly lettuce box once chopped, which means it was at least a lb. She uses earth & compost with organic fertilizer.
Today is a perfect day for canning beans. I'm doing kidney & black, 3 lbs dried of each. Half the kidneys are in the pressure canner now so I'm heading out to plant some Kentucky Wonder bean seeds hoping that the soaking they will be getting for at least the next 24 hours will be good for them. Apparently summer is hitting next week, but not sure if that means the Cape, too, or not.
What are ya'll doing on this cold drizzly weekend?
CC
CapeCoddess- Posts : 6811
Join date : 2012-05-20
Age : 68
Location : elbow of the Cape, MA, Zone 6b/7a
Re: May 2013 New England
that's a nice lettuce!CapeCoddess wrote:
What are ya'll doing on this cold drizzly weekend?
CC
Today outside it is 42*F, rainy and windy so I am painting beehives, doing some housework taking a nap and then I am treating myself to the new Star Trek movie.
43 years a gardener and going strong with SFG.
https://squarefoot.forumotion.com/t3574-the-end-of-july-7-weeks-until-frost
There are certain pursuits which, if not wholly poetic and true, do at least suggest a nobler and finer relation to nature than we know. The keeping of bees, for instance. ~ Henry David Thoreau
https://squarefoot.forumotion.com/t1306-other-gardening-books
Re: May 2013 New England
camprn wrote:that's a nice lettuce!CapeCoddess wrote:
What are ya'll doing on this cold drizzly weekend?
CC
Today outside it is 42*F, rainy and windy so I am painting beehives, doing some housework taking a nap and then I am treating myself to the new Star Trek movie.
How exciting! Please let me know how the movie is. I have to wait til it's on DVD coz I get sensory overload at the theater.
Check this out...I have a cherry tomato!!! I think it's a Sungold but it could be a Sweet 100. Will have to wait til/if it colors up before I know for sure:
AND the strawberries are a'comin':
Meanwhile, the whole SFG is in full swing. Cupboards 1, 2 & 3 in front on the right contain kale, broccoli, cabbage, collards, walking onions, chard, chives & tomatoes. I harvested the rest of the spinach today so have 2 empty newly composted sqs in there - what to plant, what to plant:
Cupboards 3, 4 & 5 w/ toms, peas, daikon and newly planted beans in the composted black MM where the spinach I finished harvesting today used to be:
Boxes 1 & 2 w/ lettuce, beets, chard, tomatoes in the front one and garlic, lettuce, carrots(?) & bush peas that look the same as climbing peas to me, in the rear one:
Half the beans are canned, half to go. What a great day on Cape Cod!!!
CC
CapeCoddess- Posts : 6811
Join date : 2012-05-20
Age : 68
Location : elbow of the Cape, MA, Zone 6b/7a
Re: May 2013 New England
CapeC.....Your garden is looking just beautiful....and with lots of crops to come. Congrats.
quiltbea- Posts : 4707
Join date : 2010-03-21
Age : 82
Location : Southwestern Maine Zone 5A
Page 6 of 7 • 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7
Similar topics
» March 2013, New England
» July 2013 New England
» New England: October 2013
» New England: November 2013
» August 2013, New England
» July 2013 New England
» New England: October 2013
» New England: November 2013
» August 2013, New England
Page 6 of 7
Permissions in this forum:
You cannot reply to topics in this forum