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The Old Guy's Garden Record

July 18, 2025


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Sunday, July 13, 2025

I tried to mow our lawn yesterday. I went out early in the afternoon about two hours before a rain was predicted to arrive. After about ten minutes, I came in totally soaked with sweat and rainwater. But after cleaning up the mower, I was able to mow our lawn today, leaving the field next to us for tomorrow.

While on the riding mower, I was able to knock down some of the weeds growing in our main garden bed. Getting the lawn tractor into the raised bed takes a trick or two, but I got it done.

And has been the history of this season, we got another heavy rain again this evening.

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Friday, July 11, 2025

Katherine eating a tomatoGrandma's yeast rollsThe image at left is of a granddaughter who turns twenty on Sunday. She loved tomatoes, starting with grape tomatoes before moving on to our favorite Moira tomatoes. She also loves Grandma's Yeast Rolls. So I made a batch of rolls for her for a family gathering.

Squirrel on well coveerI used the overnight refrigerator method for the dough, causing it not to raise as much as I would have liked. But as usual, the rolls were delicious.

Speaking of delicious, a bunch of squirrels have found the birdseed we spread around our shallow well cover to their liking. One bold squirrel remained on the cover while I took today's splashshot of our garden. Sometimes, four or five squirrels hit the bird seed.

It's getting too late to plant sweet corn this year, but I hope to get some Eclipse peas, JLP cucumbers, carrots, and lima beans planted. If I ever get our East Garden plot turned over, it will go to a cover crop of buckwheat.

Stark Bro's Nurseries & Orchards

Thursday, July 10, 2025

I'm just gearing up for the day. But I took the time this morning to write both of our Indiana senators suggesting that they not support rescinding funding for public broadcasting.

I hope you'll similarly contact your senators: U.S. Senate website.

Park Seed

Wednesday, July 9, 2025

We started today with, what else, more rain. I do hope to get outside later and do a little gardening.

Gloxinias on dining room table

Gloxinias in sunroom windowSunroom temperatureSome of our gloxinias have finally come into bloom. Most of the bloomers are double blooms, which makes hand pollinating the flowers for seed saving a bit difficult.

Besides the gloxinias on our dining room table, I have ten very healthy gloxinias on a bookshelf inside our sunroom. The plants weren't doing well under our plant lights in the basement, so I moved them to the sunroom.

I wondered if the heat in the sunroom would hurt the plants. But despite some high temperatures above 100°F, the plants are thriving!

Besides the frequent rains and very high temperatures, an old neck injury has pretty much brought my outdoor gardening to a halt. I did try a little weeding yesterday of the bed our tall peas were in. I need to clear that bed to plant cucumbers in it. I also want to till the bed our garlic grew in to make way for a planting of supersweet Eclipse peas.

And while most of our main raised bed is covered with grass weeds and our East Garden plot is still untilled, I've decided to just go with what I can do and be happy with that.

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Friday, July 4, 2025 - Independence Day

Here's wishing you a safe and happy holiday weekend.

Chewy.com

Tuesday, July 1, 2025

Our Senior Garden - July 1, 2025Wunderground_tenday_250701After a very hot and wet June, we started July with a half inch of rain overnight. With our frequent, recent rains, everything is way too wet to work outside.

Our extended weather forecast from the Weather Underground suggests things may dry out enough to do some serious gardening in the next week or so.

I did take out several buckets of compost today. One was kitchen compost (mostly pea pods and coffee grounds) and another was filled with gloxinias that had failed to break dormancy. A third was partially filled with garlic scones I'd trimmed off our garlics when putting them on our drying/curing table in the garage.

Botanical Interests High Mowing Organic Seeds FTC Required Disclosure Statement: Botanical Interests, High Mowing Organic Seeds, Park Seed, and True Leaf Market are some of our Senior Gardening affiliate advertisers. Clicking through one of our ads or text links and making a purchase will produce a small commission for us from the sale. We're also a consumer member of the Fedco Seeds Cooperative. Park Seed True Leaf Market

Monday, June 30, 2025 - June Wrap-up

june_2025_anigifRain gaugeIt's been a frustrating start to our gardening season. First, there was too much rain to work our ground. Then a heat wave moved in, making it too hot to work out anytime but the early mornings. But...

So far this season we've had asparagus, peas, and what appears to be a good harvest of garlic. Our onions and tomatoes are doing well. But we have lots of weeds in our gardening beds.

And once again, we're getting rain...lots of it! We've received around two inches of precipitation over the last few days. That, and the return of temperatures in the 90s, will make outside work difficult.

Our tall pea vines are ready to be pulled and any good seed pods harvested for seed saving. I have Japanese Long Pickling cucumber transplants started in the basement to replace the peas.

Gloxinias in bloomOur other narrow bed where I recently harvested garlic will get planted to Eclipse peas. But both narrow beds need to dry out before any planting can occur.

Dill in bloomOn a more positive note, we have gloxinias in bloom on our dining room table. I began hand pollinating some of the blooms this morning for seed saving.

An awful lot of our gloxinias never emerged from dormancy. Fortunately, some did, and we have ten plants thriving in the somewhat extreme heat of our sunroom.

And while the recent strong winds blew over several of our dill plants, they're now in bloom.

So while I'm really discouraged to come to the end of June without our main bed fully planted and our East Garden untilled, there's still time to get some things going when our ground dries out.

Fruit Bouquets

Thursday, June 26, 2025

Digging garlicCart of garlicDespite the humid, ninety plus degree weather, I dug the rest of our garlic today. I did it in spurts, taking frequent breaks to cool off and hydrate.

This is about as early as I’ve ever dug garlic. But about half of the garlic stalks had fallen over, Some had separated from their bulbs, making digging a good bit more difficult. Also, despite my mulching, weeds were taking over the bed.

I won’t know how good a harvest we got until the garlic cures in the garage for a couple of weeks. Then I’ll trim tops and roots and weigh the garlic.

Our how-to, Growing Garlic.

Garlic on drying/curing table

I haven’t been doing much outdoor work of late, staying inside enjoying the air conditioning. First we had way too much rain, Now it’s dangerously hot for an old geezeer (gardener) to be pushing it outdoors. At this point, I wonder how much of a garden we'll have this year.

More out of habit than anything else, I picked a few peas this morning. I think I’m about done with them and need to let the existing vines ripen pods for seed saving.

Hoss Tools

Friday, June 20, 2025

Shelling peasWunderground Extended ForecastWhen I picked peas this morning, I went ahead and picked table ready peas and browned pods for seed saving. So while shelling, I shelled for table use and also shelled peas for seed saving.

It appears that our frequent rains are over for now. We have a week of dry, ninety degree days in our extended forecast! But with the break in the rains, maybe I can get some garden plots tilled and planted.

While our onion sets came up well, our planting of carrots and beets totally failed. And just a few potato plants emerged.

I'm planning on mowing the field next to us this afternoon where our large East Garden plot now sits idle. It's a one plus acre mow, and the grass is really high. But mowing it may clear the site of last year's compost pile for transplanting butternut squash into it. Butternuts really roam when putting out vines, so I grow them outside our East Garden, often on the site of an old compost pile.

Later

Site of previous compost pileButteernut squash transplantedI got back out and transplanted four pots of butternut squash plants. They went into the spot where our compost pile was last year, and the top two inches of soil there looked like black compost. You can see the compost in the photo at left.

Each planting hole got a sprinkle of commercial 10-10-10 fertilizer and then filled with Quick Start solution.

When the grass I mowed has dried a bit, I'll use our lawn sweeper to gather some to mulch around the plants. I'll also need to spray them with something for insect control. I got a lot of ant bites while doing the transplanting. Some liquid Sevin should slow them down, although I prefer using Captain Jack's Deadbug Brew, as it seems to prevent squash bugs from laying viable eggs.

1800Flowers

Thursday, June 19, 2025 - Juneteenth

From Elizabeth Warren on Facebook:

"On #Juneteenth, we celebrate the end of slavery in the United States. Today, we also recommit to fighting for racial justice."

I picked peas twice this morning. When picking, I noticed some tan to brown pods I’d missed, so I went back out and started saving peas for planting next season. Our good picked peas made enough to freeze another pint of them.

I generally take a day off after mowing, as it leaves my shoulders pretty sore. Instead of any gardening today, I uppotted a bunch of tomato plants I'd left in their deep sixpack inserts way too long. The Quinte, Earlirouge, and Crimson Sprinter plants went into a variety of shapes and sizes of larger quarters. If I ever get our East Garden turned, and the plants aren't stunted from my ill treatment, they should supply us with some nice, late tomatoes.

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Wednesday, June 18, 2025

I got our lawn mowed today. With all the rain we've had, I'd let the lawn go too long. When I came in from parking the mower in the garage, thunder began. We had strong storms come through, but haven't noticed any new storm damage. More rain is predicted for tonight.

I got another good picking of peas this morning. By tomorrow, I should have enough to freeze another pint of them.

Pea vines aging

And as happens, our pea vines are beginning to age and brown. There are still some blooms on the vines, but our season for tall, early peas is about over. I'll pick a few more times and then let the vines mature peas for seed saving.

Hoss Tools

Friday, June 13, 2025

Shelled peasHummingbirds at 32 oz feederIt’s a rainy Friday the Thirteenth here today. I got out between showers this morning and picked a nice bunch of peas. With what I’d already picked this week, there were enough to freeze another pint of early peas.

We’re enjoying seeing a multitude of hummingbirds at our feeders. There are obviously more than we’ve had in the past at this time of the season. But the little birds were wearing me out refilling their feeders. So…

I filled and hung a 32 ounce feeder we call “the jug.” I was up to filling the birds’ favorite ten ounce feeder twice a day plus another sixteen ounce feeder once a day. The birds didn't seem to mind the switch.

I'd brought in a sirloin tip roast yesterday and slow cooked it. When done, I split the roast saving half of it for today. The other half became a delicious beef barbecue.

Today, I cooked carrots, potatoes, mushrooms, onion, and garlic for the beef. I started to use garlic that hangs in a bag in our kitchen when I realized I had fresh garlic I could use. So I brought in three garlics from the garage drying table. But when I went to split cloves out of them, I found the wrappers to be as tough as leather! That made splitting out some cloves tough, but also hints that our garlic may not have any spoilage of the cloves.

Hummingbird Feeders

Thursday, June 12, 2025

Our Senior Garden - June 12, 2025Test garlic digRather than rush out to mud in the Eclipse pea seed I brought in yesterday, I started germination tests with the four bags of seed. The seed was saved in 2019, 2021, 2022, and 2023. All of the bags had previous germination results written on them, but the seed has been in our big freezer for years. When I checked the seed today, it appeared that all the shrunken seeds had absorbed moisture and fattened up a bit. That's a good sign.

Not really thrilled with the production of our tall early peas, I fertilized them with some Quick Start liquid fertilizer to encourage more blooms. We'll see if that causes the vines to put on more blooms.

And seeing the browning of the leaves on some of our garlic plants, I did a test dig of nine or ten garlics today. The softneck garlics were rather small. Of course, softnecks usually produce smaller garlic bulbs. There was one regular garlic of good size and an elephant garlic at okay size. What I didn't find was any rot on the bulbs, a good thing in this wet spring. And despite their smaller size, all of the garlic are usable. And freshly dug garlic has incredible flavor.

Hardware World

Tuesday, June 10, 2025

Apple TreesTall melon sproutsWe had a pretty much perfect morning today to spray our apple trees. There was little to no wind, and it’s not supposed to rain for several days. Our first spray of the season was with dormant oil. The next and today’s sprays were with Bonide Fruit Tree Spray. Since the Bonide spray has some really toxic stuff in it (Captan, Malathion, and Carbaryl), I wore a mask, gloves, and eye protection while spraying.

It appears that I left our melon and squash seedlings over our soil heating mat a day too long. All of the pots have germinated, but the plants are a bit tall. Getting the plants off the heat mat and from under the somewhat clear humidome would have prevented the legginess.

We got a rather light picking of peas this morning. That made me think to bring in our Eclipse pea seed. Eclipses are a supersweet variety that don't germinate well in cool soil. But the peas stay sweet when grown in warm weather.

Botannical Interests

Monday, June 9, 2025

Weedy bed
Patch somewhat weeded

Early peas frozenWe received another three quarters of an inch of rain overnight. So for now, our garden plots remain too wet to do any planting. Hmm I did see several people out mowing their lawns today. Their mowers must go through standing water better than ours does.

We didn’t get all that many peas in this morning’s picking. But with some previously picked and shelled peas, it was enough to freeze a pint of our early peas. It was time to empty out our Pyrex container of shelled peas, as some of them may have been there for several days. I haven’t found a good way to rotate the peas in it.

Blocked from gardening in our beds, I weeded one side of the patches on either side of our front steps. There were more hostas in the one side than I remember planting. Several of them will need to be moved to where they'll receive more light. When my knees and calves said to stop weeding on my hands and knees, I did.

It's cool to begin freezing produce from our garden. When I put the peas in our big freezer, I had to move several bags of frozen asparagus out of the way. Supper tonight will be grilled pork chops, baked potatoes, and the next to our last bag of frozen corn from last season.

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Sunday, June 8, 2025

Oregano out of control
Herb bed cleaned up

Second hummingbird feeder"Our" hummingbirds emptied their feeder in one day yesterday. So it was time today to hang another feeder. I'm guessing the hummingbirds have hatched out their first clutch of eggs of the season and the babies have left the nest. We'll probably have to hang one more feeder when the second clutch of eggs hatch and the birds leave the nest. At least, that's what usually happens in a normal season.

Something not normal is the dearth of white egrets on the Turtle Creek Reservoir. The water there is usually lousy with the birds, but I haven't seen even one so far this season. I did see a Blue Heron yesterday when driving across the causeway of the reservoir.

The oregano in our herb bed is doing its usual trick of trying to take over the bed, if not the world. I sort of let it go, and it's now in bloom. For best flavor, one wants to harvest oregano before it blooms. So, it was time today to cut it back.

True Leaf Market

Saturday, June 7, 2025

JLP packetJapanese Long Pickling cucumberWe had a nice morning today, so I picked and shelled more peas. When I took today's splashshot (top of the page photo) this afternoon, I also walked out to our peas and ended up picking a fistful more mature pea pods. Did I just miss all those peas this morning, or did they fatten up so quickly? It's probably a little of both.

Our how-to: Another Garden Delicacy: Homegrown Peas

I brought in last year's Japanese Long Pickling cucumber saved seed today and started two deep sixpack inserts of the variety. JLPs, as we call them, produce long thin cucumbers. They're ideal for making bread and butter or dill pickle slices. We also use them to make some incredible sweet pickle relish. The JLP plants will replace our tall early peas when the pea vines play out.

Feature story: A Cucumber of Distinction

This evening in a light sprinkle, I moved three Cora Cascade vincas into a large hanging basket pot. This is the second such pot I've started. With it, I will pretty well fill our main hooks under our back porch.

I'm going to need to hang a second hummingbird feeder from our back porch tomorrow. The tiny birds just about emptied a twelve ounce feeder in one day. This usually happens a little later in the season, but we seem to have some thirsty birds this year.

Park Seed

Friday, June 6, 2025

While I watched the Pacers/Thunder game last night, I started some melons and squash. For watermelon, I seeded Ali Baba, Blacktail Mountain, Crimson Sweet Virginia Select, and Kalahari triploid. For cantaloupe, it was Athena and Sugar Cube. The squash started was a Slick Pik. Other than the Kalahari, all of the varieties planted are old favorites that have done well in the past for us. Triploid watermelon varieties come and go. Our previous favorite is no longer available, so we're trying a new one.

Shelling peas

Things are still really wet out from our recent rains, with more coming tonight and tomorrow. I did get out this morning and picked enough peas to justify shelling them. They shelled out for enough for supper and possibly enough more to freeze a pint.

Stark Bro's Nurseries & Orchards

Thursday, June 5, 2025

Every picture tells a story, don't it. While the Rod Stewart classic song doesn't have anything to do with gardening, the song title came to mind as I looked at our main raised garden bed with standing water in it.

Standing water in main raised bed

Rain gauge showing 4 plus inches of rainToday's pea harvestWhen it finally quit raining, I put on my fishing boots and walked out to the garden. Our rain gauge was showing over four inches of precipitation in the last twenty-four hours! Even with what I've called a dry sump smack in the middle of our main raised bed, there was lots of standing water in the bed. The dry sump is just a hole dug as deep as possible with a post hole digger and backfilled with sand. It helps drain the bed of excess water.

After emptying the rain gauge, I was in for a couple of pleasant surprises. There were a lot of mature pea pods to pick. There's probably not enough there to yet make a meal, but it's a start.

Besides the peas, each of our Moira tomato plants had put on a small tomato. Based on a Google AI search, we should be picking tomatoes by early July.

Small Moira tomatoRuby-throated hummingbirdAnd to cap off my wet, outside gardening today, a male, Ruby-throated hummingbird posed on a branch of our laurel bushes when I had my camera with me. Unfortunately, I didn't have my long lens in hand to get a better shot.

With any serious outside work out of the question, I sterilized some more potting soil to start some cucumbers, melons, and squash.

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Wednesday, June 4, 2025

Potato sets in rowsStorm comingI cut our seed potatoes with one or two eyes per piece last evening. While I really didn't feel like it, I got out and planted the potato sets this afternoon. I was sort of racing against a storm that was moving in.

Marking the rows, shoveling a furrow down each row, watering with a mix of Serenade biofungicide and Quick Start fertilizer, and spacing the potato sets about a foot apart and covering them with soil took an hour or so. I beat the rain by an hour.

The potato sets went in about three inches deep, about two inches shallower than is usually recommended. The long eyes on some of the sets got totally covered, so we'll see how that works out.

I don't have a how-to on growing potatoes, as I'm not very good at it, I'll give you a link to a Seed Savers article on the subject.

I started some more gloxinias from seed yesterday. I also transplanted a Cora Cascade Vinca into a small hanging basket and three more in a large hanging basket.

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Tuesday, June 3, 2025

Our Senior Garden - June 3, 2025First ripe peasI put in a double row of onions from sets yesterday at the far end of our main raised garden bed. Now we have caged tomatoes at one end of the bed and onions at the other end. I'd planned to direct seed carrots and beets, but simply ran out of energy and tolerance for black flies. I hope to get them seeded today.

My big gardening treat for yesterday was finding our first ripe pod of peas. There was just one pod ready to be picked, and I didn't find any more this morning.

Realizing that I'm going to want to start using last year's compost pile, I started a new one yesterday. The new pile is at the east edge of the field, just outside our East Garden plot. When doing so, I pulled a bunch of volunteer tomato plants from the old pile. They could carry disease that might infect the tomato plants I want to put in the East Garden plot.

Purple pea bloomsGetting back to our peas, there are lots of pods filling out. And while our early peas are a landrace mix of the white blooming Champion of England and Maxigolt varieties, something has crossed into our saved seed producing lovely purple blooms. I'm not really sure if I should remove those blooms or if they will produce good, edible peas.

Hoss Tools and SeedsOh, and about those onions. I'd mail ordered some very expensive onion plants. Then I let them dry out in the basement! I put the dried plants in large pots with some wet soil to see if any of the plants survived my mistreatment.

And looking ahead, I have lots of healthy lettuce, broccoli, and cauliflower transplants under our cold frame ready to go into our main raised bed. And there's a bag of seed potatoes in the basement that I need to rescue from a mesh bag. I'll have to sacrifice the bag to not harm the sprouts the potatoes have put out.

Peas reipening

Later

I got out and direct seeded a double row of carrots and beets. The carrot varieties seeded were Mokum, Napoli, Naval, Scarlet Nantes, and Yaya. The beets were Red Ace and Burpee Golden. I haven't grown golden beets for years, so this planting should be interesting.

High Mowing Organic Seeds

Sunday, June 1, 2025

Garlic scapesExtended Forecast - June 1-10, 2025I snapped off the garlic scapes I mentioned yesterday. Some of the scape stems will get chopped and browned a bit in oil before going into something like Campbell's Green Bean Casserole. Instead of using French style green beans, I used some old canned green beans. I also departed from Campbell's recipe by adding some bacon and Monterey Jack cheese.

Later

The green bean casserole with some "improvements" wasn't all that great. I'll stay with the tried and true Campbell's recipe next time around.

Botanical Interests High Mowing Organic Seeds FTC Required Disclosure Statement: Botanical Interests, High Mowing Organic Seeds, Park Seed, and True Leaf Market are some of our Senior Gardening affiliate advertisers. Clicking through one of our ads or text links and making a purchase will produce a small commission for us from the sale. We're also a consumer member of the Fedco Seeds Cooperative. Park Seed True Leaf Market

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