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One of the Joys of Maturity


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The Old Guy's Garden Record

March 21, 2025


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Wednesday, March 19, 2025

Our Senior Garden - March 19, 2025Peas emergingIt's warm today, but blustery outside. Other than working on our outside hoses, I didn't do any outdoor work. Our main garden hose had begun to leak terribly at the shutoff and nozzle. And while I tried to get all the old parts off, the shutoff wouldn't budge despite applications of WD-40 and using pipe wrenches on it. So I swapped that hose onto our rain barrel and its hose went onto our hose reel with a new shutoff valve and nozzle.

After moving three of our egg carton petunias to a fourpack, I went out to take our daily splashshot. I also ventured out to our bed of peas. We're finally getting some good germination of the seed I planted on March 3. About half of the 18" wide row is up, suggesting we may get a good crop of early peas by June.

I realized yesterday that I hadn't yet started any vinca. Searching our seed in the big freezer, I didn't find any vinca seed. So I ordered some Cora Cascade and Pacifica seed from Park Seed. The Cora Cascades are great for hanging baskets. The Pacifica do well edging our garden plots.

Garden Tower Project

 
 

Saturday, March 15, 2025

Garlic upPea germinatingWe had some thunderstorms move in last night, but we only got about a quarter inch of rain. While the wind blew some stuff off our back porch, we really didn't have any wind damage like areas south of us got.

When looking out to our garden from the back porch this morning, I was able to see a strong stand of garlic up. There's one bare patch, but beyond that, the raised bed is filled with healthy looking garlic shoots. We'll probably dig garlic in early to mid-June. And that stand will give us enough to last a year, maybe make some garlic powder, and share some with our local food bank.

Our how-to: Growing Garlic.

And in a promising view, I saw a few peas trying to emerge. Planted about two weeks ago, I'd begun to worry that I'd gotten the peas in too early, too deep, or without any fungicide on them. But pea seed seems to know when to emerge in the spring. Our tall early peas are a mix of the Champion of England and Maxigolt varieties that I've allowed to cross over the last few years.

Our how-to: Another Garden Delicacy: Homegrown Peas.

In a case of some success and some failure, our Egg Carton Petunias are up. Only three of the Supercascades germinated and none of the Double Cascades. But the three are enough for one hanging basket. I re-seeded the empty cells of the egg carton with the Celebrity variety, a good one for the garden.

Egg carton petunias

Communal pots of stuff
Plants uppotted

Geraniums in sunroomOur tray of geraniums went up to our sunroom today. The room isn't heated, although it doesn't get down below freezing at this time of year. The cold nights are said to improve root growth and the sturdiness of the plants.

I got several communal pots of stuff uppotted to four- and sixpacks today: Two fourpacks of dianthus and one of rosemary. Dill, celery, and thyme went into deep sixpack inserts.

I'd meant to get a shot of our daffodils this morning. But by mid-afternoon, wind gusts had picked up to over 40 MPH. I had to reset my Canon T5i from its usual aperture preferred to a shutter speed of 1/250 to compensate for the flowers blowing violently in the wind. It's definitely March.

Daffodils in the wind

True Leaf Market

Tuesday, March 11, 2025 - Little by Little

Parsley and snapdragonsThe parsley and snapdragons I started in communal pots last month were ready to be moved to individual pots or cells today. While there were lots of plants in the pots, I only moved twelve parsley and twelve snapdragons to deep sixpack inserts.

I’m finding that I’m in worse physical shape this year than in previous springs. So I’m working at a little of this and that, not pushing too hard on outdoor work as I gradually get into gardening shape.

I’m about half way through clearing our raised asparagus bed of previous growth. I used lopping shears to cut the old asparagus stalks and lots and lots of tiny trees that had gotten started. The good news of the cutting was that I didn't see any new asparagus emerging. We actually had new asparagus coming up this time last year.

The spent asparagus stalks and our old pepper plants went beside our current compost pile. They’ll sit there until next spring, getting covered with garden refuse and kitchen scraps.

I started one variety of tomatoes yesterday. I seeded twelve cells (2 deep sixpack inserts) to Moiras for our main garden. Our other tomato varieties will get seeded later, as they’ll go into our East Garden that I’m always slow getting planted. I also started sixpacks of Goliath broccoli and Amazing cauliflower.

And buds on the stems of the rosebush cuttings I took recently have begun to open. But when I accidentally knocked one of the cuttings out of its pot, there was no sign of rooting on the bottom of the stem.

Park Seed

Friday, March 7, 2025

Our Senior Garden - March 7, 2025Red headed woodpeckerWe had a visual treat this morning. Red bellied woodpeckers often visit our shallow well cover. Today a red headed woodpecker was there. I hadn't seen this type before.

The long beak of the woodpeckers allows them to feast on seeds that have slipped between the boards of the well cover that other birds can't reach.

With some so-so weather yesterday, I chose to stay inside and cook. I first made a loaf of bread, combining an online Vienna bread recipe with our own Grandma's Yeast Rolls recipe. At first, I wasn't satisfied with the bread, but found that I'd not added enough moisture to the dough. But by today, the bread tasted fairly good, although it was pretty crumbly.

My other cooking was making a batch of portofino. I split the batch towards the end of the cooking, adding chicken to one pan and shrimp to another. My wife rarely eats shrimp, and I love it. Cutting a corner, I bought small cooked shrimp. It was good for a shrimp cocktail, but was lousy in the portofino. I'll go with large raw shrimp in the future.

Bread dough Loaf of Vienna bread Portofino

Rose bushDaffolils upI got outside today and trimmed our one rose bush. It's one I grew out from one of those small potted plants sold in discount stores for Valentines Day and such. I took some cuttings from it and started rooting them from a Facebook suggestion from Barbara Pleasant. She recommended putting the cuttings in potato pieces! While I added some rooting gel to the rose cuttings, I did put them in potatoes and those into potting mix. We'll see how that works out.

St. Jude Children's Research HospitalWhile on that side of the house, I grabbed a shot of our daffodils. Probably like many of you, ours have been up for a while. Fortunately, they haven't yet begun to bloom. We still have several freezing mornings in our forecast.

High Mowing Organic Seeds

Wednesday, March 5, 2025

Potting soil kettle cooling on back porch1-800-Flowers Deal of the WeekIt’s just plain nasty outside today. After a couple of windy but fairly warm days, it's cold (35°F), very windy (wind gusts of 40 MPH), and rainy with some snow flurries at times. It turned out that the Weather Underground’s extended forecasts were way off. I had to go out twice today. One trip was to retrieve our mail and the second was necessitated by our roadside trash can blowing into the road!

With this cold, wet spell, I’m a little worried about the early peas I seeded on Monday. But as I was talking with an old friend at the grocery yesterday, we agreed that pea seed seems to know just when to germinate. But at this point, I’m now wishing I’d treated the seed with Captan fungicide.

One job I did get done today was sterilizing a load of potting soil. Taking advantage of the cold weather, I let the kettle of soil cool on the back porch after it baked for an hour and a half at 400°F. Such baking pretty well eliminates any danger of damping off disease.

Chewy.com

Monday, March 3, 2025 - Planting Peas

Wide pea row seededWeather Underground Extended ForecastWe started out this morning with a low of 24°F. But with a predicted afternoon high in the 70s, I hoped to get some outdoor gardening done today. I’d planned to spray dormant oil on our apple trees this morning. But the wind picked up (20 MPH), putting off that activity. But it’s still early, as the trees probably won’t begin to bloom for several weeks.

Despite the wind, I could still plant peas. Our extended weather forecast suggests that warm, wet weather might pop the peas up out of the ground fairly quickly (I hope). I began the planting by measuring the sides of the row in the raised bed and staking and stringing the area. I came in six inches from the north side of the bed and left eighteen inches across the wide row. It actually narrowed down to about fourteen inches wide when I planted.

I spread and hoed in fertilizer, lime, and granular soil inoculant down the bed. Then I thoroughly watered the bed before liberally spreading pea seed. Most sources suggest spacing the seeds an inch apart. Since I had lots of our saved Champion of England and Maxigolt cross seed, I didn't bother spacing the seed. Since it's supposed to be warm out for about ten days, I omitted my usual practice of treating the seed with Captan to prevent seed rot.

I covered and tamped down the row, leaving the seed about an inch and a half deep.

Once the pea plants emerge, I'll surround them with a five foot tall double trellis. With the strong winds we now experience here, the trellises are necessary to keep the pea vines from bending and breaking. When the peas come out, I'll plant a succession crop of tall Japanese Long Pickling cucumbers.

While I had the hose out, I also watered our garlic that's coming up nicely from a fall planting.

I've probably left stuff out here, but I describe in some detail how we grow our peas in a how-to, Another Garden Delicacy: Homegrown Peas.

Stark Bro's Nurseries & Orchards

Saturday, March 1, 2025

Plant rackPots to be split upLet's hope the weather folklore, "In like a lion, out like a lamb" is true this year. Hoping I might get our early peas seeded in a few days, I raked out the narrow raised bed where they will go. I also dropped off a bag of compost/peat by our asparagus bed. But it was a bit too cold for much outdoor work today. It was twenty degrees warmer yesterday, but with 40 MPH winds!

I'm looking for a non-windy day without rain or a frost in the forecast to spray our apple trees with dormant oil. I also need a non-windy day, preferably after a rain, to burn off the boxes and fallen limbs we've accumulated.

Our plant rack is filling up. And once I move plants out of their communal pots to four- and sixpacks, things may begin to get crowded. To ease the coming crowding, I'll move our tray of geraniums to our sunroom. That room isn't heated and allows the geraniums to toughen up a bit and put on more root than top growth.

Looking ahead, I hope to soon seed broccoli, cauliflower, spinach, and lettuce. I rely on past experience on when to start stuff along with some help from Johnny's Selected Seeds Seed-Starting Date Calculator.

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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