Showing posts with label edamame. Show all posts
Showing posts with label edamame. Show all posts

Thursday, August 22, 2013

Almost fall

After a period of cooler temperatures, both frightening and exciting, summer seems to have started up again. But the front garden knows that fall is coming.

At the top of the stairs, the cucumbers and tomatoes are fading.
The cucumbers have gotten mildew, though I don't know if it's downy or powdery. I suspect powdery.

Mildewed cucumber!
I haven't done anything about it, since we're trying to be organic here, and the plants out back are fine. I'll probably just pull the two plants out front and replace them with something for the fall. The only problem is choosing between broccoli and sugar snap peas. Sugar snap peas would usually win, since they're guaranteed to do well and I love them, but I'd like to try at least one broccoli plant out front.

At least the third wave of beans is going well.

Provider bush bean flowers.
Edamame pods.

It looks like I'll get more, and bigger, beans from the 10 or so plants out front than from all of the summer ones out back. I'm developing a serious dislike of the mulberry tree that gives the shadier bed out back its name.

In the back there's never much to report, as it's mostly tomato plants chugging along, doing their late summer thing but at a slooow pace. The last minute bed I threw all of my extras into turned out to be a very good move.


It's a mess in the back, where the stakes keep falling over, but the plants don't seem to mind too much and have been supplying a steady stream of Sun Gold cherry tomatoes, with some Black Krims that might make it to maturity. This bed has never even had a suspicious, blighty looking leaf show up.

And a whackload of harvest pictures since I haven't been keeping up.





Thursday, August 8, 2013

Bits and bobs

These days, round three of the beans are coming along nicely.

Two week old provider bush beans
Provider bush beans to the right, nearly 2 weeks after planting.
Edamame plants flowering
Edamame flowering, planted back in July.
I'm hoping for more and bigger soybeans from this batch, since they'll get direct sun. The ones in the back garden have so little sun they don't even reach upwards, instead they just snake around on the ground, lost.

Two more eggplants will be ready soon, maybe even around the same time.

Two eggplants growing on the plant

It's cooled down enough these days I might consider a baked dish, especially if I get one or two more from my CSA.

Here's how the front looks this morning, which mostly differs from last week in that I've moved some plants around. And also a new zinnia bloomed.

Overview of front steps container garden in early August

Next year the front needs more flowers, definitely.

In the back I managed a better picture of my thick and thin cucumbers a couple of days ago.

Oddly shaped cucumbers

Poking around online led to the usual suspects: uneven watering, lack of nutrition, or too much nitrogen. But another possible culprit is uneven pollination of the flowers, which I'd had no idea about. My money is on water though, since I rarely water out back. It's been a wet enough summer that I can get away with it, and watering means standing still for more than 5 seconds which leads to more complete mosquito bite coverage.

Otherwise the back keeps churning out cherry tomatoes, below pictured with the roommate's cat.

This cat doesn't care about cherry tomatoes at all

Friday, August 2, 2013

Blending together

Summer garden updates sure do run together after a while. Even the newest seedlings aren't quite the miracle they were back in March. One magical thing the summer does have are the harvests:

July 27th
July 29th 
This morning (August 2nd already!)
The first eggplant got used on a pizza that same night. That photo also includes lettuce and arugula, a rare sight since it's usually eaten directly after it's picked. Sometime I should detail what happens with the food, especially since this might not count as a real gardening blog until I post a photo of homemade pickles.

Yesterday and last night were rainy and sometimes windy, and that combined with not visiting the back garden since Tuesday meant I lost out on a few cherry tomatoes.

Poor fallen tomatoes.
Between the unsalvageable fallen tomatoes and a few that had split open on the plants I'm down a whole handful, but the price of good food is eternal vigilance and apparently I'm not always ready to pay.

I also lost my most recent eggplant blossom, which you can make out on the ground in the photo below.


I'm not sure why it fell off, hopefully some of the other nascent flowers will soon bloom to make up for it.

In other news out back I think the older soybean plants are on their way out.

Older plants are on the right, with yellowing leaves and bean pods.
There are quite a few pods that never filled out, and most of the ones that did have been fairly small. Next time they'll go someplace else, even if it's outside of the protected beds. They're one plant the cats and squirrels don't seem to bother once they're big enough.

Some of the latest cucumber out back are coming in oddly shaped, varying thickness along their length. This is a bad picture to show what I mean, but the adolescent cucumber below is sort of gourd shaped, something that hasn't happened to the front cucumbers.


I can't imagine how bored any NSA or CIA operatives would be if they had to trawl through records of my googling: fallen eggplant blossoms, weird cucumber shape, how to tell when edamame is ripe.

Monday, July 29, 2013

I take it all back

Yesterday, not 12 hours after I wrote about how worried I was about the transplanted eggplant, it had already started to perk up. And today not only is the stem lifted up from the side of the pot but all four of the green beans I planted in the same pot have sprouted.

Recovering eggplant.
Baby "Provider" bush beans. You can't quite see the fourth one from this angle but the stem is pushing up the dirt between the left and middle seedlings.
In fact the whole front was looking pretty nice this morning, after the rainy day we had yesterday.


Of course by early afternoon everything was dried out and droopy, but nothing 4 gallons of water couldn't fix.

In the back things are chugging along, slowly. There's a bunch of new cucumbers starting out, and a few tiny black krims just getting started. It's a relief to see that some blossoms made it through the heat wave, though full sized tomatoes take their time back there so it'll be some time before the real celebration.


My second planting of edamame have been flowering and setting fruit too, but I'll be lucky to get much from that bed.

At least three edamame pods and more to come.
Behind the high tech bean trellis you can see the empty space where the fall broccoli and brussels sprouts will go, along with a new trellis at the other end.


On the right side there's a sweet potato vine and on the left I've wrapped a regular potato plant around the string. The bamboo holding this up is 5' tall; this is what happens when you plant potatoes in the shade.

Saturday, July 27, 2013

First, the bad news

The transplanted eggplant isn't exactly flourishing.

Two days in.
It's not totally dead either, but I'm not sure what I can do for it. If anything the pot it's in has too much water, so I'll just wait and see some more, again.

Then there's the figs, which haven't grown at all since the first couple of weeks they came in.


I wasn't expecting them to get huge, it is a tiny plant in a tiny pot after all, but I worry they don't get enough water/nutrients/whatevs and I'll be looking at tiny green figs in October, wondering where it all went so wrong.

Finally the cucumber that had one end cutely supported by the plant is growing all funny, even though I clipped it free the day after I took the picture, just to avoid this scenario.


It's not a huge tragedy or anything, but these variable thickness cucumbers I seem so adept at growing are harder to pack into jars for pickling. Maybe I'll just end up with a lot of slices for sandwiches.

The good news is I can console myself with at least a few berries or cherry tomatoes every day.

This morning, from the front garden.
Friday, from the back garden.
Thursday, from the front garden.
And my first eggplant is almost big enough to harvest, any day now...

Tuesday, July 16, 2013

In the back

Finally, finally, I got around to picking up some bamboo stakes for the tomatoes out back. Of course I still need more but it's, like, 110 degrees or so and kind of a hassle to bike to home depot for more. So this happened in the sunnier bed:

Sunnier bed, with staked up tomatoes at last.

Towards the back you can make out the tips of the 6' stakes and closer to the front are some 5' stakes (there was only one package of 6' ones available). In front are cucumbers, that are climbing over everything, and two eggplants that have barely grown since I transplanted them in... mid-May?

In addition to the cherry tomatoes which have been growing and ripening for a few weeks now, there are real tomatoes too.

In the center, a future black krim.
Also quite a few baby cucumbers, but that's about it. Out front the eggplant has flowered but back here it's still waiting to make its move.

The shadier bed is pretty boring by comparison, since I ripped out all of the brassicas except for two cabbages that started heading up, though I doubt they'll do much.

Shadier bed.

There are still some edamame growing, and a couple of the sweet potatoes towards the fence are getting a little viney, but the middle of the bed is cleared for fall plants.

More stakes are needed for the other bed, which has all of its tomato, and potato for that matter, plants flopped left and right. There are a few staked up in the back row, but the front is a mess.

The bonus bed.
On the left is a literal pile of tomato plant limbs and on the right there's potato plants leaning over the edge of the bed.

I wish there more detailed shots but I started taking pictures after watering which roused the mosquitoes from whatever portal to hell they had been waiting in, so the back garden tour got cut short. However I remembered to take pictures of what I harvested this time!


There's a cucumber, a few cherry tomatoes, and a bunch of unripe ground cherries that had fallen already. I actually harvested a similar size cucumber on Friday, the first this year, but forgot to document until it was halfway eaten. Someday I'll remember to take a photo when I'm bringing in a bunch of herbs and lettuce and scallions and such.

Friday, July 12, 2013

Front garden update

An overview looking up the steps.

On the steps are strawberries, dill, basil, lemon basil, rue, and some bedraggled marigolds.

Down at the bottom, there are definitely figs happening!


And definitely ground cherries happening.


There's even a little nasturtium flower peeking out under the ground cherry. I'm not sure why this nasturtium is so tragic looking, I figured if it were lacking in sun it'd start inching out over the pot edge but perhaps this is a different type than I've grown before? Anyway so far it's just sat under, growing straight up at a sad rate, while its siblings in my window box have been flowering for the past couple of weeks.

Last weekend I split my rue plant into two pots, one of them is down by the cherries and both are doing well.

Rue.

More tomatoes are ripening, though the Isis don't seem to set nearly as many fruit as the Sun Gold out back. There are also Isis in the back but they've been slower to bloom than the front ones. I suppose in a few weeks or a month I'll know if the sometimes lack of water out front or the size of the container have held these guys back, since by then the back garden plants should have caught up.

Isis Candy Shop cherry tomatoes.

There's also a few eggplant flowers, and I planted some edamame in the pot that used to hold the peas, so I guess those'll be ready in... Octoberish?

Eggplant flowers, a little blurry. The eggplant is the the same pot as the cucumber and seems to be holding its own for now.
Just sprouted edamame, next to the tomatoes.

There's actually edamame that looks ready to harvest in the back, along with a few Sun Gold cherry tomatoes, but the mosquitoes back there make it kind of unfun to visit these days.

Wednesday, May 22, 2013

Back garden update

Both back beds are nearly all planted!
Shadier bed.
The shadier bed has spinach, kale, and lettuce up at the top. Then the cabbage, broccoli, and brussels sprouts, last seen up close here. At the bottom of the photo are the beans and peas. Unlike out front, the peas back here have barely grown at all, they get the least sunlight of anything here, poor things.
Sunnier bed.
The sunnier bed has some (tiny) herbs up top, followed by ground cherries and cherry tomatos. Closer to the bottom (and with more space in between) are the larger tomatoes, and then along the bottom are eggplant, cucumber, and a lone pepper plant.

Much of both beds are half-assedly mulched with newspaper weighted down with twigs and other garden detritus. Both beds are also caged in with wildlife netting stretched over 1x2s and held taut by nails at each corner, which can be easily unhooked from the nails so the beds are accessible. I'm not sure what happens when the tomatoes get too tall.

For contrast, here's a view of the back from a month ago, when only the shadier bed was planted. This was when the forsythia was in bloom (also the magnolias in other yards), and the trees were mercifully bare.
April 15th.
All of business towards the front of the garden is the landlord's projects. They've put out grass seeds, but that doesn't do so well when it gets really shady back here, which it will.