"It's Like A Heat Wave!"
Martha & The Vandellas
Hello again! Well, after a calm and mild spring, summer arrived last week ushering in an East Coast "heat wave". Daily temperatures have been in the high 80's and low 90's which is a significant change from just a few weeks ago. The good news is that the humidity has remained relatively low making it a bit more bearable. That may not seem so bad to readers in the American southwest where temperatures are scorching hot. But, of course, the high temperatures here have put a good deal of stress on the garden as mid-day heat quickly dries out the soil. Ideally, then, we put out the soaker hoses and sprinklers in the morning hours before the sun begins to reach it's peak. (The soaker hoses are particulary useful with the zucchini plants whose large leaves tend to shed water away from the plant center.) This allows the plants to soak up much of the water before the sun has a chance to cook it off. If morning watering isn't possible, a good alternative is late afternoon/early evening before the sun sets. Nightime watering is not recommended due to the possibility of fostering fungi and other problems.
Mini Hollyhocks
All of our vegetables and flowers are doing well. We have been very fortunate not to have suffered any meaningful invasions of aphids, stink bugs, beetles or the like. We harvested our first cucumbers, zucchinis, raspberries, tomatoes, and green beans in the past week. The harvest of veggies will last much of the summer for the tomatoes, zukes and cukes, but not the raspberries which will soon be done for the year and green beans which will do well with a new planting when this batch is spent.
Cucumbers!
The cucumbers and butternut are coming along nicely, as is the corn. We can probably pick corn end of July, but the butternut, a "winter" vegetable will not be ready until Fall.
A baby Spaghetti Squash!
I remember, from my long ago childhood, that Maryland folks used an expression to describe the progress that the corn crop was making. They often referred to corn being "knee high by the Fourth of July". Time and agricultural advances have made that reference a bit outdated. Our corn is a bit over four feet tall today (June 26). Corn on the cob by the end of July?
A few feet of our corn "crop"
And, in case you're interested, our strawberry harvest yielded 13 pounds of berries while the sugar snap peas came to 4 pounds.
Thanks for stopping by. I hope to see you again next week!
Chuck
Cucumbers!
The cucumbers and butternut are coming along nicely, as is the corn. We can probably pick corn end of July, but the butternut, a "winter" vegetable will not be ready until Fall.
A baby Spaghetti Squash!
I remember, from my long ago childhood, that Maryland folks used an expression to describe the progress that the corn crop was making. They often referred to corn being "knee high by the Fourth of July". Time and agricultural advances have made that reference a bit outdated. Our corn is a bit over four feet tall today (June 26). Corn on the cob by the end of July?
A few feet of our corn "crop"
And, in case you're interested, our strawberry harvest yielded 13 pounds of berries while the sugar snap peas came to 4 pounds.
Thanks for stopping by. I hope to see you again next week!
Chuck