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lavender

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Everything posted by lavender

  1. So is there an explanation for a boulder moving uphill other than the supernatural one?
  2. Who knows? I'm never sure where anything goes. It might be in the dimension to which all of the lost socks find their way.
  3. I lost my original avatar over that swap. I didn't have it backed up and had to go looking for it I never did find the original.
  4. I could never decide if Oscar the Grouch or the Cookie Monster was my favorite. I leaned toward Oscar but the Cookie Monster had a dark side too.
  5. Yeah, we've lost some of the better ones over the years. Either Steve bans them or they go away mad.
  6. I gave my peppers and basil a good spraying with a combination viruscide and fungicide and the new leaves are coming in fine. Hope it isn't too late for the plants.
  7. My peppers and basil all have black leaf spot or just are stunted. Too much rain. I did spot one nice pepper today so I'm thinking that the larger bell peppers are going to set fruit. Curling leaves can be caused by anything from insect damage to environmental stress. I agree with your solution. Since we won't starve if the pepper plants bite the dust the simplest thing is to pull them up. It's frustrating but not as time consuming as trying to save them. I did spray all the tomato plants this year for a fungus that has taken up residence in my soil and rots the stems of the small plants. It took care of the problem and the most amazing thing is that the tomato plants put out roots above the problem area on the stems after treatment. It is hard to kill a tomato plant.
  8. Looks as though the tomatoes will be fabulous. Lots of cukes. Fair crops of broccoli and cauliflower. Nothing much with the peppers and eggplant so far. Onions are larger than usual. I'll be trying the cardoon soon. Cabbage looking good. Odds and ends are doing well.
  9. I put that crushed bug spray to the test about 10 years ago when it was a semi-popular theory. I had a terrible infestation of striped squash bugs in the garden. Overcoming the ick factor I collected a handful of them. I tossed them in an old blender container with some water and gave it a whirl. I strained the resulting mess and sprayed it on the squash. The the other striped squash bugs loved it. They came from miles around apparently thinking it was a family reunion. The only think I can think of is that I released pheromones that were very attractive. My conclusion was that hanging a dead coyote might frighten off his kin and hanging a dead crow may have a similar effect but squished bugs just attract more bugs. It's kind of like hanging a Japanese beetle trap among the roses.
  10. I've noticed that Japanese beetles drop when they feel threatened. I've caught a lot of them by putting a container pf soapy water under a branch and shaking it. They are perhaps dropping and hitting water instead of ground. How are the ducks fulfilling their roll of tick eliminators? Do they eat Japanese beetles as well?
  11. For practical and pruning purposes indeterminate tomatoes are tomatoes that grow tall and will grow best if staked or caged. They can get to be 5 or 6 feet tall. Pruning aka suckering is an option. Because they continue to grow they do produce over a longer period of time. This is why they are often topped off in our shorter growing season. Indeterminate tomatoes are bush tomatoes that grow to only 3 or 4 feet. The larger sizes grow best staked but it is optional but pruning is not a good idea as they stop growing at a given point and pruning reduces your crop considerably. The goals and problems of commercial growers and those of the home gardener are often quite different. Most of us aren't planting hundreds of tomato plants and planting them as close together as commercial growers do so we aren't going to experience the problems that come with acres of tomatoes. Nor do we have to produce tomatoes that are perfect. Enjoy your garden and limit the work. Here is a more extensive explanation of determinate and indeterminate from Horticultural Magazine http://www.hortmag.com/plants/fruits-veggies/the-difference-between-determinate-and-indeterminate-tomatoes
  12. I don't. I'll take off bottom leaves and plant more of the stem in the spring. This will encourage root growth. After that you only prune indeterminate tomatoes if you are going to do it at all. Pruning determinate ones will lower your yield considerably. If you stake your tomatoes taking out the suckers will control the plant and perhaps increase the size of your tomatoes. It may also lower your yield. Late in the season some people top the tomatoes. If you take off the top it will no longer grow taller and will give the tomatoes on the plant a chance to ripen before the frost. Removing the side shoots will also increase air flow which might be a good idea if there is a lot of rain and high humidity that increases the chance of fungus diseases. It just depends on what your are aiming at. Highly controlled pruned plants are more likely to give you big, perfect tomatoes. Letting them grow will give you a higher yield
  13. Seven dust works for me. We have had fewer insects this year and no deer damage. (Knock on wood!) I don't know what is going on. I'm sure all the rain had something to do with it. Maybe this batch of deer don't like Asiatic and daylilies.
  14. The Down to Earth Garden Club will be meeting Thursday, June 28, at 7:00 p.m. at Christ Lutheran Church, 875 Sunflower Drive. The group will be arranging watering schedules, work parties and the reviewing the ongoing progress of various city beds.For more information call 371-8672 or 375-9528, email downtoearthgardenclub@hotmail.com or visit the group’s web page at www.downtoearthgardenclub.org or check on Facebook.
  15. That is those flea beetles. Seven takes care of them. The rain may not make much difference if that is what you are using. Either it sticks or it kills them off so quickly that it works despite being washed off. Gramps always said dust with lime but I never did think that worked. They will ruin the eggplant unless it grows so quickly that it replaces the leaves faster than they can turn them to lace.
  16. Best garden that we’ve had in years. You can almost see the plants growing especially the broccoli, cabbage and cauliflower. Curiously, there are few insect problems. Even the flea beetles that usually just about ruin the eggplant are fewer in number and no asparagus beetles to speak of I did spray for fungal and viral diseases as we had some problems last year. With all this rain it was precautionary. The only things that were affected were some spiderworta and I want to keep it that way.
  17. The wild turkeys eat our driveway, which is gravel.
  18. There is usually more than one way to do almost anything. There is no "my way or the highway" in gardening. As Lyndsey pointed out sometimes it is a big rock. Personally, I usually start with the simplest form and work my way up the scale. I grow the variegated form of Japanese knotweed, Fallopia japonica 'Varigata", as an ornamental. It is a very pretty plant. I keep it under control by growing it in the shade. It doesn't grow as big or as rambunctious. If no other method works you could try eating it. Japanese Knotweed Crumble Prepare a knotweed compote (similar to stewed rhubarb) by cutting tender spring knotweed shoots, no longer than about 12"-18" (the thicker, the better; leaves removed) into inch chunks. Steam till soft -- about 10 minutes. Add sweetener to taste -- perhaps 1/4 c. sugar per 2-3 cups of steamed knotweed -- and a squeeze of lemon juice. A drop of red food coloring will give it a very appetizing look. Mix equal parts flour and oatmeal, say 1/2 c.each, with a bit of cinnamon, some sugar and a dash of salt. Cut in butter, 1/3 stick at minimum and more if you like a richer crumble. Butter a baking dish. Put in the knotweed, cover with crumble mixture and bake in a medium hot oven, 350 degrees, for a half hour or so. As you notice, measurements, times and temperatures are variable. This basic technique is flexible and adaptable – just like knotweed! Have fun, use up our invasives, and get something for nothing
  19. The only way to get rid of an invasive plant that multiplies by rhizomes is to cut it back and put a tarp over it. It must have no holes in it and preferably be black. The heat helps kill the rhizomes. Spray any remaining foliage with glyphosate weed killer and watch the edges of the tarp for more plants creeping out. Kill them! Eventually the rhizomes will die. Whatever you do don't let it flower.
  20. Not sure why you are so worried about it. It's not a fungus the way athletes foot is a fungus. It is just nature's way of utilizing dead or dying organic material. It helps break down the wood so that it returns to the soil like earthworms or soil bacteria work with the soil or in your compost heap. Without these things everything that died would just lay there and never decompose.
  21. I've never seen one of those around here but yes, it looks like the perennial ageratum (Conoclinium coelestinum ). Check and see if it is spreading by rhizomes. They are a great plant for butterflies. I've got a spot for it if you want rid of some of it.
  22. The world of fungi is weird and wonderful. I used to find this one along the fence of my veggie garden. It is known as dog penis fungus or less salaciously as dog stinkhorn (Mutinus caninus). They give them such great names. I don't know where that name came from but I have from a reputable source that when a mushroom guide was recently compiled the publisher insisted of common names for all of the 'shrooms. Some of them didn't have them as they were of no interest to anyone but the people who studied them so the person consulted made them up as he went along. He had a very whimsical imagination. Here is the dog penis fungus
  23. Like Steelnut, I like Celebrity for eating and San Marzano for canning. Both grow under adverse conditions. I'm trying a cultivar of Celebrity this year it is called Celebration. Celebrity seeds are difficult to come by. I try something new each year also. This year beside Celebrity it is Maestro. I also saved seeds from the Kumato and we shall see if they are an open pollinated plant or a hybrid.
  24. until
    The Down to Earth Garden Club will be meeting Thursday, May 24 at 7:00 p.m. at Christ Lutheran Church, 875 Sunflower Drive. The guest speaker at the May meeting will be Cheryl Hannah. She is employed in the Physical Therapy Department at Penn Highlands and has been an EMT for 22 years. Hannah became interested in Tia Chi in 2016 and subsequently became an instructor. She says, “Tai Chi is calming, alleviates stress, is easy to do and safe for your joints, not to mention how much fun it is.” Tai Chi dates back 2500 years and originated in China as a martial art. Unlike the more obvious martial arts Tai Chi does not involve aggressive moves or overt physical force. It concentrates on slow, meditative, rhythmic movements that bring calm and internal peace. It is said that a true Tai Chi master can defect an attack using the principle that "four ounces can deflect a thousand pounds." Tai Chi is said to have numerous health benefits including delaying the aging process, alleviating arthritis and joint pain, lowering blood pressure and improving balance. There will be a short meeting following the presentation. We will have the results of the plant sale for discussion. For more information call 371-8672 or 375-9528, email downtoearthgardenclub@hotmail.com or visit the group’s web page at www.downtoearthgardenclub.org or check on Facebook.
  25. There are some weird looking ducks wandering the streets of Clearfield. I was told they were Muscovys. Might want to go over and see if they are still there. I'm sure they would be happier with you than being homeless in Clearfield.
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