Wettest. June. Ever?

What a difference a month and over eight inches of rain makes!

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Plot #63 at Roseville Community Garden on Tuesday, May 14, 2013. (Click the photo to enlarge)

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Plot #63 at Roseville Community Garden on Sunday, June 16, 2013. (Click the photo to enlarge)

As New Jersey approaches its wettest June ever in recorded history (the State average of 8.27 inches of rain on June 19 is just .34 inches behind the 2003 record) and with flooded farm fields suffering in Mercer County, Plot #63 at Roseville Community Garden remains soggy and wanting for some solid days of warm sunshine.

While the garden has grown significantly in the last month (see comparison in side-by-side photos to the right) the excessive rain has caused some problems. Tomatoes are getting taller and setting many fruit already, but they are showing early signs of leaf blight from being so wet. The Bushmaster Green Bean seeds I planted never did sprout, as the seeds may have been too cool and wet and rotted. And don’t forget the problem with radishes I mentioned in my last update, also caused by cool, wet weather.

I’m still harvesting the Black Seeded Lettuce in huge quantities (upper left corner of garden in the photo above), and making great lettuce & radish salads from the second radish crop now coming ready to harvest…with no cabbage fly maggot damage!  The Neon Lights Mix Swiss Chard and Ruby Red Swiss Chard are almost ready for thinning and first harvest, while the Chioggia, Detroit Dark Red, and Early Wonder Beets are doing fine, Both chard and beets would probably take off like weeds with a few days of warm sunshine.

The squash/zucchini plants are getting huge, thankfully with no squash bugs and striped cucumber beetles yet. Proactive spraying with Garden Safe Fungicide 3 (fungicide/insecticide/miticide) should help keep them away, and also help with the tomato leaf blight.

I did plant another nine-foot row of Pink Beauty Radishes and three purple eggplants ‘gifted’ to me by my friend John Kowalski since he overbought for his garden. Hmmmm. It’s a beautiful, late-Spring evening. Think I’ll take a trip over to the garden and see how things have done since this photo was taken Sunday. More soon.

“Like water off a duck’s back…”

Two mallard ducks

Garden Update: Delia radicum, destroyer of radishes

God in His wisdom made the fly and then forgot to tell us why.
~Ogden Nash, “The Fly”

Delia radicum – commonly known as the cabbage fly, or cabbage root fly – ate my radishes. Allow me to correct myself…the squirming white cabbage fly maggots ate my radishes. And their name fits their crime! Another weather/garden/pest lesson learned, I guess. Read more after the jump…

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Plot #63, Roseville Community Garden. Sunday, June 9, 2013 (Click image for larger version)

Continue reading Garden Update: Delia radicum, destroyer of radishes

Friday Cow Blogging: Friends of Distinction

Whenever I head over to the Roseville Community Garden, and the herd of black Aberdeen Angus are out grazing in the warm summer sun (certainly not today, as TS Andrea approaches us from the south), I imagine catching them off-guard – in the ultimate ‘Far Side’ experience – standing around rehearsing the Friends of Distinction’s classic 1970’s hit  Grazing in the Grass. Can you dig it? Happy Friday!

Grazing in the Grass!

My ‘Friends of Distinction’ Grazing in the Grass at Hudson Farm West

Garden Update: Bring on the radishes!

“A tiny radish of passionate scarlet, tipped modestly in white.”
— Clementine Paddleford

‘Radish’ is the word at the end of the sixth week of the 2013 garden season. Big bunches of French Breakfast RadishPink Beauty RadishCherry Belle Radish, and a couple Short Top Icicle White Radish. Getting an early jump on preparing the garden and planting was a good thing, as last year at this same time plants were nowhere near as mature or ready to harvest. And timing was perfect for my parents, visiting from Minnesota, to enjoy in the snappy, spicy crop!

A sink full of radishes from Plot #63 at Roseville Community Garden, June 2, 2013.

A sink full of radishes from Plot #63 at Roseville Community Garden, June 2, 2013.

Continue reading Garden Update: Bring on the radishes!

Friday Cow Blogging: Cows Meet Mom

The Hudson Farm West herd of black Aberdeen Angus cattle meet Mom at the Roseville Community Garden.

Mom, meet cows.

Mom, meet cows.

Words may or may not have been spoken to the cattle. I’m just saying. They do seem to be wondering “What the heck are these radish sandwiches that this crazy lady is talking about?”

 

Garden Update: Looking Good After Five Weeks!

In order to live off a garden, you practically have to live in it.
  ~Frank McKinney Hubbard

Plot 63, Roseville Community Garden on Sunday, May 26, 2013

Plot 63, Roseville Community Garden on Sunday, May 26, 2013 (Click photo for larger image.)

Memorial Day weekend, five full weeks since Plot #63 at Roseville Community Garden was planted, and the garden’s progress is way ahead of last year. Part of that is due to the fact that I got things in early, and part due to keeping ahead of the weeds this year and making more frequent visits to the garden.

The tomatoes – having survived the killing freeze that took a toll on others in the garden – are approaching two-feet in height and contain dozens of blooms. ‘Maters by the Fourth of July?!?! Another frost alert tonight has me planning for a late evening visit to ‘cover up’ again, with fingers crossed that the weather guys are wrong.

Continue reading Garden Update: Looking Good After Five Weeks!

Friday cow blogging: The gang’s all here!

The Hudson Farm West herd of black Aberdeen Angus cattle, ‘loitering’ in the shade in the field adjacent to the Roseville Community Garden. You got a beef with that?

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