I'll start with the good news: the summer garden has been planted and although it's only been a day, I'm sure those little seeds are already in the ground stirring. We planted all the usual characters: okra (fewer every year), corn, cucumbers, tomatoes, squash, limas, LOTS of peanuts, green beans, and black-eyed peas.
Newcomers are purple cosmic carrots----I love the name, don't you?? They're planted under the tomatoes.......we'll see if they like that spot. And then Howard found some funky yard-long green beans and those are also in the ground........I guess we could have ONE for dinner??
As you can see, the snow peas are growing nicely and starting to scale the fence.
Howard noticed some blossoms on several of the plants yesterday, so pea pods are not far behind!
I like to go outside and grab their little feelers and curl them around the fence wires----gotta get those youngsters going in the right direction!
We have both sugar snap and snow peas, but they're equally delicious. In fact, the sugar snap peas often don't make it all the way off the vine and into our house....... :))
In other news, the flower beds are starting to fill up. However, every year it seems as though I have more and more uninvited guests appearing. There are lots and lots of spiky little plants coming up that look suspiciously like dianthus. I've been assured by fellow Master Gardeners that dianthus don't spread, but........... Well, time will tell.
The strawberries have spread nicely and there are about 50 starting to grow and mature. Yummy!
Now for the bad news............you know what they say about the plumbing at the plumber's house, right?? Well, I guess the same is true at the Master Gardener's house.
Howard was gazing at his willow tree in adoration when he happened to notice several large holes in the trunk..........uh-oh.
I may not remember everything I learned in my Master Gardener training, but I know about those holes. As they say in prison parlance, that's a dead tree walking.
Those rather large holes (about the size of a quarter) are the EXIT holes of boring insects. Not boring as in, *YAWN* are you going to tell that story again?? But boring as in bore into a tree. What they've done is go in there, laid their eggs, and left through those holes. Their children are going to hatch and EAT their way out of our poor tree.
The worse part of that story is that there's no solution. There's no killing those little critters----they're in there and they're coming out, and when they do, they'll leave a dead tree behind.
We've pretty much decided on a Chinese pistache to replace it.........nice-looking tree and pest resistant. Poor Howard wanted to spend one more summer with the willow so I guess the new tree will go up sometime this fall.
Such is life.
Happy Mother's Day! Your garden looks great. I love you
ReplyDelete