Saturday, August 12, 2023

Bubbly Jelly Blues and Lots O' Pumpkins

   The last few days have been pleasant and mild.  Low-to-mid 20s with cool mornings and a bit of drizzle.  The days are getting shorter; it's no longer bright and sunny outside at 5:00AM.

   The green beans have been producing well and we have blanched and frozen several batches already.  My favourites this year have been Provider and Roma II. 

   Mongolian Dwarf, Principe Borghese, Black Sea Man, EM-Champion, Sylvan Gaume, and even the Franchi Red Pear tomatoes are starting to ripen.  I am tempted to pull up Moonglow, Clear Pink Early, and Rose de Berne, as almost every single tomato on these plants has been ruined by blossom end rot.  I'm glad I only planted 1 each of Moonglow and Clear Pink Early (though 3 of Rose de Berne, unfortunately).

   The Burpee’s Butterbush squash plants are just now starting to put out flowers.  No squash has set yet.  I hand-pollinated the first one today.

   With the exception of Baba Franchuk's, all the garlic has been harvested and hung to cure.  The garlic was harvested between July 31st and August 11th.  Baba Franchuk’s was harvested August 11th and will be hung up in next few days.  I let a few of the plants develop umbels and was surprised to see how large the bulbils are for Kiev and Baba Franchuk's!


Baba Franchuk's garlic

   The sunflowers are finally blooming.  They certainly add some colour and cheer to the garden!

   This morning, I made jelly from the crabapple juice we froze last August.  It didn’t turn out clear and is full of little bubbles.  It will likely taste fine, it is just disappointing when it lacks the pretty "stained glass" appearance of a successfully canned batch of jelly.  I hesitate to give jellies and jams as gifts when they turns out less than perfect.  I plan to can peach butter in the next week, and hope that batch is a success.

The fenceline raised beds, looking up the driveway...



 

 ...and down the driveway.



   The Galeux D'Eysines (a French heirloom pumpkin) plants are thriving.  My standard has always been that if we get one or two good-sized pumpkins per plant (typically, 6-8 per season), then I've been happy.   

   There are many vines, making it difficult to tell which ones belong to which plants, but there are 13 set pumpkins so far.  Past experience has shown that sometimes, ones that have set will stop growing and shrivel up.  Even if a few do that, it looks like this might be a stellar year for Galeux D’Eysines.  I topped most of the vines in the last two days so more energy will be directed to the developing pumpkins.

 


 South garden (mostly potatoes this year).

 



  North garden, sans garlic.  AmaRosa potatoes, Fordhook zucchini, a sunflower (Sunspot?), calendula, marigolds, and green beans.


 

 

   One of the dahlias and the China Aster have the same baby pink-and-white colours.

 




 My one surviving cabbage!


 

   Two robust volunteers have grown in the front compost bin this summer.  Flowers have developed on the Galeux D'Eysines plant (we composted an old pumpkin that was past its prime in the Spring).  It will be fun if we actually get a pumpkin from this volunteer! 

 

 

   The second volunteer is a bush bean plant.  I don't know which variety it is.  If it grows to maturity, we might be able to figure it out. 

 

 

The Dragon’s Egg cukes are producing well.

 


Dahlias (Unwin's Mix)

 

 

Herbs and greens




   On the south side of the house: tomatoes (Hungarian Heart, Reinhard's Chocolate Heart, and Sylvan Guame), cucumbers, dry bush beans in window box planters, marigolds, and a smidgen each of dill and basil.

 

 

Cosmos on the left of the planter, Fernleaf dill on the right.




The mid-August tomato round-up:

Black Sea Man


 

Fred's Tie-Dye


Franchi Red Pear



Favorie de Bretagne

 



Fisher's Earliest Paste

 


 

Hungarian Heart



 

 Sylvan Guame

 

 

The first few ripe Mongolian Dwarf tomatoes.

 


   Meanwhile, inside the house, we found one of our kitties occupying a warm pot of soil that was destined to hold mint cuttings.  Such a cutie!





Thursday, August 3, 2023

Early August Odds and Ends

   It has been a wet start to August.  The garden appreciates the rain, and I appreciate the break from schlepping watering cans.

   Some of the dry bush bean varieties are already starting to dry down on the plants.  Most of the Arikara pods are turning yellow/beige.  It is the earliest dry bean of the season, by far. A few of the Weiner Trieb pods have begun to turn yellow as well.  Early Warwick won't be far behind it.

  Two more zucchini and two Yellow Prolific squash were ready, so I made a second batch of Zesty Zucchini relish yesterday.

   We have been harvesting, blanching, and freezing small batches of peas over the past two weeks.  This year's pea patch hasn't provided a huge crop but there is enough to enjoy with a few meals throughout the winter.  Of the three varieties grown this summer, Green Arrow - as usual - came out the winner.  Lillian's Caseload was earlier, but its pods are smaller.  Laxton's Progress remained very short, the pods were small, and its peas became starchy quickly.

   When planting snap beans in May, I tried using up some of the older seed I had in my stash.  The germination rates were hit or miss, and I ended up having to replant several times.  'Provider' has proven to be a great bean.  The plants are sturdy and remain upright, keeping most of the beans off the ground.  Provider beans grow large and straight and are tender.  Cantare, a slender green bean, has been a disappointment so far.  The plants are short/stocky, but they quickly fall over, leaving the beans to grow on the ground.  That results in many of them growing in a curled or crooked shape and rotting/getting muddy when it rains.  Calima, which I've grown in the past, seems a much more reliable and easy-to-manage slim bean variety.  The Roma II beans are great - I wish I'd grown more this year.  The plants are large and they tip over under the weight of the beans, but the flavour and texture of Roma II's make it worth that hassle.

   With the ground already wet and more rain in the forecast, I decided to pull the small Red Russian bulbs (grown from rounds at the front of the garlic bed) and Brown Tempest bulbs on July 31st.  Central Siberian and Northern Quebec bulbs were pulled on August 1.  From the looks of things, I should have pulled the Northern Quebec earlier.  The outer wrappers don't cover all the cloves and some of the cloves look like they're pulling apart from the other cloves in the bulbs.  It will be fine to eat, it just might not store as long as it normally would.

   The female Galeux D'Eysine squash flowers have finally started to bloom in earnest, and I've hand-pollinated 4 in the last week.  This one (pollinated July 22) is the earliest and largest of the bunch.


 

Favorie de Bretagne tomatoes



Fisher's Earliest Paste tomatoes




Petrusha Ogorodnik tomatoes (paste)

 



 

The first China aster is about to open...



Strawflowers





Lots o' Bachelor Buttons...



The dahlias are beginning to bloom (Unwins Dahlia mix).  Love the pink one!