![]() |
|
Homestead
Blog
Innovations: Homesteading Tags Recent Comments Blog Archive User Pages Login About Us Submission guidelines Store |
We enjoyed the Kennedy Museum of Art so much we went back for a repeat visit. ![]() I dropped by one set of
foster peaches this past weekend to see how their pruning and thinning had done. Success! Actual
ripe peaches. ![]() Unfortunately, the
taller limbs that I'd left in the interest of not pruning the tree too
hard all at once (then hadn't thinned the fruits on since I couldn't
reach them) were full of brown rot. I think I'll be brave and
whack the top off the tree this winter, water sprouts or no water
sprouts. No....Anna did not get a job
working at a book store. ![]()
You can lead a driftwood horse to Art.....but you can't make him appreciate it. ![]() Our second set of fall
broccoli is outgrowing its pots and ready to hit the garden. But is the
garden ready for it? ![]() Eight of my 38 plants
fit easily into gaps in the summer garden. Which left quite a few in
need of a home. ![]() The beds I'd intended
for them are built from partially composted manure...which looks much
less composted than I'd thought. I set out four test plants and will
check back in a few days to see if broccoli is one of the plants that
can handle such strong not-quite compost. Squash and raspberries, I've
learned, can. Asparagus and blueberries cannot. A nice Hobbit door protects the Ohio University learning and research garden. ![]() For most of the year,
we've been barely building garden beds in time to fill them with
productive plants. But in July we got a little ahead --- time to plant
buckwheat! ![]() Germination was a bit
spotty with only hand-watering, and I didn't put a kill mulch in the
aisles until the buckwheat was already up so had to mulch pretty far in
to kill all the weeds. Still, it's so satisfying watching the garden
enrich itself! ![]() Yellow soldier fly grubs having their way within our compost tumbler. ![]() Summer transplants aren't optimal. But with a little TLC, plants often
come through better than you'd think. ![]() I wasn't so sure these flowers Mark's mom thinned out of her garden
would make it in the summer heat. But we got lucky and it rained for
three days after planting. Add in a little supplemental handwatering
and they all seem to be surviving. One cock's comb is even starting to
bloom! Didn't check back soon
enough and unread posts ran off the bottom of the page? See older posts in the
archives. |













