Sunday, April 27, 2008
Journal 4-27-08
I haven't done much more than normal maintenance lately. I've been tending, and watering, and weeding. I am more convinced than ever that the wall bed must be left to the nasturtiums--everything else is doing badly.
Happily, the porch bed is doing very well. The peas are coming up quickly.
The weather has been hot, humid, and the air has been filled with vog. It's really oppressive and unpleasant. I can only imagine what life is like on the Big Island! This morning the sky looks more clear than it has for a week. Perhaps things will get back to normal.
Sunday, April 20, 2008
Journal 4-20-08

I surveyed the garden yesterday and experienced a mix of joy and chagrin. The eggplant has TWO! healthy purple flowers on it, and the pepper is growing little buds.
In the bed, things are not so rosy. The begonia,
which I put where the pepper had been, is dying. The sunflower that was near that spot is dead [click on the pictures to see better detail].
most concentrated on the one end and becomes less pronounced further down the bed.If this is the case, I think that I may have to abandon that bed and move everything--perhaps to the bed under the stairs. That would be ok, as everything over there is thriving. Maybe I can just leave the nasturtiums, which seem to be unaffected, and let them take over the wall bed. If they can survive, it would end up being very pretty when they flower.
Gardening seems to be an exercise in patience, faith, and hope--three things that I have in small supply most of the time--I perhaps I'll end up growing with my flowers.
Sunday, April 13, 2008
Journal 4-13-08



gangbusters, so the rain isn't all bad! I am going to do a little research on the tomato problem and see if I can diagnose it.Thursday, April 10, 2008
Journal 4-10-08
On a happier note, the habenero is doing better than it ever has! I guess that not having millions of bugs living in its roots is a relief! The seedlings are ROBUST thanks to all the rain, and the eggplant is looking very happy. Everything else is doing fine, so I feel heartened, even though I was forced to perform some tough love.
Tomorrow I plan to get a thermometer so that I can take accurate temperature readings.
[Photos will be added to this post tomorrow--it was wet and a little dark when I was out there earlier. ]
Wednesday, April 9, 2008
Journal 4-09-08
It rained most of today. I did some research at the library and determined that the Goji Berry may be suffering from powdery mildew, which is a fungus. I found a recipe for an anti-fungal made from garlic minced and mixed with water. I made some and sprayed it on the leaves. I hope that it's not too late, since all the leaves look sick and many have fallen off. I'll just have to wait and see.
It's too wet to do any other work outside--I don't want to spread any diseases to any of the other children.
Tuesday, April 8, 2008
Journal 4-08-08
This afternoon I spent about an hour digging around in the dirt behind the stump. I think that the roots there belong to the stump. When I got it weeded out a little I planted poppies, columbine, and thyme in sort of a sprinkling way--hoping to get an untamed wildflower effect. We'll see.
The Goji berry plant is sick. I don't know if it is shock from being transplanted, or too much rain (it's been pouring all night and part of the day since Saturday). It has bcome rather pale green--almost yellow--and has some white stuff on the leaves that looks like dust but doesn't rub off. I added some fertilizer to the soil in that bed and hope that it will help. Everything else is doing very well--the little tomato is coming along nicely. The eggplant lost its flower again--I think that something ate it this time. It looks like a few snails have been at it. I am going to research natural ways of fending off snails (besides my current method--picking them up and turning them around so that they'll wander off somewhere else).
I received my first seed catalog today--Burpee. I am planning to curl up with it and dream about what I want to order (and can't because the Department of Agriculture won't let me ;->).
Later: I read the Burpee catalog. It is quite wonderful, with every flower and vegetable I can imagine planting. Unfortunately it contains this little paragraph:
"State regulations prevent us from shipping the following products to these states:
AK, HI: Garlic, Fruits, Potatoes, Annual Flower plants, bulbs, Perennial Plants, All Herb and Vegetable Plants."
That about covers it, I think. Perhaps they should just say "Forget it, you pathetic island dweller." I've never actually NOT lived in either Alaska or Hawaii, so I can only imagine the wonderous joy of being able to order ANYTHING and having it arrive in a relatively inexpensive and timely manner ;->. Ah well, back to KMart.
Sunday, April 6, 2008
Journal 4-06-08
The last couple of days have been pretty rainy. It's nice for the garden, since everything is really coming up.
I just went outside to look around and found that there is a little green tomato on the tomato plant!
The picture below is pretty fuzzy, but you can barely see it. I immediately made a cloche for it out of chicken wire so that the birds don't take the tomatoes--that was the problem I had last time I tried to grow them.
I'm pretty excited! I'm also excited because the eggplant has another flower. It had one when I planted it, but I think that the stress of transplanting was too much because it fell off. I can't wait to harvest my own eggplant!!!
Everything else is doing well. The pepper seems to be rallying in spite of its encounter with the Borg. I am hoping that, with care, it will survive.
Thursday, April 3, 2008
Journal 4-3-08

Well, today's time in the garden was a mix of happiness and chagrin. The seedlings that I planted in my Goodwill pot on May 29 are already starting to come up. The really cool thing is that this morning, when I surveyed my kingdom, nothing was showing in that bed and now they are an inch tall! Rain is a wondrous thing!
After looking over my seedlings and inspecting everything else on the porch side of my garden, I moved over to the wall bed and noted that there were new tunnels under the pepper (but nothing else). I looked very closely and saw a few big black ants running around in the bed.
As a result of my ongoing battle with the scurvy little beasts inside the house, I have become something of an expert in ant psychology. I plugged the tunnels and watched. Soon the ants on the surface began to show signs of distress. When their distress turned to hysterics I knew that there was a nest down there!
I finally found it--in the roots of the pepper! I dug the pepper up and cleaned out the dirt around the roots. I also filled the hole in the bed with soil and drenched it.
The ants were crawling all over me carrying little bundles. Finally I got it all contained (pretty much) and replanted the pepper in a quarantine pot for the time being. I am hoping that it will recover from this catastrophe and grow into a fine plant with little psychological scarring. There are still lots of ants running amok on the bed, but I think that they will disperse when they have finally come to grips with the awful reality that the nest is no more.
Whew! what an adventure. I was thinking as I was re-potting the pepper that, when I was in Alaska, the definition of wildlife in the garden was deer, bears, porcupines, and the neighbor's dog. Here it is ants, huge mentally deficient carpenter bees, reptiles, and the neighbor's children.
Wednesday, April 2, 2008
Journal 4-02-08
It rained last night so everything got a drink. I have a slight problem when it rains: the railing on the staircase drips water onto the step below and onto the bed where the tulip is. Any plant that sits in that spot will get the Chinese water torture, and the bed gets too much water. I have tried putting a pot under the rail, but it fills pretty quickly and overflows. I need to figure out a way to channel that water AND make good use of it.

now that it's probably a futile endeavour, but at least I'll make it easier to dig out if nothing happens. The picture at right shows the area where I unearthed the roots. In the foreground is the stump of a tree that was chopped down some time ago. Since cutting a tree off at the ankles like that (around these parts) usually results in lusher vegetation than ever, I assume that the trunk was treated with something to prevent it from coming back. I don't think that this tree is related to the other root system, but I may be wrong. I have no idea what kind of a tree the stump was -- it was chopped long before my time on this side of the house.
Tuesday, April 1, 2008
Journal 4-01-08
After work today I came home and finished clearing out the stair bed. I smoothed it over and then enriched and watered it. Next: plant the Goji Berry!! I'm pretty excited about finally populating that bed. I will take a picture tomorrow--it was too dark when I was finally done tonight.
There is something rather weird going on with the Habenero. It is slowly, slowly declining. I looked closely and saw that there are holes in the soil around it that lead to hollow tunnels, like something (a teacup mole?) is burrowing under it. None of the other plants in the bed are suffering from this problem. I'm not sure what it is that is eating it, but I'm going to do a little research. There are lots of beetle-like bugs in the dirt, but I don't think that they are bothering anything else. The lizards don't seem to care for plants except as stepping stones from one place to another. It's strange.
Everything else is doing well. The rose seems to be improving since I started watering it more often. The lavender is quite nice, and the tomato is getting little buds. The eggplant is pretty hearty, too, though the leaves have a lot of snail or slug damage. That was there when I bought it, and I think that it is only an aesthetic concern. By far the healthiest and most vibrant plant in my garden is the tulip, which is funny since it has been beheaded and is just a bunch of flower-less stalks with leaves! It gives me hope that the bulb might be plucky enough to survive a tropical winter.



