June in a New York State Garden, a Big House, Tiny Garden Update

in HiveGarden11 months ago

There is so much beauty all around me these days, I sometimes become overwhelmed and look down at the ground for relief. Does this bring me some rest from the onslaught of gorgeousness? No indeed it does not. Even that which is most overlooked, the ground under our feet, can be gobsmackingly lovely.

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June in the northeastern US means the last frost has passed (unless...) and we can finally put the seedlings that we have tended so carefully into the ground. As hard as it is to choose where to begin on a June garden post, I'm starting with the seedlings.

Just look at all these I have to put in!

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seedlings hardening off

I chose the cucumbers, four seedlings of Chicago Picklers, to put in today, mostly because they were transplanted into larger pots a couple weeks ago, and have been hardening off outside for a good week. These seedlings were ready to go in; they told me so themselves.

Once upon a time, I was a professional pastry chef. You might be surprised to learn that bakers use a great deal of geometry. We are very good at cutting rolled out croissant dough into perfect triangles of equal size by hand. We can cut any size cake into equal size portions with a few simple circles and circle segments. Today, I found myself using the techniques I once used to get the most cookies I could onto a cookie sheet, all spaced correctly so that no cookie touched another cookie as they spread and 'ripened' in the oven, while planning the layout of this year's cucumber bed. I mused about this - when we've learned something really well, the knowledge will come in handy in unexpected places. So don't ever shirk! Do everything with love, intelligence and passion! When you're my age, you'll be glad you did.

This year's cucumbers will be semi-trellised. I have never been successful at trellising cukes right from their start, but last year I fortuitously discovered that they grew up the fencing bordering the garden. For a few feet the vines grew on the ground, then once well-established, began growing up the fences. The fruits were very easy to find and harvest, so I'm going to try to recreate, and improve upon, last year's serendipitous success.

I have one section of the fence up in the shot below on the west side of the bed, and will put some kind of low trellises along the white lines (which were made with a calcium/magnesium blend) and along the right side of the bed. This should both save me some ground space and give the cukes room to spread before having to climb. I hope you can visualize this.

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cukes and the plan

For the first time ever, I'm going to mulch my all my high-summer veggie beds. I learned my lesson already this year when I mulched the raspberries in the back left of the photos above and below to protect the raspberries from a frost the night after they were planted. Whereas all the other unmulched beds are always dry as a bone two days after I water them deeply, my well-mulched raspberries have only needed to be watered once in the week since I planted them. To reduce water usage, and probably keep down weeds, a good 2 to 3 inches of straw mulch seems to be the way to go. We'll see.

Below is the final product of a good hour of my time: four seedlings planted, watered, mulched and looking very good! It's a darn good thing I didn't have to plant forty!

I plan to put poblano peppers in the part of the bed that is still unmulched. This year, I'm not crowding my plants! I also removed a silver maple, the stump now crowned with a pot of struggling sweet potatoes in the back there, so that the entire veggie patch gets hours more of full sun. Hours!

The bag in the front of all is potatoes. I caught my cat peeing in it today, so I've rigged up a barrier on top of it, in case you're wondering.

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This concludes the main portion of my gardening post for the month. Now, on to the minor acts.

When my sweet potatos arrived, they looked dead dead dead. But the instructions pretty much said 'these will look dead, but they are not. plant them with confidence' which I did. I hoped that planter in the back there would be spectacular by the end of July, a show stopper. But the show stopped there, seemingly. Those things proceded to look even deader over the next ten days. Just yesterday, I saw tiny bits of new and robust growth on each of the seedlings, so my hopes for a spectacular garden feature have returned.

Tomatoes have ruined the sun on the rest of my veggie patches for three years in a row; I always underestimate how big they will get, so this year, they are going in along the northern fence, where they won't shade anything but the fence. I put some calcium down there today just so I don't forget the stuff when it comes time to plant.

For years, I only planted perennial flowering plants. I am in my fourth year of trying to grow veggies, or is it the fifth? But my love of flowers persists. This house was chock-a-block with hosta and heuchera, both of which I love for their foliage. I've rearranged some of those, and added more conspicuous flowers among them. As I said above, this will be the year of mulch, and my flower beds have been covered with a lovely dark brown bark mulch that sets off the foliage and flowers beautifully.

Now, a word about compost. I've tried a bunch of methods over the years, and can say that the tumbler below is by far the best method for a little old lady. It turns easily, and makes great compost in a few months. The compost is also very easy to get out of the bin, which was a big problem with the other composters I've tried. I was surprised by how much I got, too! I'm going to get another of these, and for anyone interested, I got it from Gardener's Supply. It's pricey, but worth it just for the ease in turning.

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sweet potato new growth

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future tomato patch


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flower bed from the west

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compost

There's still so much I haven't shown you! My shell peas are 15 inches or more high, and look fantastic! I've never been successful with any kind of pea before. My blueberry bushes survived a season of zero sun (tomatoes), and a winter of my dog's chewing them down, and although they won't produce a lot of berries, the bushes look better than I expected them too. My peach tree might not produce any fruit this year, because of a very late and very hard frost while it was blooming.

The 'hoop house' in which I planted carrots, beets, daikon, and arugula very early, has done very well for me. My beets may still be smaller than golf balls, but they are definitely globes. The carrots are definitely carrot-y. The arugula has made its way into salads and soups many times. I've had a number of radishes too. Mustard greens, beet greens, lettuce, and let's not forget the star of my spring show - spring onions! I saute them up with garlic, olive oil and shiitakes, and yum yum yum. I love eating food I grew myself!!!

Saving the biggest and best for last, here's a shot of my new garden arbor and gate. Everything but the wooden planter is easily moveable, so that when December comes, I'll just move the arbor and wire fencing and trellises to the left so that I can get my car into the garage. I had a huge expanse of asphalt when I moved in, a waste of space if you ask me. But now I'm really excited about what to do with my increased garden space, a veritable and large patio. Garden parties are in my future! And everyone will walk through an elegant gate to join in.

That is the official conclusion to this month's garden journal. I have no idea where I found the time to produce this post. I probably let the bee balm a friend gave me today die. I pray my seedling didn't fry in today's sun and heat. And I hope you enjoyed my post!

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This is my entry to Hive Garden Community's monthly garden challenge for June. Thank you so very much for reading it!

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All images are mine.

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You're doing an amazing job with everything you have going on @owasco!

All of your seedlings look very healthy, and I cannot wait to see how your cucumbers turn out this year. I'm excited to see how everything turns out really!

Your geometric abilities certainly shine through your gardening, indeed.

You're a brilliant and talented woman in so many ways and you never cease to amaze me with the things you do!

I'm so happy to see your plants, it's motivating me to plant some tomatoes and maybe some other things too :)

 11 months ago  

How lovely to have you and your super kind and thoughtful comments back on hive!

I love math, so having to do a little is fun for me. I was thinking yesterday that geometry is probably the most useful math subject of all, but we make the kids learn how to prove stuff through it, and this turns them right off.

Did you choose your name because you live near a lake of the same name? If so, I grew up about an hour and a half from you. And I’ve worked as a pastry chef, too.

Weird.

I often wonder during my five years in a bakery how many eggs I cracked. It must be a ridiculous number.

You have quite the space for a garden. I’m envious. The space between my house and the next is probably slightly narrower than your raised bed behind the bag of potatoes.

 11 months ago  

Yes! I still own property on the west shore of Owasco Lake, and live 2 1/2 hours southwest of there, in Allegany county. You?

I live in Japan, but I grew up in Rochester.

 11 months ago  

Ah! I have relatives who live in Victor, quite a few of them. That's quite close to me. How did you end up in Japan?

That’s where my father lives in now. Too funny.

As for Japan, I just wanted to live another country and I found a job in Japan so I came here and ended up staying.

I love these "small world" connections. (Lake Owasco)
And that you were also a pastry chef, @boxcarblue.
This was the first line I highlighted:

You might be surprised to learn that bakers use a great deal of geometry. We are very good at cutting rolled out croissant dough into perfect triangles of equal size by hand. We can cut any size cake into equal size portions with a few simple circles and circle segments.

And this!

Today, I found myself using the techniques I once used to get the most cookies I could onto a cookie sheet, all spaced correctly so that no cookie touched another cookie as they spread and 'ripened' in the oven, while planning the layout of this year's cucumber bed. I mused about this - when we've learned something really well, the knowledge will come in handy in unexpected places.

Ahhh, the good advice, the kind I need to hear repeatedly:

So don't ever shirk! Do everything with love, intelligence and passion! When you're my age, you'll be glad you did.

I did things with passion, all right, and too much incaution. (Dare I call it fearlessness?)
If I'd taken more time, done more research, learned from others - but nobody else told me not to do the things I did. I'll have to write my own handbook of things NOT to do as a gardner/homesteader.

Your seedlings are amazing!
I will chant with the angels to your sweet potatoes: Grow, grow, grow!
Why shouldn't the angels and saints concern themselves with plant life, too, after all?
Life is life. Life feeds life.
Grow, grow, grow!

Every blade of grass has its Angel that bends over it and whispers, "Grow, grow."

  • The Talmud

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 11 months ago  

Thank you! @rem-steem you rock!

Yay! 🤗
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 11 months ago  

Thank you!!!

You certainly have some lovely ideas for your delightful garden! Isn't it strange how we don't have time for the gardens and yet we can lose time in our gardens. I'm sure your bee balm will be fine. They are rather resilient

Wow do much is happening in your garden, I live it.
You have been busy, loving the abundance and creativity on flow here.
So great to see all the beauty that surrounds use and I agree what better place than the earth at our feet.
Looking forward to seeing how everything does and good call on the mulching too. It really makes such a difference xxxxxxx

 11 months ago  

Thanks love! I'm feeling really good about this one. I've learned so much from everyone here on hive.

The flower garden is stunning & i love all the potted plants -- good luck planting!

 11 months ago  

Thank you!

 11 months ago  

I agree, as for the first photo of the ground covered with dry leaves. I also liked the pots and your flowers. Also, you have a neat and large garden, you can tell you are always working it. I wish you, all that you have planted will come to fruition. Congratulations.

 11 months ago  

Thank you! It's not neat though, I shove stuff out of the way for photos!

 11 months ago  

ha,ha. I understand. Greetings.

Great stuff my fellow New Yorker. This time of year is so busy for us gardeners in the northeast. Those couple of nights that got cold had us running around covering our little plants with whatever we could find. @thebigsweed came up with wide mouth mason jars to cover the tomatoes and a big tarp to keep my rose bed warm. All my potted flowers and herbs were brought inside the house, it took us awhile to get that done, but it was worth it.

You have a beautiful place, I can feel the love you pour into growing.

Be well and good luck with the rest of your planting.

 11 months ago  

I can feel the love you pour into growing.

I'm kvelling over here. Thank you for that comment!

Looks like you are going for a banner year! Can't wait to see mid summer...

 11 months ago  

Thank for you support, advice, and expertise! I have learned an awful lot from you. xo

You have been a busy little gardener. With sweet potatoes, we get store bought ones, and when they sprout we plant the entire potato when the vines gets about 10 inches long or longer, we cut it off and root it, this is what we grow the new sweet potatoes from.

 11 months ago  

Oh! I imagine I could do this with one of these sweet potatoes then. If I get any. Thanks for the tip!

You can google how it is done, by doing this you get more sweet potatoes

You were not kidding when you said you had a lot of work to do in the garden. I love the geometry aspect of the planting. We gardeners tend to be fickle when planting our babies out. lol Everything looks fabulous too.

 11 months ago  

Yeah I'm determined to grow as much of my own food as I can. Thanks for stopping by!

Wow, things are really coming along up there! Your seedlings look fantastic. I hope they are even happier once you get them all in their final homes.

I don't think I realized you had been a pastry chef! Those skills often come in handy when you least expect. I ALWAYS underestimate how big the tomatoes get. Happened again this year, so I imagine those darn hornworms are going to have a field day evading my gaze with so much cover. 😂

I'll reserve any other comments for later lest I take up anymore of your precious gardening time reading. Happy June!

 11 months ago  

Wow! You are absolutely kicking ass BIG TIME! I love the temporary fencing/trellis. And I love how you're using your geometric baking skills in the garden haha - brilliant! You absoluutely amaze me with your passion, creativity and skill, your problem solving and - well, everything. And then you go throw me a knock out post like this one! Fabulous work.

I LOVE spring onions - I tend to use them more than other onions as they are just more subtle and sweet, and they just keep coming. I'm hungry thinking about sauteed garden veggies!

Glad the tumbler works for you - I'd say lucky I have a husband to do it but I end up doing it on my own, and it's not fun!

 11 months ago  

Thanks! I do feel like I'm kicking ass this year.

I hear you with the benefits of a deep layer of mulch. We use our well for watering and the last thing we need is for it to be overused and dry up, god forbid.

Your garden looks great and you seem to enjoy keeping everything just right.
Along with the satisfaction that comes with growing your own veggies, being surrounded by a picturesque garden is also so very pleasing.
You are growing a wide variety of veggies and herbs including cucumbers. I don't know if you have planted any pickling cucumbers, but if you did and you like Garlic Dill Pickles I've got a pretty good recipe for them. Just let me know and I would enjoy sharing it with you!

Have a splendid neighbor.

 11 months ago  

Oh yes I would love that recipe!!! I only managed to put up a few jars of bread and butter pickles last year, too sweet! This year, I wanna get a few flavors canned.

RECIPE FOR GARLIC DILL PICKLES
BRINE
1cup of water/8oz
3/4 of a cup of white vinegar
1 tablespoon of salt
6 teaspoons/.67oz of maple syrup

OTHER INGREDIENTS
4 teaspoons of garlic
1 tablespoon of black peppercorn
2 teaspoons of dill
1/4 teaspoon of red pepper flakes

When the Maple syrup runs low, we use Honey at the same rate.

I'm not a fan of a sweet pickle, but Robin enjoys them every so often.

 11 months ago  

Thank you!!! Printing it out right now, or I'll never find this again. Definitely going to try it. I'm very happy it's with syrup.

Syrup or honey, whenever possible we try to stay from refined sugars.

Wonderful garden @owasco ... Your garden is clean and well-located and the seedlings are healthy and cute💕. It looks like you'll have a bountiful garden ahead!🙏☺️.

Happy gardening!

 11 months ago  

I'm hopeful this year will be a good year. Thanks for stopping by!