Showing posts with label Basil. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Basil. Show all posts

Tuesday, March 20, 2012

Quick Tip: Getting a deal on Cilantro


I planted six cilantro plants last weekend, but only paid for two.  How?  When you buy cilantro starts from the big box store, they are almost always planted with 3 or 4 seedlings per pot.  You can see the three distinct seedlings in the closeup above.  Don't just plant the whole thing in one spot.  Spread them out a little bit for more production.  


Remove the cilantro from the pot.  

*Note the wooden template in the background.  I plant cilantro 4 plants per square foot.


Cilantro is a very hardy plant that can handle rough treatment.  Using a serrated knife, divide the rootballs into thirds (or quarters depending on the number of seedlings).  Plant them according to label instructions and water well.

This also works very well for basil.  It's too early in the year to plant basil, so lock this trick away for later.

Thursday, July 14, 2011

Weekly Gardening Outlook: Dog Days

This will be a continuing series where we look ahead at the coming week in gardening for the Northwest Arkansas area.

Chloe and chicks
Might as well get the bad news out of the way first.  After two years without harming a bird, the dogs killed two of my young hens.  They haven't bothered the full grown hens, but the little ones darting about apparently stimulated their inner carnivore.  I looked out the window and saw them bouncing around having a great time with one of the hens in Crash's (our male) mouth.  They were harshly reprimanded, shown the dead bird, and then reprimanded again whenever they showed interest in it.  I've kept them chained up when I'm not in the backyard.  It's going to be hard to trust them around the birds again.

Confined dogs
Insect Report:

Flea beetles on an eggplant
Flea beetles attack my eggplants every year, making the small holes in the leaves that you can see in the picture above.  Unless the population really gets out of control, they don't really seem to hurt the plants much.  They are interesting beetles in that, when disturbed, they can hop very quickly like the fleas they are named after.  A dose of neem oil mixed with pyrethrin (aka NeemII) gets rid of them.  These are both organic treatments.

Japanese beetles eating an okra leaf
Japanese beetles minutes after an application of NeemII
The Japanese beetles are out and trying to eat my green bean vines, apple trees, blueberry bushes, okra, basil, etc.  Above, you can graphically see the effects of the aforementioned neem oil/pyrethrin mix.  The beetles are only out for 3 weeks or so a year, so two or three applications spread over that time will keep them off of my crops.

Japanese beetle on sweet basil
Pyrethrin kills a broad spectrum of insects, including beneficial insects.  The way to protect beneficial insects is to target the beetles by applying it in the late evening after most beneficial insects have quit flying.  Pyrethrin is biodegradable and breaks down quickly when exposed to oxygen.  Neem oil on the other hand lasts for up to a week, but only kills insects that eat plant leaves.  

Butterfly on flowering sweet basil

These basil plants were treated with NeemII less than 24 hours before this picture and video were taken.  They are covered in butterflies and literally hundreds of hoverflies.  The video doeesn't fully capture the swarm of activity, but it's the best I could do.  It's important to use a pest management system that doesn't harm these beneficial insects.  Both butterflies and hoverflies are excellent pollinators (meaning more fruit for you) and the larva of many hoverflies eat harmful insects like aphids.  If I had just dusted these in Sevin dust, I would have destroyed both.

Caterpillar hiding in damaged onion leaf
Closeup of caterpillar in the onion leaf
Looking at my onions, I noticed the ends of a few leaves were missing.  Upon closer inspection, I caught this guy red-handed inside one of the leaves.  I believe it's a leek moth larvae.  I could treat the onions with Bacillis thuringiensis (BT), but after inspecting them closely I only found a few and the onions are nearing the end of their growing season anyway.  I'll just keep an eye on it for now and smash any that I find.  Interestingly, they have not affected my two-year-old evergreen bunching onions.

Garden Report:

Okra
The okra is still in the vegetative growing phase and has not put on fruit yet.  This variety (Perkins Long Pod) will get up to 5-6 feet tall with trunks as big around as my wrist before they are done.  You can see a definite size difference between the plants on the south (left) end of the bed and those on the north (right).  The plants on the north end get less sunlight because they are shaded somewhat by the plants to the south.

Tomatoes
Cherry tomatoes
Roma tomatoes
The Roma tomato plants may not get tall (~2 feet), but they are loaded with fruit.  None of which are ripe yet.  The cherry tomato plant (Super Sweet 100) has just begun to give a few ripe fruit.  Like the Romas, it is loaded with green fruit and blossoms.  No evidence of blossom-end rot this year.  The crushed egg shells (calcium) and straw mulch (conserving soil moisture) seem to be working.

Jalapenos
Bell peppers
The peppers are also loaded with fruit.  The straw mulch has really improved the health of my plants.

Flowering eggplant
No fruit on the eggplants yet, but they are putting on plenty of purple flowers.

Onions with an eggplant in the background
The onions are ready to harvest.  This is indicated when the foliage begins to fall down as seen above.  Click HERE for a previous post on harvesting and drying onions.

Young butternut squash
Butternut squash vine on a trellis
I have had such problems with squash vine borer (SVB) in the past, that the only squash I'm growing this year is the butternut squash.  Butternut squash is said to be resistant to the SVB.  So far so good.  The vines are 3-5 feet long and are growing up my cattle panel trellises.  

Swiss chard
The chard is doing what chard does.  It's growing with little care or maintenance.  Such a great crop.

Purple-podded pole beans on a trellis
The pole beans are 3-4 feet long and have yet to flower.  The only problem I've had with this variety in the past is with Japanese beetles defoliating them.  I have the NeemII ready...

Turnip
The warm season growing of turnips has been a huge success.  No maintenance and they are ready to harvest.

New growth on the apple tree
The apple tree is putting on some new growth after being hit hard by cedar-apple rust.  I've treated it with Serenade and this is a promising sign.  I plan preventive treatments next spring starting in April.

Blueberry bush
The two blueberry bushes are growing gangbusters.  I mulched them with straw and that seems t have really helped keep the pots from drying out between waterings.

Dead strawberry plants
Speaking of drying out between waterings, the lack of rain combined with 100 degree temperatures and my neglect have killed about two-thirds of my strawberry plants.  The cinderblocks being porous and having one side exposed to air, dry out easily.  They are easily harvested because of the accesibility, but be aware of the drawback to planting inside the cinderblocks.  Being the low maintence gardener that I am, I am ok with this.  The strawberry plants that remain can obviously handle drought better than those that died off, so as the years go on, the genetics of my plants will exhibit drought tolerance.

Jerusalem artichokes (sunchokes)
Amongst those weeds is a stand of sunchokes about 4 feet tall.  They will put on a beautiful display of small yellow flowers in a month and after it freezes, I will harvest the potato-like tubers.


Chicken and Egg Report:

Juvenile laying hen next to a juvenile meat bird
Again, the size differential between these birds who were born the same day and fed the same feed is astounding.

2"x4" wire barrier
The white cornish/rock meat birds have become so heavy that they cannot haul themselves back up the ramp to get to the food and water.  I put a 2"x4" wire mesh across the end to keep them up top, while allowing the hens access to the nest boxes.  The hen's production has leveled off to about 4 eggs per day.

Out in the proverbial cold
When I put the wire in a week ago, more than half of the egg laying chicks were able to squeeze through the wire and come and go as they pleased.  Just a week later, they have grown such that only two of them can still fit through.  The ones that can't fit through, spend their days foraging in the yard for insects, worms, and vegetation.  We've mysteriously lost two more of them (down to 7).  I can't blame the dogs.  Since I found no feathers or other remains, my money is on hawks.  I'm going to let the dogs run free again as a deterrent to the hawks.  We'll see how that goes.

Weather Outlook:

-We finally got a break from the heat and got a little rain to boot!  Temperatures will remain in the mid to upper 90s this week with little further chance of rain.  Keep your gardens watered.

What's Being Harvested:

-Cherry tomatoes
-Turnips
-Herbs
-Serrano, jalapeno, and bell peppers
-Green, yellow, and purple onions

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Wednesday, June 1, 2011

Weekly Gardening Outlook: It's Grow Time!

This will be a continuing series where we look ahead at the coming week in gardening for the Northwest Arkansas area

Onions reaching for the sky

The garden is planted, the days are sunny, and the nights are warm.  Now the weeding, watering, pruning, repelling insects, and fighting diseases begins.

Tomato plants, caged and ready
Whatever was eating my tomato plants got all of them over the course of three nights.  Before we left, I crossed my fingers and replanted.  When we returned home, all of them were intact and thriving.  Yea!  I believe it was the work of an animal and that the new cages overhead and the new rotted straw mulch deterred it.  This year I am trying rotted straw as a garden mulch.  It seems to be doing a great job at reducing moisture fluctuation in the soil and suppressing weeds.  Thumbs up so far.

Cutworm
I did find this cutworm in the front yard.  So they are in the area, but I don't think a cutworm was the tomato killing culprit.  The stalks were intact, but defoliated.  A cutworm would have cut them off at the base like Paul Bunyan.

Pepper plants
I planted 4 bell pepper plants, a serrano pepper plant, a jalapeño pepper plant, and a mild jalapeño pepper plant before we left.  They doubled in size while we were gone.  I added 2-3 foot high stakes after this picture was taken.  I will tie the plants loosely to the stakes with strips of pantyhose as they grow to provide support.

Sweet Basil
My three basil plants were purchased in one pot and subdivided.  They are thriving and won't require much care other than watering.

Strawberry plants sending out runners
Things that do require some care are the strawberry plants.  They constantly send out runners, which should be pruned off.  The first wave of berries has tapered off.  Another should be along shortly.

Onion sets flowering
Onions bulbing up a little
Some of the onions sets that I planted are flowering.  Onions being biennial, this shouldn't happen until the
second season.  I'm not sure why they are doing this.  Perhaps our late freeze convinced them that they had been through a winter and that they are now on their second year.  I removed the scapes and we will see if it has any effect on the bulbs.

Bolting hybrid cilantro
The hybrid cilantro that I bought from the store has begun to bolt (flower), though it resisted the heat much better than the heirloom volunteer cilantro.  The lower leaves still taste fine, so I have cut the tops off and we'll see if I get any usable cilantro from the remaining plant to use in salsa.

Bolting arugula
The arugula bolted and tasted very bitter.  It's now in the compost bin.

Lemon thyme with a side of cilantro
Thyme
Oregano
The herbs are spreading out.  I purposely did not surround them with rotted straw so that they could do this.  Also, thyme and oregano prefer a drier soil.

Green Beans planted (purple podded pole)
A row of green beans (purple podded pole beans) was planted where the spaghetti squash was last year.  The straw was simply pulled back to expose a row.  They will grow up the trellis made from cattle panel.

Butternut squash seedlings after thinning
The butternut squash seeds, planted before we left, have emerged.  I planted 2-3 seeds per hole and pinched off all, but the strongest seedling.  We had such a problem with the squash vine borer (SVB) last year, that the only squash species that we planted this year is the butternut, which is said to be resistant to the SVB.

Green blueberries
We will get 3-4 good clusters off of this bush this year.  The other remaining bush isn't producing, but seems to be growing well.

Sunchokes (aka Jerusalem artichokes)

The sunchokes are emerging.  I chose not to harvest any this past fall to give them an extra year to become established.  They took advantage of that and have multiplied quite a lot.  What you see above is from the planting of just one tuber last spring.


Native blackberry vines flowering
Unknown grape vine
Some wild edibles have sprung up at the back of the property.  We've gotten wild blackberries there for years.  There's a power line overhead and the birds "plant" the seeds for us.  The grapevine is new.  I haven't identified what kind it is, but I will keep an eye on it.  The neighbors have a large grapevine, so I assume that is the source.


Homemade, collapsible squarefoot planting guide
I have never been a fan of permanent dividers or string marking the divisions in a squarefoot garden.  They tend to get in the way of weeding, mulch application, and soaker hose placement.  So I developed this planting tool that is very portable and makes planting a square foot garden a snap.  It is simply 2"x4" boards ripped down the middle and joined together loosely with bolts.  It allows you to plant 16 square feet at a time and is removed once the seeds or plants are in place.



Chicken and Egg Report:

Chickens foraging
We are getting three to four eggs a day from our backyard flock of 6 hens. I am expecting a shipment of 10 assorted brown egg layers and 15 white cornish/rock cross meat birds sometime this week.  The 15 meat birds will be raised for only 6-7 weeks.  If they get much older than that, the meat begins to toughen up.  Come late July, we will have a freezer full of fresh, homegrown chicken!  The new laying hens will begin laying sometime in November and will replace our current hens.  The current hens will be canned up at that time for use in chicken salad sandwiches and soups.  The pressure canning process makes these tough old birds quite good to eat.

Weather Outlook:

-Hot and dry.  Slight chance of a popup shower here and there.
-Keep your garden well watered.  The high winds and temperatures will dry the garden out.

What's Being Harvested:



Freshly harvested cilantro

-Strawberries (barely)
-Cilantro
-Herbs