The crookneck squash I added to the bed on May 8 is dying.
I think the moral of this this story is don’t buy seedlings with two plants in a tiny 2″ pot. Thin early. I hope that’s the lesson here. Does any one have any other ideas?
The crookneck squash I added to the bed on May 8 is dying.
I think the moral of this this story is don’t buy seedlings with two plants in a tiny 2″ pot. Thin early. I hope that’s the lesson here. Does any one have any other ideas?
Photos from the ninth week in the garden are up, spanning May 9-15, and have been tagged "Week Nine" in my Gardening 2010, Part Two album in my Picasa Web Albums.
It’s a big week. The zinnia that I transplanted is about to bloom in various different parts of different beds, and the first one to show a flower looks awesome.
And then, after Kim has already picked five tomatoes, I finally have one that is finally growing on The Beef Maestro tomato plant I have in a large container.
On Saturday, I went to The Home Depot and Enchanted Forest to pick up some plants to put in the spots in the bed extension that were bare, thanks to the failure of some transplants I tried to install right before the 90-degree early May we’ve just experienced.
It’s freakin’ hot here! But, not so much this week. Pretty windy this week, and I had to do some staking, but that’s another topic.
Without further ado, the new arrivals:
Photos from the eighth week in the garden are up, spanning May 2-8, and have been tagged "Week Eight" in my Gardening 2010, Part Two album in my Picasa Web Albums.
I had to start a new album in Picasa Web Albums, because the maximum number of photos allowed in one album is 1,000 (lame).
On another note, this week I was a little-less obsessive compulsive with the garden photos, and didn’t shoot any all week, instead opting to shoot only on Saturday.
On Friday, my daughter picked and ate the first strawberry of the season. She reports it was good.