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Gardening questions and answers
message 51:
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Scout
(new)
Jun 03, 2011 09:18PM

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What's doing well in your garden this year, Bun? My bell peppers and eggplants and zucchini are producing enough so that I can give some to my mom and my neighbors, and I just have a few plants. I love having a garden.

What does one person do with 60 artichokes?!
I've only eaten fresh artichokes once, and if memory serves, it was an awful lot of trouble for a teeny amount of food ingestion.

exactly how i feel about crab legs.....but, they're just so damn tasty!!

Scout, thank you for the bug info.
Jammies wrote: "Okay, gardening gurus, should I deadhead my clematis(es) or not? And what is the plural of clematis?
Scout, thank you for the bug info."
http://forums.gardenweb.com/forums/lo...
clematis (plural clematises or clematis)
Scout, thank you for the bug info."
http://forums.gardenweb.com/forums/lo...
clematis (plural clematises or clematis)

Bun, I know you prune, you're a ferocious pruner! I wonder if I could harvest a seed or two and try growing clematis from scratch? That could be my equivalent of the onion experiment. Hmmm.

Then this weekend the whole plant just withered. The fruit is still ripening, but everything else is just hanging there. I tried water, food, love. The water now just drips straight through, so I'm thinking it's totally dead. Ever heard of that happening? I've had plants fail to thrive, but never had one that was looking so strong and happy turn bad overnight.
Does anyone else let a few weed seedlings grow among the cultivated plant, just out of curiosity? I do this. Right now in my lobelia, which is indoors and I'm growing from seed, there is the most fascinating, large seedling which I did not plant. I've never seen it before and I'm dying to find out what it is. It must have sprouted from something long dormant in the soil, as the pot it's in hasn't been subjected to outside air.
I also get tons of elm seedlings every year.
Some of them might be cottonwood seedlings, as I've been seeing cottonwood seeds blow by and get trapped for a couple weeks.
I also get tons of elm seedlings every year.
Some of them might be cottonwood seedlings, as I've been seeing cottonwood seeds blow by and get trapped for a couple weeks.

Sprouts in a garden left over from last year's plants are commonly called volunteers.
Larry wrote: "Sprouts in a garden left over from last year's plants are commonly called volunteers.
"
I grew calibrachoa in that pot last year. That would be awesome if it turned into calibrachoa.
"
I grew calibrachoa in that pot last year. That would be awesome if it turned into calibrachoa.
If I have an unopened bag of potting soil, will it still be good next year, or should I return it to the store?

A tiger swallowtail was visiting the zinnias this morning, close enough for me to touch.
Can you keep berry brambles from growing back? I'm going to buy some industrial strength weed killer if one of you doesn't give me a better way to keep this mess growing back again and again. We just had them cut down to nubs a couple of months ago, now they're taller than the fence! Is there some secret kitchen formula, like mixing red wine vinegar with corn starch and nutmeg? Come on, somebody, give me the recipe! Must.Kill.Berry.Bushes!
Herbicides sound like your best bet. Also in this article: ways not to try to get rid of berry bushes.
http://www.hgtv.com/landscaping/getti...
http://www.hgtv.com/landscaping/getti...
Thanks, LG, that was a helpful article. Depressing, but helpful.
The pathetic thing (and annoying) is that I've never seen a berry on them, I don't even know if they're blackberries or raspberries. They're just evil sticker vines that will send runners out clear across the back yard!
The pathetic thing (and annoying) is that I've never seen a berry on them, I don't even know if they're blackberries or raspberries. They're just evil sticker vines that will send runners out clear across the back yard!



Thanks, Scout & Bun. I'm starting to feel like I have a chance! :)

We've almost got it cleared out...


"When disposing of a bag of live Japanese Beetles (attracted the phernomes in the trap) microwave the bag for 1-2 minutes to kill the beetles. Crispy Critters."



One, make sure they get a lot of sun.
Two, water evenly--don't soak them and let them dry up for a couple of weeks. They need an inch of rain/hose water ever week. Water them directly at the base of the plant, trying not to get any of the leaves wet. Touch a wet tomato leaf and it may dry up or be more susceptible to disease.
Three, if your tomato plants are experiencing black spots on the fruit or sick-looking blighted leaves, you probably need to put your tomatoes in a different area of the yard next year. Various tomato diseases can winter over in the soil, the crop needs to be rotated.
Four, in the area where you used to have the tomatoes before you moved them, you will not want to plant things in the tomato family, ie eggplant, as it will be subject to the same diseases.

Sarah Pi wrote: "Very good tips, Cynthia. I like that you refer to yourself in the third person as well. My tomatoes this year have been a disappointment, but I can't really say what I did wrong."
Oh, come on. We want to know.
Oh, come on. We want to know.

One thing I learned this year is to be sure to plant miniature marigolds around the edges of the raised bed. The ones this year grew two feet tall.
It's so hot here that I'm already thinking about cooler weather. I've never done a fall or winter vegetable garden, so I'm thinking maybe some combination of collards, broccoli (that is a cool crop, isn't it?), and cabbage. Anyone tried these?

Oh, come on. We want to know.
I'll never tell.

One thing I learned this year is to be sure to plant miniature marigolds around the edges of the raised bed. The ones this year grew two feet ..."
Scout, I think broccoli and cabbage take a couple of months to mature. I'd try salad greens in cool weather, or radishes, some things that mature more quickly. Guess it depends on your average first frost date.
