I go to nature to be soothed and healed, and to have my senses put in order.
John Burroughs

Sunday, June 6, 2021

Starting over

What a roller-coaster ride the weather has given us of late; from heat during the second last week of May, to brutal frosts the last week of May, to energy-sapping heat and humidity today. It has been very dry, and the township is under a fire ban, but late yesterday, we had a lovely quarter inch of rain, and this morning the yellowing spots in the yard are all green, green, green!

After taking a chance on that warm weather in May, and planting out my tomatoes and peppers, the frosts in the last week of May pretty much did the tomatoes in, but surprisingly, the peppers were only singed here and there, and are coming back now, and blooming! I double covered the tomatoes and peppers, and left the covers on well into the mornings, as the day temperatures did not even rise into double digits. The cool days and cold nights all in a row stopped all the growing things in their tracks. We were lighting the fire each morning! The frost even did in native plants/weeds. The Milkweeds are burnt, the Spreading Dog bane is toast, and even the base leaves of the Orange Hawk weed look shriveled.

I had to buy new tomato plants, and when they were rung up, realized how much money I save by starting my own! Choice is also limited when buying starts.

So, I am starting over, and spirits are again on a positive swing. Yesterday I finished planting the warm weather stuff, cucumbers, squash and beans. Two bare places are left in the beds, one for the second planting of beans and one for a later planting of carrots.

There isn't much green to be seen yet in the beds, an 8 foot row of peas had their top leaves scorched yellow in the frost. The 8 foot row of climbing beans have just popped through the soil. The blue rounds in the third bed were cut from a leaky water barrel, and sunk into the ground, as there is bedrock just below the surface there, and the rounds increase the soil depth, and hopefully will contain the mint and oregano, which are just starting from seed in them.


The garlic had their tips yellowed in the frost, but otherwise had no issues.


The rhubarb wilted a bit, but is going great now. Some of the stalks are almost as big around as my wrist!


This is a baby white oak tree that we planted when we moved here. It has been doing very well. The brown leaves are frost damage, but it will come back. It got singed badly because we planted it out in the open.


9 comments:

  1. Sorry about all the crazy weather, I've heard so many say the same things. Sorry your tomatoes didn't make it through it all too. Sounds like everything is full speed ahead now though - enjoy! :)

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    1. The weather has been pretty extreme this year. Hopefully it will be smoother sailing now!

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  2. Oh, Mother Nature, why do you do this to us? Although we had several nights in the low 30s and frost evident in the mornings, we didn't lose anything. (We covered what we could a couple of nights.) Sorry to hear you had as much of your garden destroyed as you did. I'm looking at plants that I set out too early (too impatient) and are now stunted and am vowing to follow the advice of a couple of the old-timey gardeners we met when we first moved up here: Don't put anything in the garden until the first week of June. :o\

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    1. I think the 'old-timey' gardeners are right! I am adjusting my planting schedule accordingly for next spring! Its just that gardening itch that is so hard to control!

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  3. I thought our May was crazy, but yours beat ours! Gardening is certainly a challenge these days, isn't it? Hopefully, everything will be onward-ho from here.

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  4. It has been much more 'extreme' than normal. After all that, I get nervous when cooler weather is forecast, even now when summer is almost upon us!

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  5. Our young oaks and butternuts lost all their leaves to frost, but they are budding again. My lilies and iris lost their flower buds. I'm watering twice a day, morning and evening just to keep everything dampish. There is rain in the forecast for this afternoon. It has really clouded up, but I'm not holding my breath.

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    1. Forgot to mention that the frost didn't seem to bother the young apple tree at all.

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    2. I lost the buds on the Lemon lilies, sadly, as they are so aromatic. The iris are all scorched on the tips but buds are rising.
      We got a good boom of thunder and some grumbles this afternoon, but no rain, and now the sun is out full again.
      I've been going out after 8PM, with the bug shirt(!), and watering the seedlings that are coming up. Once a week I give the mulched plants a good soak. Interesting that you have butternut trees. Are they hardy to this zone? (3b) How are the gypsy worms over your way? We have a few and are watching the apple, plum and haskaps daily.

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