A Bee in the City

adventures in an urban garden

Some photos 12 June 2009

Marigold 'Tangerine Gem' and calendula 'Flashback Mix,' waiting to be planted on 29 May:  These were from the first farmers' market of the year.

Marigold 'Tangerine Gem,' calendula 'Flashback Mix,' and lavenders waiting to be planted on 29 May: These were from the first farmers' market of the year.

More plants waiting to be planted on 29 May:  Bidens, knautia, various salvias, coleus 'Alabama Sunset' (one of my favorite coleus), and Scottish bluebells

More plants waiting to be planted on 29 May: Bidens, knautia, various salvias, coleus 'Alabama Sunset' (one of my favorite coleus), and Scottish bluebells

New vase with dianthus 'Rainbow Loveliness' and ragged robin on 7 June: First garden bouquet of the year

New handmade vase with dianthus 'Rainbow Loveliness' and ragged robin (a double-flowering cultivar) on 7 June: First garden bouquet of the year

Plants waiting to be planted today:  Chamomile (budded), two kinds of celosia (a red-on-red and the one that looks like little brains), a variegated felicia, and (behind chamomile buds) globe amaranth

Plants waiting to be planted today: Chamomile (budded), two kinds of celosia (a red-on-red and the one that looks like little brains), a variegated felicia, and (behind chamomile buds) globe amaranth

Pea ripening today, with pea flower, fava/broad bean plants, and salvias

Peas ripening today, with pea flowers, fava/broad bean plants, and a salvia flower

Peas ripening on 'Golden Sweet' today: Just two of many pods.  I'm not sure if this has really been my best performer so far or if it just seems that way because the peas are so easy to spot!

Peas ripening on 'Golden Sweet' today: Just two of many pods. (Also a green pea pod to the right of the foremost golden sweet.) I'm not sure if this has really been my best performer so far or if it just seems that way because the peas are so easy to spot!

Peas forming on 'Capucijners Blue Pod' today (AKA 'Pois a Crosse Violette'): My other colorful pea!  I don't know how well you can tell in a photo, but the one in focus (the one farther back) is the craziest pea I've ever seen - it's MARBLED in different shades of purple!

Peas forming on 'Capucijners Blue Pod' (AKA 'Pois a Crosse Violette') today: My other colorful pea! (plus a bonus green pea) I don't know how well you can tell in a photo, but the one in focus (the one farther back) is the craziest pea I've ever seen - it's MARBLED in different shades of purple! (You can click the photo for a larger sized version to see the marbling better.)

Peas forming on the dwarf pea plants today

Peas forming on the dwarf pea plants today

Fava/broad beans blooming today. (Pea plant/blossom in foreground)

Fava/broad beans blooming today. (Pea plant blurry in foreground)

Perennial salvia with bolting cilantro 'Salsa' today

Perennial salvia with bolting cilantro 'Salsa' today. Ornamental grass 'Shenandoah Purple' in background.

Zinnia 'Profusion Fire,' gold coin, lantana 'Lavender Trailing,' creeping thyme, and golden oregano today. You can't really see it here, but the thyme is just starting to bloom.

Zinnia 'Profusion Fire,' gold coin, lantana 'Lavender Trailing,' creeping thyme, and golden oregano today. You can't really see it here, but the thyme is just starting to bloom.

Dianthus 'Rainbow Loveliness' with African daisy, marigold 'Tangerine Gem,' and tovara 'Painter's Palette':  Like most dianthus, it does not look its best after a downpour.

Dianthus 'Rainbow Loveliness' with African daisy, marigold 'Tangerine Gem,' and tovara 'Painter's Palette': Like most dianthus, it does not look its best after a downpour.

One of my favorite color combinations in the garden at present:  A marigold with an angelonia.  (Heliotrope in background.)

One of my favorite color combinations in the garden at present: A marigold with an angelonia. (Heliotrope in background.)

Peach-leafed bellflower 'Telham Beauty'

Peach-leafed bellflower 'Telham Beauty'

Today was rainy and humid and day four of thick greyness in the sky.  Then, abruptly, the clouds broke, and it turned gorgeous!  This is the sky after the clouds broke.  The sun still sets farther west every day here.  Almost solstice!

Today was rainy and humid and day four of thick greyness in the sky. Then, abruptly, the clouds broke, and it turned gorgeous! This is the sky after the clouds broke. The sun still sets farther west every day here. Almost solstice!

 

Canning article / Recently in the garden 27 May 2009

There is a pretty nice article on home canning in today’s New York Times, targeted towards beginners, Preserving Time in a Bottle (Or a Jar), with a sidebar, Some Canning Dos and Don’ts.  The online version includes a video clip and a slide show.

The snowmelt has emphatically run out in the front garden by now.  Yesterday many of the areas that I hadn’t watered recently (I try to do hand-watering of selected plants when possible instead of whole-garden watering) had quite literally turned to powder.  The ability of the wind and other weather patterns to so completely dry out the front garden so fast never ceases to amaze me.  Thankfully, as I type it’s finally raining, though again the heaviest rain is tracking away from us (usually in the past month it tracks to the south, but this time it’s tracking to the north).

Yesterday I did some planting.  My biggest focus was on the vines that I ordered from Select Seeds (4) and picked up from the nursery recently (2) as they all appeared to be pot-bound and because I know vines want to get going – want to become vines instead of being trapped, being a tiny size in a tiny pot.  I ended up planting 5 of the 6 with the little stand of sweet peas, figuring they could take over when the majority of the sweet peas inevitably die with the onset of long-lasting heat.   The 6th, Spanish Flag (Mina lobata), I planted at the base of the cup plant (Midwestern US native Silphium perfoliatum), a sturdy trellis if there ever was one.  Cup plant is such a hefty presence in the garden that I already get people asking about it even though it’s far from flowering and still short (for cup plant’s standards – maybe 3 feet tall).  Anyway, the biggest reason I picked Spanish Flag for tht spot is because it’s suppsoed to be more tolerant of partial shade than the other vines I planted, and I figured cup plant would, just because of its impressive stature, make whatever climbed on it a bit shaded.  The others I planted were Purple Bell Vine (Rhodochiton atrosanguineum), Creeping Gloxinia (Asarina erubescens) ‘Wine Red,’ Mexican Flame Vine (Senecio confusus) ‘Sao Paulo,’ one of two plants sold as Cardinal Vine, and a morning glory that I think is ‘Blue Star,’ and which I was enchanted by at the nursery because of its tag’s photo of a flower that reminded me of things washed up on seashores, but in photos online looks to be blue-on-blue instead of the photo’s appearance of blue-on-white (still, it appears to be pretty).  After I finished planting them, I handmade a trellis using bamboo poles and garden twine.

I also planted two more creeping verbenas (the two I already had are a deep purple; the new ones are one each in pale lavender and a medium purple), another lantana (‘Citrus,’ which I’ve never grown before [I don’t know if it’s a new cultivar] and which is a pale peachy-orange ringing a bright yellow, and looks lovely planted with the yellow African daisy, the white-with-yellow-centers bacopa, and the pastel stocks, as if it ties the two color themes together better), and twelve young annual ice plants in a mix of colors, ten of them ringing one corner of the garden, one more planted slightly off by the yellow African daisy, and the last one planted at the front retaining wall to provide a bit of consistency.  I think I might’ve planted a couple more things too, but I can’t remember.  I also found a young pea growing in the flower bed and, unsure if it was a sweet pea or a garden pea, transplanted it into the crop patch, off by itself, to see what it becomes.  I assume the ants did the redecorating, as usual.

The peas and fava/broad beans are doing really well.  More favas have blooms every day.  I still love their beautiful white blooms with black splotches; they have such character to me.  Yesterday I noticed the first pea bloom, a white one on one of the dwarf peas (I think it’s ‘De Grace’), and then realized that several of the tall pea plants had buds.  It looks like the rain and crisp air are encouraging them to open their blooms today. The runner beans, edamames (soy beans), and garbanzo bean hadn’t sprouted yet in my last thorough check yesterday, but the last three purple-podded beans have come up since my last update.  (Information on them is pasted below.)  As I’ve said before, how I love purple-podded beans!

Yesterday and today were/are ‘flower days’ in biodynamic growing parlance.  I mentioned what I did yesterday, and today I’m hoping to sow the zinnias, nasturtiums, marigolds, and morning glories.  Marigolds are the first plant I ever remember growing from seed, in window boxes at my bedroom as a child, and I still love their ease of growing from seed and their beautiful flowers, especially the single flowers that I grew up with (neither I nor the pollinators are overly fond of most floofy double marigolds).  Zinnias and nasturtiums are two more of the easiest flowers to grow from seed, and as I noted here last early summer, sowing them shortly before storms works very well as the storm soaks the seed, meaning you can skip the general recommendation of soaking them for 12-24 hours before planting (also a recommendation for morning glory seed).  It’s supposed to thunderstorm later this week (though we’ll see) so I’m hoping planting them today will mean they’ll be soaked shortly and then sprout in the hotter temperatures to come at week’s end.  Right now it’s frigid for this time of year; clocking in in the upper 40s F, it is colder than our average low temperature.  Lucky for ‘De Grace’ that it loves this kind of temperature (it’s supposed to be one of the hardiest garden peas, able to handle some frost well, though in fairness, I’ve found that many of the other heirloom peas are similar in this regard).

My neighborhood farmers’ market starts today, not the best day weather-wise for it, but I am still quite looking forward to perusing all the seedlings for sale, many often things that can’t be found at the local nursery and/or are not organic there.  (Most of the farms at my market are organic, be it in label or solely in practice, but most of the nusery’s suppliers are not.)  Usually the first two or three weeks are mostly plants with some produce, and then the ratio gradually flips until by midsummer there’s usually just one stand selling plants, a fairly new stand that was so unfriendly that I don’t remember them ever even saying hello to me even though I browsed for several minutes at least three different weeks, and the first time, would have probably bought a couple plants from them if I’d been able to find a staff member (that week, there didn’t even appear to be anyone manning the stand when I stopped by, and I wasn’t the only one seriously looking at the time).  Anyhow, the point is that I’m looking forward to seeing the staff again and to getting quality plants and tasty food!  Yay for farmers’ markets!

Royalty Purple Pod Bush. Purple bushes with short runners and purple flowers. Bright-purple stringless 5″-6″ pods cook to dark green. Buff colored seeds germinate in cold, wet soil. Bred by E.M. Meader at the University of New Hampshire and introduced in 1957. (freebie from Peaceful Valley; I strongly favor pole beans, and don’t grow many [sometimes any] bush beans)

Dean’s Purple 55. days. Vigorous, prolific, beautiful. [Family heirloom from Tennessee.] Supplied to us courtesy seedsavers Mark Schonbeck, Valerie Lyle and Dean Turley. Dean recieved the beans as a gift from a student whose family brought it to Frost Bottom, Tennessee when they settled there 150 years ago. Plants form a gorgeous purple and green screen loaded with vivid purple beans. Save both light and dark seedsfor the more tender purple pods and finer taste. Minimal bean beetle damage when other varieties were destroyed. (Southern Exposure Seed Exchange)

Purple Marconi Just in from Italy, a fabulous violet purple Italian pole bean. I was so pleased with these pole snap beans. Vigorous and growing on strong vines up to 8 feet, these are just too beautiful to eat! These were grown on a trellis but they got so big and strong we had to attach an “addition” onto the fence holding up the trellis. They are very ornamental and lovely. The “Purple Marconi Pole Beans” have flat 5-7 inch long pods that turn green when blanched, but the color can be maintained if steam blanched for under 2 minutes. These have a sweet but hearty taste, and are best picked young. Another edible ornamental for your garden, try them raw with crudites for their gorgeous color. Pretty early for a pole sort at 67 days to maturity. (Amishland Seeds)

 

Some recent photos 24 June 2008

I’m sorry it’s taken so long for me to post any of the promised photos.  My computer and my camera have been having abrupt issues communicating and I’ve only been able to upload some of the photos so far.  Here are a random selection of a few of the uploaded ones.

Rudbeckia ‘Toto’ and dill (the latter grown from seed)

On the right is one of a copious number of lavender buds.  I wish I could share some big impressive trick about the dill, but really all I’ve ever done with dill is just take a handful of seeds and broadcast them in a general area, and then repeat it a couple times if I want to seed it in various places.  This rudbeckia was one I got at the farmers’ market this year.  It has done the best out of the six ‘Toto’s; some of them seem to have totally died.  Let this be a stark reminder to you that if you purchase rudbeckia after it’s already warm out, plant it promptly and keep it well-watered while it’s settling in.  Rudbeckias, especially the cultivars that tend to be grown as annuals, don’t react well to stress, and in particular, have a habit of reacting to hot, dry weather by developing mildew on their leaves.  Not only is it not pretty, but if the plants are still small, just a day or three is enough time for it to spread enough to kill them.  (And I even watered them more often than other plants, moreso after they developed mildew; apparently it still wasn’t enough.)  At least my ‘Toto’ tragedy has led me to be more vigilant of the ‘Indian Summer’ rudbeckias (also purchased at the market) and they’ve all survived so far.

Dianthus ‘Inchmery’ blooms with pansy blooms

California poppy foliage on the left; agastache ‘Acapulco Orange’ foliage on the right.

Lima beans and garden beans with lemon verbena

with lemon verbena and the edge of the sea holly

The limas (a bush variety, I think ‘Henderson’s Bush’ but I can’t remember for sure right now) are on the bottom of the photo, the leaves with the rounded dip in them.  The garden beans (vining kinds; I’ve always primarily grown garden bean varieties that are either pole beans or vine well enough to grow on poles) are the leaves that look somewhat similar but are less rounded in appearance, to the left and above the limas in this photo.  The lemon verbena is flopping around in this shot.  This year’s lemon verbena has had a lot of trouble staying horizontal.  I’ve tried putting a stake in the middle of it and it still seems to flop over even with the stake there.  I suspect it’s because last year I bought one that was leggier and that seems to have actually made it adapt better to a windy site than the one I got this year, which was shrubbier (more like lemon verbena’s natural form).  On the far right are some leaves and a bloom stalk of the sea holly, which develops new buds every single day but still hasn’t opened any of them.

One of my many beloved salpiglossis plants (center), backed by pansies, violas, a ‘Tangerine Gem’ marigold, and a California poppy:

The salpiglossis (AKA painted tongue) pictured here was the first to bloom; these were its first blooms.

Pansies and creeping snapdragons:

The coloration of pansies and violas is so fascinating to me.  The blue and yellow one varies in how much yellow it has depending on some factor I have yet to determine (amount of sunlight? temperature when the bloom is forming? I don’t know).

Chive blooms starting to fade:

In the background are a ‘Profusion Fire’ zinnia bloom (orange on left), two buds of a pinkish California poppy (right), and a bloom of ‘White Lily’ verbena (upper left).  ‘White Lily’ turns out to be fairly susceptible to some kind of mildew; one of my two plants has a pretty bad infection and the other has a mild one, and they developed it so fast that the bad infection sprang up literally inbetween times I checked on the plant.

 

A few photos 11 June 2008

Here are some photos from Monday (the 9th), partway through the heat wave –

Part of the front border:

The yellow trumpet in the center of the shot is the first salpiglossis (aka painted tongue) to bloom this year.  A second one is opening in this shot (on a different plant).  Last year the salpiglossis seedlings I bought were heavy on the red trumpets with yellow markings.  This year so far (as of today too) all the ones to bloom have been yellow.  In this shot there are also blooms of pansies, violas, sweet alyssum, stock, blue-on-blue felicia/kingfisher daisy (Felicia heterophylla), marigolds (both French [large red/orange blooms] and signet [smaller orange blooms on ferny foliage]), Marguerite daisies, and California poppies.

Here’s the same area from a slightly different angle:

The tall deep green stalk rising behind the salpiglossis bloom is one of the parsleys.  It started to bolt several days ago (before the heat wave even started) but has yet to actually bloom.  The other one, planted in a different, less windy area of the garden, is still producing leaves.  My initial conclusion from my parsley experiment is that windy weather tends to make parsley bolt faster.

California poppy and dianthus blooms:

I believe the dianthus/pink that’s currently blooming is ‘Inchmery’ (I planted it last year, but it didn’t bloom, like so many other things in their first year in the windy, hot front garden).  I planted two of them last year and they are prolifically blooming right now.  ‘Inchmery’ is an antique pink, but like with so many antique pinks, the breeding stock has been diluted to the point where it’s honestly difficult to tell for sure if what you’re being sold and/or are growing in your garden is actually the original stock from the olden days of gardening or is a plant of a similar description.  I don’t believe it’s usually intentional on the part of sellers; I think it’s honestly just really hard to be sure, since there were no photos then, not very many color drawings have survived, and written descriptions from the time period oftentimes fit most or all of the plants now being sold as the cultivar.  Regardless, whether it’s ‘Inchmery’ or not, it’s a beautiful pink, very floriferous, whitish-pink, and carrying a lovely fragrance.  I got my stock of it from Select Seeds.

The Small’s penstemon (Penstemon smallii) is blooming in the middle of the left of the shot (a pale purplish color on the outside of the tubular blooms).  There’s an orange gazania just below it, and pansies and violas below that.  On the lower right are a felicia and a signet marigold.  Behind the poppy and the dianthus blooms are a blooming lavender (Lavandula angustifolia cultivar ‘Lady’, one of the ones I got at the first farmers’ market), a euphorbia (chartreuse bracts), and salvia (Salvia coccinea) ‘Brenthurst’ (coral blooms partially visible behind the euphorbia).

Another shot of the front border:

I thought this one might give a good sense of how tall the sundial lupine’s blooms are, as well as iris ‘Mme. Chereau’.  (‘Mme. Chereau’ and fellow iris ‘Quaker Lady’ [the latter not pictured here] have faded fast in the heat wave; most blooms lasted less than a day, and there are no current open blooms.)  You can also see the full plant of the bolting parsley in this shot.  The tall silver plant is the rose campion, still budded.

Plants still waiting to be planted in the front garden:

Amongst them are two six-packs from last week’s farmers’ market (the rudbeckia ‘Toto Mix’ and the lisianthus), the baptisia/false indigo from last week’s market, sweet marjoram, winter savory, sage, a Salvia greggii that blooms in a creamy yellowish color, curly chives/German garlic/ornamental onion (Allium spirale AKA Allium senescens), lavender cotton, French tarragon, and a second rosemary, ‘Tuscan Blue’, which is a richer green color of leaf and more upright-growing than the one I already planted, ‘Arp’, and than many other rosemaries.  It’s been ages since I grew curly chives, and I was psyched to see that the nursery had added it to their herb section.  What can I say, I just love growing alliums of all kinds.

The heat wave finally broke today.  It was our longest heat wave since 2002, when it was very hot and very humid for eight days straight.  It is still fairly hot, and mostly sunny, but it is no longer humid; now the air temperature accurately reflects what the air feels like, instead of having to factor in high humidity to create a heat index. I took many more photos this morning and hope to make a post with some of them later.

 

This week in the garden 29 May 2008

The local farmers’ market started yesterday. I always get at least two lavenders there – ‘Lady’ and ‘French Fringed’, which are consistently sold by one of the longest-running organic farms there and not usually hardy here – as well as cooking thyme if it hasn’t survived the winter and some six-packs of annuals. So this week I got both lavenders and the cooking thyme, as well as lemon thyme, an especially pretty geranium (this one has petals with bright pink outer petals and white inner petals, as well as unusual leaves that are much darker in the rest of the leaf than the very outer edges) and six-packs of marigold ‘Safari Red’, marigold ‘Honeycomb’, and generic mixed gazanias, all from one farm I’ve been buying plants from for many years.

I also found out that the farm that’s been selling the best, most robust perennials I’ve ever had the pleasure to grow is leaving the business after sixteen years, and next week will be their final time at our farmers’ market, so I got two perennials from them (at least half their week’s plants had been sold in the first half-hour of the market by fellow panic buyers, so by the time I stopped there, their stock was already limited), monkshood ‘Sparks’ AKA ‘Spark’s Variety’ and delphinium ‘Butterfly Blue’. The farmers told me that unlike other delphiniums, this one prefers full sun and likes hot conditions, so that’s where I planted it when I got home yesterday, and so far it’s doing great even though I haven’t even taken the time to hand-water it and it’s almost eighty F and brilliantly sunny today. According to the farmers, monkshood ‘Sparks’ can easily attain heights of six to eight feet (two-plus meters) and is completely unfazed by strong winds. Today I poked about a bit online and so far, nothing comes even close to that estimate. However, I think it’s the monkshood grown by a local gardening friend and hers easily reaches five feet, often more. I don’t know if New England is a better place to grow it than the climates of what I’ve been reading or what else. I’ll be curious to see what height it gets to in the garden here.

There’s a new farm at the market this year that specializes in herbs, and yesterday they had a stand full of herb plants, but they didn’t have any signs identifying themselves as organic and the staff wasn’t the friendliest yesterday so I didn’t ask them about it, and am not sure yet whether they use pesticides/etc. or whether they are like some of the other farms and just aren’t certified as organic despite using all-organic practices (which means that they’re not allowed to use the term, now that the US government has a certification process for it). There are a few other farms at the market that are the latter, so I know it’s a possibility. Hopefully I’ll get to ask them next week. They had some gorgeous geraniums, but I forced myself to stop at buying the one from the other farm. My geranium fanaticism is getting to be a bit much.

On Tuesday (the 27th) we had severe storms, thunder rattling the buildings with rain coming so fast and thick that the gutters couldn’t hold it all and it rolled off the roof in waves, pouring past my windows as I stood at one watching newly fallen rain blow off other roofs before it even had a chance to roll off. This rain has apparently been most excellent for the garden, as so much more has been happening in it since.

For example, some of the California poppies have finally abruptly budded; here’s one:

The sundial lupine has continued its blooming progression:

A third bud has formed since the rain, too.

The blue-on-blue felicias have gone crazy, tons of their buds opening now.

The salpiglossis have budded:

Shown here with stock (peach bloom in center), euphorbia (upper left), and quicksilver (silvery fuzzy leaves on right).

Some of the new stuff —

Marigold ‘Honeycomb’

It is one of my favorite marigolds.

Marigold ‘Safari Red’

Lemon thyme

Gazania (orange) with pansies and a snapdragon

Most of the gazanias at the farm stand were already blooming. I picked a pack in oranges and yellows to balance out the (still not blooming) ‘Talent Mix’ gazanias I bought at the nursery. In my experience ‘Talent Mix’ tends to bloom primarily in mauve and pale yellow.

Another gazania (two blooms)

The two bronzy-leaved plants and the variegated one are all lantanas. The two are ‘Lavender Trailing’ and the third is a new-to-me (not sure if it’s new-in-general) one, ‘Samantha’. I’ve grown ‘Lavender Trailing’ several times before and it’s the one lantana I try to grow every year. ‘Samantha’ is budded (has been since I planted it) but has not yet bloomed. It’s supposed to bloom in a lemony yellow.

Another gazania

I don’t know if you can see the tiny pollinator on one of the perennial sweet alyssum blooms down below the gazania in this shot. This is the first year I’ve grown perennial sweet alyssum and I’ve been amazed at just how big a hit it is with small pollinators (many of whom also go on to either kill pests or lay eggs that turn into hatchlings that kill pests).

One more gazania

Dianthus ‘Double North’ with lavender foliage and iris foliage

This one’s new at the nursery this year. I got it there recently and planted it yesterday. It’s got a nice fragrance.

The front garden, half in sun and half in shadow: