Monday, September 7, 2020

August & September in the garden


Chopping down the mirabelle

Since my husband aka MotH does not read my garden blog I'm just going to come right out and say it: I'm glad he's back at work! It has been quite the extended summer what with his smartworking from home during lockdown and then the 4-day work weeks when the company finally reopened. But when the office issued a mandatory August off to use up accumulated vacation time, I knew I'd never have time to properly sit down and blog. I would never have my own space!

That's not to say August went by without incident. On the contrary, it was a big deal to get rid of the mirabelle plum. For several years it had been plagued with aphids each season and failed to produce healthy fruit, so we both decided it best to chop it down. I will miss the small yellow plums that reminded us of northeastern France (that's where we first learned of mirabelles), but what to put in its place is still up in the air.

The vegetable yields are off this year since it was only warm enough to transplant in the 2nd half of June: moderate crop of tomatoes, zero zucchini (lebanese), a handful of Parisian pickling cucumbers, and just over a pound of patty pan squash. There were loads of male flowers on the zucchini and patty pan, but hardly any females. I can't say if it had anything to do with the weather (which stopped being hot at the end of August), but all I saw was a lot of powdery mildew and slugs in the garden.


Large patty pan squash bushes. Spread is about 2' with vine length at 3'.

Now, in September, I'm in fall garden mode and hope to get good germination with some new (and old) seeds in my stash. These egg shell trays are something that I'd seen on garden blogs and am giving them a try. If the chard and turnip leaves don't come up (old seeds), the whole lot will simply go into the compost bin.

4 comments:

Michelle said...

I see that you've harvested 6 pounds of Mara de Bois strawberries! I'm so envious. I tried growing them 2 times and each time the rodents did them in. I think you must have sent all the heat this way, it's beyond hot, it's scorching at 43ÂșC. Do tell how the egg shell seed starting goes.

K and S said...

bummer about the mirabelles but whoo hoo for MotH back at work:)

Rowena said...

The Black Magic grapes and Maras which are in the front (south-facing) side of the house did well, hallelujah! I've seen the weather reports across the pond -- unbelievably dreadful conditions and how I wish we could have some of that heat (or send over some of our rain!).

Rowena said...

We took long enough to decide the mirabelle's fate - hated to see her go. That empty space though...wish we could have a little chicken hutch or something. It's that dachshund of ours that always ruins the fun.