Showing posts with label rain. Show all posts
Showing posts with label rain. Show all posts

Friday, April 24, 2015

puddles!

We have missed the past couple of predicted rains and our ground, at least on top, is dry as dust.  I have been considering watering to pre-moisten the planting beds prior to seeding and transplanting.  So last night I was watching with disappointment as the forecast changed from rain expected to not expected.  Today it was cloudy when I got up so I quick checked the forecast and a 0% chance of rain at least for this morning.  I was lamenting yet another missed rain when lo and behold we had a nice shower.  And puddles...

And wet dogs.  I will gladly put up with a little wet dog smell and muddy paw prints in exchange for a nice rain shower.  I did not have my rain gauge out yet but perhaps it is time.  

And a baby goat picture...
Eating hay with their momma

  

Monday, June 16, 2014

sigh...

There is a garden blog that I read regularly.   A link to it is located on the right side of my page under 'Inspiration'.  Today in my email inbox is their June Garden Update where they write about, among other things, their succession planting.  I am still planting first crops as nearly a quarter of my garden is yet to be planted.  And Saturday evening we had 2 inches of rain.  And Saturday overnight we had another inch.  Sigh... 

It will be days before I get more stuff planted.  And there is more rain predicted every day this week.   Sigh... 

This is a new lake in the field across the road from my farmstand

every low spot in the yard has standing water

water standing in the road ditch

At least the lawn was mowed. 

I think that I am going to call everything that goes in after today a succession crop. 

There are some good things. 

I was able to spend the afternoon with my parents and siblings celebrating Father's Day without feeling guilty about not being in the garden. 

I discovered that my sump pumps in the basement and well hole are working just fine.  Last fall Nathan did some work on them and this was the first opportunity to see if his upgrades were successful, and they were. 

My newly planted fruit and nut bushes and trees got a good drink.  They are spread out all over the yard so dragging a bucket or hose around is a task that I shouldn't have to do for a few days. 

There are some areas of the yard that I have been neglecting that might get some attention while we wait for the garden to dry out. 

This wheelbarrow might actually get planted...





This wheelbarrow was gifted to me by Nikole and Brad.  This treasure was left behind at their house and they weren't needing it...  Actually it is not very functional and I think that they were glad to be rid of it.  It is short.  If you want to use it a person, even a short person like me, would need to walk really hunched over because standing erect everything falls out the front.  It lists a little to the left.  The paint is chippy--or is that rust? 

I think it will be perfect filled with flowers and I asked my mom that if she saw any good deals on her trips to the garden center would she bring back something for the wheelbarrow.  And she did.  I have a new box of flowers just waiting to be planted.  I can picture it setting on the far edge of the garden along with that chunk of picket fence from my sister and maybe a scarecrow. 

Some other things to be thankful for is that I may have a quarter of the garden left to plant but that means that three quarters is planted.  And lots of that is up and growing.  I can row the corn, the potatoes and edamame are up, and the peas are growing up the trellises.  The zucchini and summer squash and other vine crops are getting blossoms.  The sweet potato slips that we grew from scratch seem to be doing well.  I am getting lots of grass clippings collected and spread between the rows which should help keep the weeds at bay.  Each week more of the garden construction, those things that have to be done only once like building raised rows and setting posts, get done. 

Wednesday, April 30, 2014

little weather update

So far this week we have had cold, rain and wind...day after day of cold, rain and wind.  So we have quite a few two inch diameter and smaller branches down, nothing dangerous or damaging just smallish branches on the ground under the trees.  The grass is green and starting to grow. 

Nothing new has been planted outside.  The things that are planted are not yet growing, no peas are sprouted, no potatoes are growing.  Before the weather started I planted  six of the January tomatoes in one of the boxes that will be the hoop house.  We had the hoops up but no plastic yet and I planned to get the plants in and the plastic on but the wind made it almost impossible to do anything outside and certainly working with a big sheet of plastic was never going to happen.  So today I did a little work on the hoops which were no longer in place and took a little look at the beat up tomatoes.  Tomorrow I hope to get the plastic on, I have cut up short pieces of hose that I am hoping that will be enough to hold the plastic in place on the left and right hoops.

I have been doing some potting up in the greenhouse.  The onions and leeks are looking good and i am thinking about starting to plant some outside.  The same with the earliest lettuces and greens.  We have lots of  asparagus plants but I think that they need to go out once it is more reliably warm.  Lots of small tomato plants are sitting there in their red solo cups and the propagation mat has trays of newly seeded stuff waiting to sprout. 

The blueberries have been moved.  They are still dormant.  Today the cranberries arrived.  They look great.  The part of the sandbox that they are going to be planted in has the sand/peat mixture.  The directions that came with the plants suggests adding bonemeal, bloodmeal, rock phosphate and epsom salts to the planting mix so I am hoping to be able to find all or some of them by the time the rain quits and the planter box is not quite so saturated.   

A package arrived from one of the catalogs that Mom ordered from and this package contains the watermelon and cucumber and Indian corn and two types of popcorn seeds.  The watermelon seeds are black diamond, a watermelon that Caitlin and I purchased at a cute farm shoppe that she discovered on a detour last summer.  We bought a watermelon and it was pretty good so when the Burgess catalog had the seed packets I decided to give them a try.  I will get a few of them planted in the greenhouse tomorrow so that by the end of the month we will have transplants ready to go into the garden.  We also ordered some new fruit bushes and nut trees and I am assuming that they will come at the right time to plant them. 

I have been lamenting the fact that I did not get my straw bales uncovered and set into place before all this rain hit.  Some of the reading that I have been doing about straw bale gardening describes conditioning (watering) the bales every day for a couple of weeks before planting in them.  Each year we insulate our underground well room with eight straw bales and usually they are wet by spring and they just go onto the compost pile.  This year we covered them a little bit better and so I plan to move them and plant them.  I am hoping to get them arranged east of the orchard so that they can grow vegetables but also kill the grass where come fall I am hoping to plant at least one row of grapes that will be trained on wires vineyard style.  I am excited to try it.  I have never grown in a straw bale garden before but if it goes well I am planning for next year to consider making cute wood frames for bales and to make them a more regular part of the garden.  I am hoping that they will eventually work well on the concrete that we have in front of the greenhouse.  Last week I had friends stop to see how things were going in the greenhouse and we talked straw bale gardens.  They are on vacation for a couple of weeks and will be away from home but they have a timer ans soaker hose conditioning their bales while they are gone.  He is expecting their bales to last for two years.  If that is correct we could have a16 bale garden, replacing eight bales each year.