Archive for zucchini garden

Swiss Chard

Greetings fellow organic gardening enthusiasts!  I’m taking a break from the arbor/Sicilian zucchini drama this week to discuss other garden news like the uprising of the brussel sprouts. I didn’t think it was possible but they have somehow gotten even larger and leafier since I last mentioned it. The brussel sprouts have completely taken over the poor unsuspecting basil and I fear that we will need to mediate the upcoming turf wars. On the bright side, I have red tomatoes! Yes, slowly (and I do mean at a snail’s pace), the tomatoes are turning red. With the amount of sun and extremely hot weather we have had this summer in Southern Ontario it confounds me. I have no idea why they are taking so long – over the course of a week they barely turn from dark green to a slightly lighter dark green. At this rate my tomatoes should be red in or around November.

Also, I have planted the largest cherry tomatoes on record. I thought I was growing little cherry tomatoes as I do every year, but the labeling skills at the nursery left much to be desired and my cherry tomatoes are the size of plums. That’s right, plums. They are very sweet though and are the perfect topping to a pizza with a little tomato sauce, fresh basil (from the garden) and a smattering of mozzarella cheese so I’m not complaining. There is nothing like picking something out of your garden and then eating it right away.  Unfortunately that’s not happening as much as I would like this season but I digress.

I was given an heirloom tomato plant, and was excited to see what became of it as the seeds were apparently very old. This plant has grown to an impressive four and half feet tall and it is leafy, full and I prune it lovingly. Do you know that all this tender love and care has yielded me? One tomato! That right, one tomato is all it has grown.  Now that I have picked that one tomato, it has grown two flowers so there is still hope.  Maybe it’ll decide to give me another tomato before frost comes. 

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Aug
13

My Organic Garden – An Arbor is Born

Posted by: Ecolyse | Comments (2)

zucchiniHello my fellow organic gardeners, I have some interesting news to share.  As you might remember from my last garden post, my Sicilian zucchini plant was bent on total garden domination.  Luckily the good people at Martha Stewart’s Sirius radio show gave me some advice on how to deal with this situation. Their advice was to build teepee like structures out of bamboo to give the plant a structure to grow into.  I went to the local garden center and found a package of thin bamboo stakes that were only four feet tall. I decided to be industrious (and frugal) and purchase this large (and cheap) package of bamboo and just attach them together with some duct tape to get the proper height. What a mistake that was.  I built three teepees for my two zucchini plants that quickly started to bow under the weight of the plants. This was when I started doing some more research on my teepee options. 

I knew buying the proper bamboo would be quite costly so I figured I needed to think about it more before I delved headfirst and (potentially) wasted more money. While watching a gardening show, I noticed that they had an arbour with various squash and zucchini growing on it. That was when the idea hit me – I would build an arbour. I quickly realized I had some scrap wood from a previous project and could enlist the help of a very handy person. The design was simple – it was really just four posts with a box-like structure on the top that had polls going across for the plants to grow over. I set out to tackle my project and in an afternoon, my little arbour was born and taking care of business.  I am happy to report that the tentacles of the octopus-like zucchini plant have been tamed and now stick to their own area in the arbour. The nature of the structure allows for more polls to be attached to the open sides (if need be) and I fear if we get more rain I will be attaching more poles.

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sicilian-zucchiniLast week I painted a picture of a garden where even though the pickings were slim, it was serene and harmonious. Well, apparently I spoke too soon. That’s right my Zen scenario has turned into a full on war after just a few rainstorms. What happened to Kumbaya? 

I mentioned previously that my Sicilian zucchini plants were attaching themselves to other plants in the immediate vicinity.  What I didn’t know was that with a little rain this plant’s tentacles would Hulk out and start taking over my entire plot of land. You must be thinking I am exaggerating but this is actually what has transpired. These tentacles of the Sicilian zucchini plant have woven their way out of the zucchini section of the garden and into the main garden. They have not only attached themselves to the tomato plants that were two and half feet away but have made their way – as far as five feet away – over to my onions to put their stranglehold on them. Actually, I had left the wheelbarrow out on the law and the zucchini not only grew three feet across the law but also attached itself to the handle of the wheelbarrow and then decided to made a right turn into the bin.

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