Gardening
- Goodbye, friends. The Garden is shutting down.
You may have heard about an incident from the other day where a user uploaded some baaaaaad images. I’m worried that the responsibility for hosting that stuff could circle back to the nice people running instances, as federated sites are connected that way.
I’m just a garden guy. Here because I wanted to show off pics of my garden with like minded green thumbs. I don’t need to get caught up in any trouble. The other thing is that I have this instance which is mostly just this one community !gardening. We often have only 1 or 0 active users in a day even though many people subscribe and participate from other instances. It’s lovely to have you all come and visit but hosting an instance for myself doesn’t grow corn 🌽.
Thank you everyone who posted or commented or even just enjoyed. This really has been fun and wonderful to share with you. Special shout out to our most active users Thrawn, Spacebar, editedit, thegiantkorean, David from Space. I have really enjoyed connecting with y’all through my favorite hobby. I will see you on one of the other garden communities I’m sure.
- Do you grow Brugmansia (Angel's Trumpet)? If so, why?
Some folks in my area grow this plant. It seems really dangerous.
Brugmansia produces anticholinergic toxins that can cause permanent neurological damage. It's closely related to the Datura genus, also known as jimsonweed, devil's snare, or loco weed.
It's kinda pretty, but it baffles me that it's so popular as a front-yard ornamental plant. If your child or dog eats a flower from this plant, they will probably have a bad trip that they may never recover from.
So why grow it? Are you sure nobody you care about will ever stick it in their mouth?
No trolling. This actually baffles me.
- First pumpkins of the season
Zone 6b here in Rhode Island, and this are the first pumpkins of the season to ripen.
- First Experience with Dahlias
This is my first season experimenting with Dahlias and I’m pleasantly surprised at how easy they’ve been to care for. Zone 7 - they definitely seem to prefer morning sun. I tried two different areas and the ones in the afternoon sun did not bloom at all. I relocated those about a month ago into pots and they are blooming now.
The ones pictured have been in the ground since spring and are thriving with little maintenance other than water and deadheading every week or so once they started to flower.
I ordered the plants this year to try and based on my experience I think I’m going to start from seed next year. It’s really nice to have a thriving plant in the worst heat of summer. Everything else is sagging and stressed for a few more weeks at least.
- 4 month old Chili Peppers in green house
Saw this on FB. I can't believe the size they get. Poster said tallest ones are 5 meters.
- Cucumbers mean time for pickles!
[Image description: a rich green cucumber hanging on a trellised vine in the morning sun.]
- Getting my winter brassicas going
(and yes, I need to diversify my seed sources 😝)
[Image description: a 72 cell seed starting tray filled with a mix of coco choir, vermiculite, and worm casings, next to a line of 12 types of broccoli, cauliflower, and cabbage seed packets, all but one from Baker Creek.]
- Soil nutrients have such a marked effect on corn
Picked some of our corn today. The further left you go is where we ran out of compost.
- Late blight?
Pretty sure my tomatoes have late blight. Anything I can do? Copper fungicide? Or just nix them?
- Is it advisable to plant Marmande tomatoes now (August is harvesting season)?
UK weather is more and more unpredictable. But I have 250 seeds so I'm wondering if I could/should plant some early?
:)
- Our garlic harvest
This is our second year growing garlic. We used cloves from the first year's harvest. We are having fun, but don't exactly know what we are doing! We plant the cloves, cover with dead leaves/cardboard for the winter, uncover in the spring, and wait to harvest scapes and bulbs. That's it.
What are your garlic growing tips/strategies? Do you feed your bulbs at any particular time?
- August gardening tips from Portland Nurserywww.portlandnursery.com August Gardening | Portland Nursery
August Gardening at Portland Nursery and Garden Center in Portland, Vancouver, Lake Oswego.
- Is this edible in any way?
I planted a wild cucumber because I think the plant looks nice and pollinators seem to enjoy it. Is the fruit edible at all?
- Shallots overwinter in New England?
Hey all, I'm curious if anyone has experience planting shallots in the fall to overwinter in New England or a similar climate (6a-6b). I'm in the Boston area so we get cold winters but they're not brutal and I have some friends who grow garlic over winter with great success. I've read that shallots are less hardy than garlic but I don't really have any experience with root vegetables over winter so I have personally no clue!
I'm planning to try growing them in a raised bed and could potentially put row cover on them if that changes things.
- Are my tomatoes going to make it?
We got hit by a pretty big hail storm a couple weeks ago. The leaves on the bottom started to die off. It seems like there’s some healthy leaves toward the top but I’m worried the bottom won’t survive. Is there anything I can do?
- Mushrooms in my garden
I have no idea what they are but I'm just excited to see mushrooms growing in my garden over the past couple days. It pleases me to know my soil is happy and healthy.
This is my first garden and I've decided to use clover as ground cover. It'll take a couple years to determine if it does what I hope it will accomplish. So far I'm quite happy with how things are turning out and am learning so much.
I'm currently and impatiently waiting to try the first cherry tomatoes but the first bunch should be ripe within the next week.
- I have an ongoing offer in our sidebar to send anyone in USA free foxglove seeds. Only one taker so far!?
Fall is a great time to plant these foxglove seeds, that’s Digitalis purpurea. DM me your US address and get some free seeds! There’s no catch. I just love sharing seeds
- A Gorgeous Sunflower!
This is a beautiful Lemon Queen sunflower in my backyard. I've planted a whole row, but this one shot up and got an early start, the rest barely have their heads grown.
I'm growing these as part of The Great Sunflower Project, a citizen science effort to track pollinators in the United States. These were chosen for their wide appeal to pollinators, and true to form, there is always at least one sort of insect buddy visiting at any given moment!
- A tree limb came down and snapped my milkweed. We had just talked to an arborist about trimming these guys.
They were about to bloom too!
- Anaheim peppers coming in strong!
[Image description: a hand holding back pepper foliage, revealing several large long peppers in stages of ripening from light green to red.]
- First harvest from my new strawberry bush!
The flavor of the fully ripe strawberry was incredible.
Most important thing this year was putting wire mesh over the plants so nothing else could grab the food before it was ready to harvest.
- identify and remove invasive jumping wormswww.finegardening.com How to Identify and Remove Invasive Jumping Worms - FineGardening
It is important to properly identify invasive jumping worms before removing them from your yard or garden. Learn more about this pest here.
- My first rose 🌹
This is my first rose, Dublin Bay. This rose bloomed only a month after planting it. Super happy about it even though I should have snipped it to encourage more growing. Ah well.