When I got back from the Land Where Time Stands Still (Medford), on Wednesday night, I noticed the glow of a strange bluish light from the garage. I'm sure the neighbors think we're harboring space aliens or growing illegal weeds for recreational use, but the truth is that it's the beginning of tomato season and Cindy has tomato, basil and parsley seedlings sprouting in there under grow lights.
She tried starting them in the house years ago, but the cats took way too much interest in the pots of dirt, so now she starts them on a heated mat under grow lights in the garage where the cats can't get at them.
I mention all this pampering because a friend of ours told Cindy recently that her own tomatoes hadn't amounted to much last year. Cindy heroically bit her tongue and refrained from reminding the friend that she had been given some of Cindy's pampered, hand-fed tomato seedlings last year and, in a fit of total brain-lock, had decided she would have twice as many tomato plants if she cut the tops off and tried to root them. Needless to say, that experiment did not turn out well for the tomatoes--instead of double the plants, the result was pretty much... nothing.
We live in San Diego, a Mediterranean type climate with the Pacific Ocean to the west, mountains and desert to the east and about 10 inches of rainfall per year. Water is a scarce resource in this environment and gardening here must always be conscious of that fact of life.
Tuesday, March 29, 2011
Monday, March 7, 2011
Rainy Day
I was watching TV last night when all four of the cats who were downstairs with me suddenly went on alert. I hate it when they do that; I never know whether they've actually heard some threatening noise or they're just messing with my mind. "Gotcha again, human. Yuk, yuk, yuk." (sound of cats laughing) They will react to lizards but ignore coyotes in the back yard, so you never really know what's up.
But when I looked outside I saw that it was raining! Not very hard, just a gentle, soft, steady rain that apparently continued throughout the night. The sound the cats were reacting to must have been the rain water starting to trickle through our rain harvesting system.
This rain comes at a very good time because it will probably ensure that the plants will stay alive until Cindy gets home on Thursday. I turned the irrigation system for the rose garden on the other day and discovered the next morning that the timer had evidently not turned off and water was running down the driveway, so I turned it back off. So this rain will help keep everything alive.
It's amazing how excited we can get over an unexpected rainy day in San Diego.
But when I looked outside I saw that it was raining! Not very hard, just a gentle, soft, steady rain that apparently continued throughout the night. The sound the cats were reacting to must have been the rain water starting to trickle through our rain harvesting system.
This rain comes at a very good time because it will probably ensure that the plants will stay alive until Cindy gets home on Thursday. I turned the irrigation system for the rose garden on the other day and discovered the next morning that the timer had evidently not turned off and water was running down the driveway, so I turned it back off. So this rain will help keep everything alive.
It's amazing how excited we can get over an unexpected rainy day in San Diego.
Saturday, March 5, 2011
"Oh, Oh, Oh, Stayin' Alive, Stayin' Alive?"
That's the song I keep singing to our plants --at least I hope they're staying alive. Cindy is visiting family in the midwest, so I'm in charge of keeping everything alive while she's gone. She won't be too pleased if everything dies while she's gone.
We had a big rain a week ago, so the ground is still pretty damp, but some of the potted plants have needed a little water. Fortunately, she has almost everything else automated, so it's not too hard to keep it going. She planted some wildflower seeds in one of the beds in the back yard, but I think the birds and the squirrels got most of those shortly after she planted them. Oooooh, seed buffet, yummy!
There's still no sign of anything coming up in the pots where Cindy planted the mystery nuts she found in the corner of the raised bed. That was kind of a long shot, anyway, so we lose nothing if they don't come up, but then we'll never know what kind of nuts they were.
I know she'll get serious about planting things, starting tomatoes in the garage when she gets back and turning under the cover crop she planted a couple of months ago. Those plants are about three feet high now and the sweet peas among them are really pretty.
We had a big rain a week ago, so the ground is still pretty damp, but some of the potted plants have needed a little water. Fortunately, she has almost everything else automated, so it's not too hard to keep it going. She planted some wildflower seeds in one of the beds in the back yard, but I think the birds and the squirrels got most of those shortly after she planted them. Oooooh, seed buffet, yummy!
There's still no sign of anything coming up in the pots where Cindy planted the mystery nuts she found in the corner of the raised bed. That was kind of a long shot, anyway, so we lose nothing if they don't come up, but then we'll never know what kind of nuts they were.
I know she'll get serious about planting things, starting tomatoes in the garage when she gets back and turning under the cover crop she planted a couple of months ago. Those plants are about three feet high now and the sweet peas among them are really pretty.
Tuesday, March 1, 2011
Other Butterflies
We've had other butterflies besides the Monarchs visit our yard recently. One day I startled our landscaper by shouting when I saw a Gulf Fritillary in the back yard. It flew off into the canyon before I could get my camera.
We've also had quite a few Cabbage Whites visit our plants. They move so fast I haven't been able to get a picture of them, either.
Then one day we saw a Mourning Cloak in the back yard. This is a gorgeous butterfly, with its cream colored edging and row of blue or purple dots around the deep chocolate wings. I wish we had been able to see more of this beautiful butterfly before it took off, but we were glad that we got a chance to see it when we did.
We've also had quite a few Cabbage Whites visit our plants. They move so fast I haven't been able to get a picture of them, either.
Mourning Cloak |
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