Organic

LOOK OUT FOR LATE BLIGHT

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Keep An Eye Out For Late Blight In Your Garden

Keep An Eye Out For Late Blight In Your Garden

Many of us lost tomatoes and to a lesser extent potatoes due to widespread Late Blight last year. Everyone had their fingers crossed that the dreaded disease wouldn’t make an encore performance, but it’s back in New England this summer. I know outbreaks have been confirmed in mid-coast Maine and the spores can travel for 40 miles on the wind, so it doesn’t take long for Late Blight to get around. Once it does, those heirloom tomatoes are gonners because plants must be pulled.

In order to keep your plants safe, the experts say it’s ESSENTIAL to apply fungicide PRIOR to infestation. That means now is the time to treat your plants. The Maine Organic Farmers and Growers Association offers some organic options. The Cooperative Extension Services also provide good fact sheets Here’s another helpful link from the UMass Extension Office.

–Amy

Goodnight Garden

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And Then There Were Two..Brussel Sprouts

It's All Over But The Brussel Sprouts

My absence from the blog for the last month pretty much reflects my life as a gardener. I’m wildly enthusiastic in May and June, celebrating every shoot and pod. By July and August, my enthusiasm gives way to methodical labor; weed-water-harvest-replant. By September and October, I’m down to a few quick harvesting missions.
Just Add Water Garden In August

Just Add Water Garden In August

So when my son asked if I was sad to say goodbye to the garden today, I said no without a second thought. I’m a four season girl and it’s time to put the garden to bed.
Sure, I’m jealous of the warm weather folk when I visit my Florida in-laws in March. (I swear I can smell the soil over the jet fuel when I get off the plane in West Palm Beach.) But year round gardening would become a chore for me.
And so on this chilly October Sunday, we ripped out the brown shriveled basil, lamented, briefly, the third crop of beans that never produced, untangled the squash vines, and left the last two brussel sprouts that should produce a few more few side dishes.

And Just as we did back in early May, my husband, son and I shoveled manure from a nearby horse farm onto the raised bed. The difference now is that my almost 4 year old has become a farmer. Without questions or whining, Zach went to the shed, grabbed his wheelbarrow and shovel, attacked the compost pile, only asking for direction once with a jaunty “where do you want it, Mommy?”
Now I can’t say for sure that it’s a summer’s worth of fresh organic vegetables that made the difference, more likely the passage of time, but it was a pleasure watching him grow along with the Just Add Water garden over the last six months.
I look forward to gardening with all of you again next spring!

Not Done Yet!

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Just when I was ready to throw in the towel and call it a season, my garden is coming alive! The dahlias that I had given up on are full of buds! My rose bushes are suddenly ready to flower again…even the ones that had lost their leaves and looked half-dead.
One bush produced the sweetest smelling rose that I have ever had the pleasure to sniff last week. IMG_1760-w500It was an amazing scent. And a late, but fast growing gourd vine has a couple of babies on it that are getting bigger by the day. After all the rain, the black spots, the bugs and the disappointment this season, I am pleasantly surprised. Go figure.

The dahlias typically bloom until the first hard frost. But, I had such bad results with so many of them this year, I didn’t expect them to ever come around. IMG_1759-w500 I’ve attached a photo of a beautiful orange dahlia that we picked this week and put in a vase. Better late than never.

I guess that I will try to get them in the ground earlier next year….or maybe start them inside. Like Amy, I am taking notes. I’ve also vowed to plot the plan of my flower garden this fall, so I remember what lives where next spring. ( I vow to do this every year and never seem to get it done.)

It was not a great summer in our garden. In fact, I’d call it one of the worst in recent memory. But there were a few highlights.

In early August, while searching for a pre-school backpack, my husband and I found some very nice healthy hosta plants on clearance at K-mart. There were many varieties, in gallon pots, all reduced to $1.50 each. It was a steal! After a few return trips, we had planted 75 new hosta in our gardens. They blend in so well, that I couldn’t tell you where we put even half of them at this point. I have had success with some hydrangeas for the first time this year. I wish I had planted more of them! And, my morning glory seed experiment worked too. Our fence is wrapped in vines with little purple flowers poking out here and there.

As we move into autumn, the sedum look beautiful. They are full of bees, and are slowing changing color. I am thankful that they have thrived this year. I’ll be busy picking flowers until the frost.
Let’s all hope for more sunny days in 2010!

Crisp air, fall foliage & apple picking go hand-in-hand

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NECN’s Anya Huneke says apple picking season is officially underway in Vermont, and as of now, this is looking to be a terrific year.

For her day off of work, Allison Hale of Burlington, Vermont, decided this would be the perfect activity. Around lunchtime, accompanied by their appetites, she and Mike McGonegal made the trip to Shelburne Orchards to welcome in fall with a bag of hand-picked apples.

Orchards across Vermont are starting to bustle with activity, as crowds turn out to pick what many farmers say is looking to be a bumper crop — in part because of, not despite, the rainy summer weather that has plagued many other crops.

Another likely beneficiary of this summer’s wet weather is the fall foliage, just starting to show its colors in Vermont. Tourism officials say moisture is a key ingredient in bright displays, and the warm days and cool nights we have had recently, have only helped.

Summertime (Tomato) Blues

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Back off. It's Mine

Back off. It's Mine

Went out to the garden (da-da-da-da-DA)
In search of a treat
But instead of tomatoes
I’ve got fungus to eat
I’ve got the Summer of 09, Late Blight Tomato Blues
And it’s bringin’ me down….

I’ve tried to move on. Really. I have. But the truth is I mourn the loss of my tomatoes every time I walk in the garden. There may be gardeners who love their vegetables equally. I’m not one of them. Tomatoes are the reason I grow a garden. All that other green stuff is just there to keep the tomatoes company.

And this Late Blight outbreak pushed me to do something I’m not proud of–purchase a non-organic product. Let me explain. I do most of my growing at my community garden which is strictly organic, but I had a few straggly leftover seedlings that were on their way to the compost pile. You know how gardeners hate to throw away plants, so at the last minute I stuck them in an old apple barrel planter in my driveway. I pretty much ignored them all summer UNTIL, I lost all my other tomato plants. Suddenly, those two plants became my only hope for home grown tomatoes.
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The Lerner Garden of the Five Senses

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While it has only been open to the public for three years, “Coastal Maine Botanical Gardens” is already becoming a national treasure. The garden’s designers are now making sure this treasure is accessible to everyone.

Plants and sculptures are intentionally within easy reach in raised beds inviting close inspection.

In an era when we’re so often on sensory overload, this is a place to reawaken the senses. Visitors leave refreshed and ready to tackle whatever is waiting on the other side of the garden gates.

Visit the Garden of the Five Senses website..

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