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Wowser. The heat is on! Summer has arrived, and we've had several days with out rain. I actually had to water some of the container plants.

Just a reminder - prayers up for Johnny and Arrowhead.

Harvest time is here and I'm overwhelmed. The spare refrigerator is chock full of produce waiting for processing. Huge quantity of corn and green beans. A few cukes and black berries(finally) and my volunteer tomatoes have several orange ones in among the green.

I harvested several of the orange ones and brought them indoors to make sure the squirrels don't get them and let them ripen on the cabinet. Everyone around town is telling me (when I see them in the stores) that their tomatoes are doing terrible this year. So are mine - except for the volunteers.

It's crazy, I planted potatoes in a bed that hasn't had any potatoes or tomatoes or melons planted there for at least 3 years. So what do I have, tomatoes, melons, and weeds have taken over the plot. I was going to pull weeds, but everything is so intertwined, I decided why mess with success? Taters may be there too, but I haven't dug in to find out.

Have to can some meat to make room for freezing the corn - I'll cut the corn off the cob so that it takes up less space.

We got really nice ears - about 120, and they taste very good, even without salt or butter. My only issue is, I wish hubby would spread the plantings out a bit, so the whole dang harvest doesn't happen all at once.

I have been out and about early AM and late PM to do a little harvest, watering, or clean up - Mid day is for indoors in this heat.

Hubby already has the corn stalks composted, and is getting the fall plants into the ground sometime this next week. We are planning a trip to Springfield to attend a Baker's Creek Seed Festival the first Sunday in August. That's going to be our 50th Wedding Anniversary celebration too - taking an extended weekend to visit with family in the area.

I can't stay on the computer too long - have to get back to processing, but I'll be taking breaks and reading/replying every so often.

Have a great weekend. God Bless.

1 posted on 07/17/2015 12:52:33 PM PDT by greeneyes
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To: greeneyes; Diana in Wisconsin; gardengirl; girlangler; SunkenCiv; HungarianGypsy; Gabz; ...

Pinging the List.


2 posted on 07/17/2015 12:53:49 PM PDT by greeneyes (Moderation in defense of your country is NO virtue. Le//t Freedom Ring.)
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To: greeneyes

It was in the low 50s last night in some spots here in Massachusetts. We had a low here of 59 degrees. No problems.


4 posted on 07/17/2015 12:57:10 PM PDT by trisham (Zen is not easy. It takes effort to attain nothingness. And then what do you have? Bupkis.)
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To: greeneyes

Hot here in western Washington, lots of watering. Tomatoes, beans and corn doing well. We have 14 hanging flower baskets on our pergola an while wetting them down this morning I look up to see a blacktail doe and her spotted fawn sneaking by 40 feet from me. I have to soak in sights like that to distract me from the destruction being done to our nation. Otherwise I might do something regrettable.


5 posted on 07/17/2015 1:02:43 PM PDT by dainbramaged (Get out of my country now)
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To: greeneyes

Wasn’t paying attention and I thought one of my 15 year old (?) Junipers had some winter damage. Bagworms. Dammit. Too much damage, so it comes down.


6 posted on 07/17/2015 1:11:42 PM PDT by USMCPOP (Father of LCpl. Karl Linn, KIA 1/26/2005 Al Haqlaniyah, Iraq)
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To: greeneyes
Here in Northern Indiana we are having our first hot day. Everyone is melting. The Russian Blue kittens must have found a cool place because I can't find them.

Am anxiously awaiting next Wed evening and Thrus a.m. when I can enter my flowers in the fair. I had NO veg this year except for some sort of a cherry tomato that was a weed in some container which I did not have the heart to pull. It has blooms.

All of the Non-stop tuberous begonias that were so pretty last year look dreadful. I need to go tell the poor lady (new) that she should not plant them in jiffy peat pellets. The roots never penetrate that mesh. I have stripped them but still not good.

Way too much rain here. Another 1.4 inches last night. 3 a.m. a bolt of lighting very close. Now we have the heat advisory.

Does anyone have a good source for making county fair entries displays. The categories are numerous. I was going to use Halloween for the Holiday entry. I have a lovely Bat-faced Cuphea and tons of fall colored marigolds. There is a red, white and blue category and I am really short on blue. I will need three stalks of the same color glad, and I just don't have that this year. That won best cut flower last year, but the rain got them this time.

The lilies peaked last week and this and will be shot by Wed. Oh well, everyone here is in the same boat. Only the clay ground is really flooded with water standing. The corn is tasseling and I saw my second Monarch butterfly.

Have another ear of corn for me. I'd like plenty of butter and salt on mine.

P.S. Just now more thunder.

16 posted on 07/17/2015 1:43:40 PM PDT by Battle Axe (Repent: for the coming of the Lord is soon.)
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To: greeneyes

Hi Everyone! I have some more BUG goodies! I hope it’s helpfulBUGS
Installment 5

*We were shown a picture of a stink bug and an army worm fighting. The caption was, “where is the pest?” In the course of the discussion, I have a note that states that there actually is one stink bug that is a good guy. It is the spine soldier bug. It is brown with spines.

Beneficial Insects:
http://pods.dasnr.okstate.edu/docushare/dsweb/Get/Document-8688/EPP-7307web13.pdf

Other links that might be helpful. Note that the ones beginning with “pods” are OSU extension publications. You can do a search for “Oklahoma State University extension” to get the page that allows you to search that data base.

http://www.wisegeek.org/what-are-stink-bugs.htm

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Green_stink_bug

Home Vegetable Garden Pest Control
http://pods.dasnr.okstate.edu/docushare/dsweb/Get/Document-1317/EPP-7313web2013.pdf

*The next picture was captioned, “Are These Pests?” They looked pretty fierce, but it turned out that they were beneficials. They showed the Lady Beetle larva and the Lacewing larva.

Most here on our thread have become familiar with the Lady Beetle larvae. I have self-reported the evolution of my own knowledge of them a few years ago. I saw really scary looking bugs on my cucumbers, and started squashing them in bloodthirsty abandon. However, something in me said, “um, perhaps you should be sure.” So I took some pictures and a few days later showed them to one of our ag people. Turns out, it was Lady Beetles I was murdering. ** sigh**

The Lace Wing larvae look like the sci fi creatures that crawl in some hapless victim’s ear or mouth to take them over and make them into an automaton for the invading entity.

There are several growth forms displayed by the Lady Beetle. There is a circular he recommended to us which is online only and not available in hard copy. It is E-1023 with the link as follows. You can see pix of both the Lace Wing and the Lady Beetle there.

Conserving Beneficial Arthropods in Residential Landscapes
http://pods.dasnr.okstate.edu/docushare/dsweb/Get/Document-7426/E-1023.pdf

*In another picture, he showed the eggs of the eggs of the Green Lacewing. The mother lays them on stalks so they are protected from their brothers and sisters.

* Another picture showed a cucumber beetle (look at the link above of the Home Vegetable Garden Pest Control document) and it definitely is a pest, despite its similarity of appearance to the lady beetle. Notice that the head does not contain the W or M.

*He showed us pix of the Pirate Bugs. It is a predator of soft body insects, equipped with piercing/sucking mouth parts. You can see a picture and write-up on the Pirate Bug in the first link above on Beneficials

*He showed us a comic of a man and lady out gazing over their garden with all kinds of pest control equipment, and the caption says, “IF YOU PLANT IT, THEY WILL COME!”

*He showed a picture of the Yellow Jacket and asked, Is This a Pest? The answer is actually both “YES” and “NO.” In their early developmental stages, they are eaters of proteins, usually other bugs. It is later that they become pests to us because their dietary desires change to sugars instead of proteins, like your soda pop.

*He showed us the Crab Spider. They eat a LOT of bad insects.

*He showed us a picture of the cocoons of the predator wasp. These were laid on a caterpillar. If you see this, leave it alone! The same is true for the parasitoid wasp laying eggs on a gypsy moth.

Our Prof gave us a peek into the history of the Gypsy Moth in the US. Turns out that the Gypsy was being looked into as a domestic silk worm. This was happening in the 1800’s – and it got loose.
End Installment 5 BUGS


17 posted on 07/17/2015 1:53:03 PM PDT by TEXOKIE (We must surrender only to our Holy God and never to the evil that has befallen us.)
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To: greeneyes
I'll take some of that corn off your hands...

More heat and no rain here in Cen. Tx. In fact no rain this entire month and I see a triple digit in our forecast. Ouch.

But still getting some excellent tomatoes, about a dozen a day.

Along with a few squash and eggplant.

But otherwise it's just watering to try and keep the newly planted fruit trees alive.

On a very positive note a Bay Leaf tree I put in the ground two years ago is finally doing very well. Guess it just took a while to adjust.

20 posted on 07/17/2015 1:59:43 PM PDT by Proud_texan ("Reality is that which, when you stop believing in it, doesn't go away." - PK Dick)
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To: greeneyes

Wow nice harvest, especially the corn. I love fresh corn with nothing at all on it, just lightly steamed. We cut it off the cob too vacuum seal and freeze. My tomatoes are doing good just slow. Finally picked a handful of cherry tomatoes this week. The broccoli has been just delicious. I thought I had gotten rid of all the potatoes in the garden. Every year I have some volunteers. Finally this year I just had one so I let it go but it is just huge now. I better get them all dug up this year. Potatoes are so cheap I can’t afford the space to grow them. I love getting food out of the ground after some tlc. Hope everyone is enjoying ther summer. Prayers always for Johnny and Arrowhead too.


29 posted on 07/17/2015 4:40:01 PM PDT by MomwithHope (Please support efforts in your state for an Article 5 convention.)
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To: greeneyes
Here is this weeks Benderville picture show ~~~

Three Bucks put on a show for us last week when they came around to check on the baby fawns ~~~

IMG_0097

They really don't do a lot of damage as the landscaping has been time tested ~~

IMG_0100

Some of the babies with their mamas ~~~

IMG_2504

34 posted on 07/17/2015 8:04:59 PM PDT by tubebender (Evening news is where they begin with "Good Evening," and then proceed to tell you why it isn't.)
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To: greeneyes; All
Meanwhile back in the fenced garden area we picked the last of the strawberries and gave them to our daughter's in-laws ~~~

IMG_2511

Does anyone have a recipe for tomato greenery? All tops and very little fruit ~~~

IMG_2513

The corn has not changed much from last week in spite of the really nice weather ~~~

IMG_2405

I dug one hill of Yukon Gold and this is all I found ~

>IMG_2514

35 posted on 07/17/2015 8:17:07 PM PDT by tubebender (Evening news is where they begin with "Good Evening," and then proceed to tell you why it isn't.)
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To: greeneyes

Love to experiment with heirloom tomatoes...planted a few Anna Russians. They are heavy producers and delicious. All others are not even showing fruit yet. Good choice.


37 posted on 07/17/2015 9:07:49 PM PDT by Archie Bunker on steroids
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To: greeneyes
My only issue is, I wish hubby would spread the plantings out a bit, so the whole dang harvest doesn't happen all at once.

There are varieties that mature from 63 days to 92 days. I put in 63,75 and 90 and then do a second planting of 75 day a week later and that gives me four batches.

59 posted on 07/18/2015 8:49:09 AM PDT by dirtboy
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To: greeneyes

We went to one of the Baker’s Creek festivals in May about 5 or 6 years ago. It was so much fun! I learned a lot and brought home a bunch of plants. I love their seeds!

Our corn isn’t ready yet. Just started showing silks in the last week or so. Tons of green beans, onions, cucumbers, and peas. Tomatoes are about to pop all at once as well as the blackberries! I’m seeing a lot of growth on the pumpkins! I really love growing pumpkins. Not sure we’ll get anything this year from the cantaloupe and watermelon plants. They just don’t seem to want to take off.

Have fun on your 50th! Congratulations!!


62 posted on 07/18/2015 12:32:29 PM PDT by samiam1972 ("It is a poverty to decide that a child must die so that you may live as you wish."-Mother Teresa)
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To: greeneyes

Any advice for getting that whitish mold off the zucchini leaves (caused by too much moisture)?


65 posted on 07/18/2015 1:12:19 PM PDT by Ghost of Philip Marlowe (Carter...Reagan...Bush...Clinton....Bush....Carter....BUSH? / CLINTON? STOP THE INSANITY!)
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