This is an account of my gardening, now on the prairie of NE Iowa. I used to live closer to the Mississippi River in another county. I formerly lived in Northern CA, in the Coastal Range of Mountains, a completely different climate. I used to garden at a friend's farm there. I recently purchased a home with some vacant land and will transform it into a large, new garden in 2020. Come and garden with me through the seasons in NE Iowa. I'll show you how to do it!
Saturday, July 18, 2009
Sunflowers and Walla Walla onions
Here are more photos! I planted several kinds of sunflowers around the garden perimeter, these are for the birds, the giant ones aren't blooming yet. And look at the peppers around the lettuce!
Here are the Walla Walla onions, which we are now harvesting. I'm freezing them and we're canning carmelized onions, and any way we can think of.
July Progress photos #1
Here are the latest photos from the garden. The weeds and space have been overwhelming. We had to hire help to weed since our boy isn't here to help. I gave up getting the squash and melons in. Too late. We just aren't young in body any more, our minds want to do more than we really can because we remember being young and able.
Here are my petunias, growing in pots around the kitchen garden and hydro units.
Tuesday, May 26, 2009
More pictures of Garden
First, left, we have the rows of peas, Maestro, Laxton's #9, and Serge. Next we have the onions, a portion of them. And below is the new addition, space behind the barn. We will have pumpkins back there, and the raspberries, rhubarb and asparagus.
Yes, we have some weed problems, but we are dealing with them. We are mulching with hay, and hand weeding.
First Pics of New Garden
Wednesday, April 22, 2009
2009 Season Begins!
Well, so much has happened since last Spring!
First off, we decided to move to rural NE Iowa. We found an old farmhouse we liked and that was it. It took all summer to move all the farm stuff and household goods, so we had no garden in 2008, other than donating our seedlings to our former community garden.
We got to Iowa by late July. I had been diagnosed with a serious medical problem and so the Fall was taken up with that, and with getting ready for Winter.
In November 2008 we got a huge space plowed up.
In Spring 2009 we enlarged it to half an acre, and had it manured and disked by a farmer neighbor. Then we rented a tiller for our tractor and went over it 4 times. We had the soil tested and added sulphur and nitrogen. The soil is very good here, great corn land, top-rated.
So far I have planted onions, garlic, and potatoes. Am trying to get the peas and carrots and beets in now. Will take pics today once the light improves.
First off, we decided to move to rural NE Iowa. We found an old farmhouse we liked and that was it. It took all summer to move all the farm stuff and household goods, so we had no garden in 2008, other than donating our seedlings to our former community garden.
We got to Iowa by late July. I had been diagnosed with a serious medical problem and so the Fall was taken up with that, and with getting ready for Winter.
In November 2008 we got a huge space plowed up.
In Spring 2009 we enlarged it to half an acre, and had it manured and disked by a farmer neighbor. Then we rented a tiller for our tractor and went over it 4 times. We had the soil tested and added sulphur and nitrogen. The soil is very good here, great corn land, top-rated.
So far I have planted onions, garlic, and potatoes. Am trying to get the peas and carrots and beets in now. Will take pics today once the light improves.
Monday, March 17, 2008
Tomato Shape Gene Research
WASHINGTON (AFP) - US scientists have
discovered and cloned a gene that controls the shape of tomatoes, a find
which could help unravel the morphological mysteries of the plant
world, a study released Thursday said.
The gene known as SUN, the second ever
found to play a key role in the formation of elongated tomato varieties,
could provide vital new insight into how edible plants develop, said
Esther van der Knaap, lead researcher of the study published in the
journal Science.
Tomatoes, among the most varied crops in
terms of size and shape, evolved from a small, round ancestral wild
fruit to the many varieties grown today. But little is known about the
genetic principles for such transformations in tomatoes or other fruits
and vegetables.
“Tomatoes are the model in this emerging
field of fruit morphology studies,” said van der Knaap, an assistant
professor of horticulture and crop science at Ohio State University.
“We are trying to understand what kind of
genes caused the enormous increase in fruit size and variation in fruit
shape as tomatoes were domesticated,” she added.
“Once we know all the genes that were
selected during that process, we will be able to piece together how
domestication shaped the tomato fruit — and gain a better understanding
of what controls the shape of other very diverse crops, such as peppers,
cucumbers and gourds.”
She also said that SUN, which takes its
name from the oval shaped and pointy “SUN 1642″ tomato variety in which
the gene was found, does not show exactly how the fruit-shape phenotype
gets changed.
“But what we do know is that turning the gene on is very critical to result in elongated fruit,” she said.
The objective now, van ker Knaap said, is
to determine whether the same gene, or one closely related, controls
morphology in other fruit and vegetable crops.
The SUN gene affects fruit shape after
pollination and fertilization, whereas the only other fruit-shape gene
previously identified — known as OVATE — affects the shape of fruit
before flowering, the report said.
Saturday, March 15, 2008
First day of 2008 gardening season
Today, for me, is the first day of the gardening season for 2008. Today I plant seeds for tomatoes, peppers, and flowers, along with eggplant, indoors.
Our last Spring frost date is May 15th. We plant out about the 1st of May, depending on the weather and how stable it is, using frost blankets that are pretty thick, but don’t require hoops. So I count backwards from the 1st, and that gives me March 15th as the date to plant seeds indoors. If we start any earlier, the plants get too big for good transplanting and fast growth.
So today I put the seeds into 6 flats on heat mats. The mats will hold 8 flats, but I only need 6 today. The flats are filled with the very best potting soil money can buy, and have covers over them. Each flat has 60 large cells. I am planting 2 flats of tomatoes, 2 flats of 20 kinds of peppers, and two flats of flowers and celery and eggplants.
As soon as the seedlings come up we turn on the big 1,000 watt plant light. It rides on a rail across the ceiling, moving back and forth over the flats so they all get the same amount and quality of light. That stays on for 12 hours each night.
I will post again when the seedlings are up, in a few days.
Our last Spring frost date is May 15th. We plant out about the 1st of May, depending on the weather and how stable it is, using frost blankets that are pretty thick, but don’t require hoops. So I count backwards from the 1st, and that gives me March 15th as the date to plant seeds indoors. If we start any earlier, the plants get too big for good transplanting and fast growth.
So today I put the seeds into 6 flats on heat mats. The mats will hold 8 flats, but I only need 6 today. The flats are filled with the very best potting soil money can buy, and have covers over them. Each flat has 60 large cells. I am planting 2 flats of tomatoes, 2 flats of 20 kinds of peppers, and two flats of flowers and celery and eggplants.
As soon as the seedlings come up we turn on the big 1,000 watt plant light. It rides on a rail across the ceiling, moving back and forth over the flats so they all get the same amount and quality of light. That stays on for 12 hours each night.
I will post again when the seedlings are up, in a few days.
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