Pickleman Family Garden Update - Herbs & 22 pics for 22 days

in #hive-1406353 months ago


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I am back from a week trip to cottage country and have 22 days to update you on with 22 pictures so buckle up!

Gardening season is relatively shorter than in other places in the world so I have to pack the good updates up weekly in the middle of the summer. 10 days since the last Pickleman Family Garden but I have an excuse!

One of the more rewarding experiences to share is gardening which happens to be a highlight of my summers after those long Canadian winters. The latest Garden Journal Challenge by @gardenhive contet features Herbs and some of the most fun gardeners on the blockchain so go check it out!

Welcome to the 6th year of The Pickleman Family Garden series on #hive. What started as a reclamation of lawn and repurposing to a simple garden veggie box has become and expanding and perpetual yearly tradition of exploration.

This edition, we return from the cottage, check on the Herbs and see what has grown the last 3 weeks!


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22 Days Ago


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The last update, we were cleaning up after some heavy rain and my tomatoes were threatening to be ready! This was the biggest of the bunch and I was waiting for a little red to start showing before picking it.

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Just returning from the garden now, they are looking more like pumpkin in size and shape. That looks like a normal tomato but it is actually the size of my outstretched hand, and I have pretty big mits!
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There are other tomatoes as well and we are playing the @solominer game where we wish we labelled them a little better and guess which variety they are. These are either vine tomatoes or Romas and I will probably have to wait a week to know for sure. Love the green flames on the sides of them and I bet they will be delicious.

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Another fun surprise is these Black Brandywine tomatoes which we planted for the first time this year. I want to pick and sample the biggest one but it is still only the size of a golf ball so I am not sure it is done growing or ready? I like to pick the first fruit on each a little early so the plant is inspired to commit resources to the rest of them. Stay tuned!


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Herbs!


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I grow herbs every year because they are easy, can be grown in movable containers, and are an awesome feature for cooking when you can pick some fresh from the yard. Basil is our favourite because we can use it all the time in pasta sauces and even pizza topping, then make a pesto at the end of the year with the final big harvest. Our basil has had a bit of a tough time with all the rain but I seem top have a little helper tending to it.

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Nestled next to the Thyme was supposed to be Italian Parsley. The leaves looked similar for a while but, upon closer inspection, it appears my little one planted celery in there! Taking a while to grow in a container but at least the rabbits are not feasting on it this year! The rain seems to have claimed the cilantro this year too. I am going to have to drill some holes in the bottom of these planters so the excess
water can drain out.

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This year, the oregano from last sprouted up in the spring so I split it up and planted some among the tomatoes, and a bit in a pot near the flowers. Looks like it is sprouting blooms to keep up with the petunias, daisies and pansies in my ornamental, pollinator planter.
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Zeke Pepperman


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I love all kinds of peppers, especially the hot ones, and my I think the perfect balance of heat and flavour is found in Habanero Peppers. I have 4 full plants in garden boxes between the tomatoes and cucumbers which should be enough for a huge bag to turn into habanero salt and hot sauce. I couldn't help but pick this one up for $1 in a clearance sale and planted it in a pot on the deck.

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Wonderful colour and I can tell you these go to war with your tongue, leaving you wondering when the heat will subside.


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Sharing the pot with the habaneros is a neat Cherry Bomb pepper plant. These too are supposed to be hot but not overly so, and we love dropping one into a chili for flavour and heat. They grow very well and I will have enough to make pasta sauces and augment hot sauce all winter I bet.

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We discovered Mad Hater Peppers from a relative's garden a couple years ago. They milder and sweeter than jalapenos at 500 to 1,000 Scoville heat units so much better for the feint of heat. They look cool too!
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I have saved the hottest for last. These are my prized Ghost Peppers which, by comparison, are ~417 times as hot as jalapenos, weighting in between 855,000 to 1,041,427 Scoville heat units. It is a shame they are so traumatically hot as their flavour is amazing! I only grow a handful of these every year as a speck is enough to fuck up any sauce. I keep 2 for my favourite restaurant Revival House as the bartender infuses a year worth of vodka with only 2 for spicy specialty cocktails. The rest, I puree and ferment into 1 jar of hot sauce which is only used sparingly to zing up another sauce or punish people who think they are manly enough to tolerate very hot.


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What Else?


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I am damn happy about our cucumbers this year. I grew them from seeds and have been harvesting at least 1 per day since the end of July. They are so sweet and juicy and flavourful that I may have ruined store bought cucumbers for my family.


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The leaves seem to be developing spots and googling this seems to lead me down as many holes as doing that to diagnose health symptoms. Everything from angular leaf spot, to lack of nutrients to too much sun to under watering to overwatering and everything in between. For now, I am fertilizing them again and spaying them a little with apple cider vinegar in case it is a fungus. doesn't seem to be hurting the yield so far!

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I think Kale is a nasty, bitter & inedible weed but I seem to be alone in this. The family has been mixing it into all their salads and a bag a week for our friend @sequentialvibe has been celebrated. Better them than me but I do enjoy how well this has produced since sprouting on its own when the frost stopped.

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Blooms


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My budget hack when it comes to saving money while still wrapping our yard in colorful, pollinator-friendly flowers is to hit the mid-july 'all you can fit in a box for $10' sale at the nursery. It is vacation season so I haven't put together a post on these but here is a small taste of what is growing.

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This beauty is a Zinnia which is doing well in a patio planter among a variety of other flowers. Looks almost like a different variety of flower growing in each bloom.

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Pansies are actually short-lived perennials, but I treat treat them as annuals and plant them every year. Wonderful for even novice gardeners, they bloom almost all summer and have so many varieties of colour and design. Highly recommend.

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One of my assistants agrees.

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This is one of my favourites this year as the daisies and funky grass started growing on its own in the spring. I added the impatiens, petunias and Blackie Ipomoea from the big sale.

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Like an old lady, I try and water my hydrangeas every day with rain water. They are going strong as a result and the ones I planted last year in my front year are starting to bloom too. Perfect perennials that need nothing but consistent watering.

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Last year, a friend gave me some neat looking papery pod seeds telling me they grow every year bushy and beautiful in her yard. I planted the seeds last year and they didn't grow very big so I forgot about them. This year, they started popping up and didn't look like a familiar weed so I left them. Turns out they are known as Apple of Peru and boast the neatest seed pods and purple flowers. I think I will plant some in the flowerbed under the cedars next year and see how they do.


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So far so good.

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After

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So, the last 3 weeks have made everything including the lawn a little bushier. Fertilised again and just now enjoying and sharing the tomatoes, cucumbers, habaneros, kale and even cucomelons! I should tell you about those neat things next edition of The Pickleman Family Garden!

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Thus ends this chapter of the garden update. Really loving the fresh veggies form the garden and will have too many to eat by the next garden update.

Mom started me along my path of growing stuff when I was a kid. Motivated by so many blockchain blogging gardeners, I figured I would plant and share and learn as I reclaim as much grass space as I can. It has turned out to be a fruitful experience and I hope to inspire you to sow and grow no matter what your location or experience level is.


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Wherever you are...JUST GROW!


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How is your garden growing?

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Wow everything is doing awesome. Such a change from the beginning of the season!!! Fresh cucumber from the garden just knocks store bought out the window. I'm planting lots of seeds this year! The slater bugs are most of my seedlings last year

Be interested to see the inside of those Brandywine tomatoes!

Ya for cucumbers, I have had years where the sprouts are all eaten by birds or critters. This year, I planted a row of seeds a bit close together, covered them in a little fence so they were not easy access, and just enough of them survives to make a nice cucumber wall. Amazing how fast they grow too. Hopefully enough to make PICKLES!

Ah, that might be a good tip - growing them close together. I'll try a few things because i really,really love a garden cucumber!

Wow, your garden certainly produces an abundance of crops and beautiful flowers! Making the most of the summer months for sure! Six years of sharing here already, your garden is looking so good @zekepickleman!

@tipu curate

Kale is.... krap...

And your gonna have to change the name of your garden.. or change your last name.. I would adopt you but you're not enough of a asshole to wear the Dickey last name

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Your garden is looking amazing. The peppers and tomatoes are really looking good. In fact I wanted to snatch one or two right of the screen and try them. Except the real hot peppers, my stomach can't handle those anymore.

You know, I am starting to have rough days after when I indulge in those peppers and will likely have to slow down on them. Damn straight I will keep growing them though!

It only takes a few minutes and they hit my stomach hard. I hate it because I used to love peppers on my food.

@bluefinstudios would be proud! Those mad haters look um, hateful to the tastebuds. !LOLZ I bet @snook would appreciate the guarden gnomes !PIMP

Ya the hatters are like a third of the heat of jalapenos so they are all bark and no bite. Good taste though and perfect for a zingy salad.

Ah I miss the days of hanging out with you and @snook and @shadowspub and the #pypt gang.

What do you call a witch's garage?
A broom closet.

Credit: reddit
@zekepickleman, I sent you an $LOLZ on behalf of enginewitty

(3/8)

PLAY & EARN $DOOM

what type of cucumber is it? what is zucchini (Japanese cucumber)?

I forget what kind of cucumber it is but probably English, Straight-8 or Slicer variety. Whatever they are, juicy and delicious!

Zucchini are also known as Green Italian squash and those goofy round cucumber/melon things came labeled as Lemon cucumbers. Someone asked if they are Cucomelons which I have never heard of but maybe!

I love your herbs in particular
They are very fresh!

Everything looks sooo good! I'm not familiar with the Mad Hatter Peppers but they look intriguing. Nice farmacy you got there!

Yes! The Mad Hatters were new to me too when we visited a relative and were talking gardening. I took a pepper to taste & harvest seeds and it turned out to be a mild hot pepper with plenty of taste. So great to regulate heat in a hot sauce and use in salads and sandwiches too!

think Kale is a nasty, bitter & inedible weed but I seem to be alone in this.

You are not alone! I loathe the stuff! I grow it for one of my daughters, then rip it out after her visit is over. Yuck. One time I went to a pot luck of old hippies, and every single dish, every single one including the one I brought, had kale in it.

I am so jealous of your peppers! I have a few lemon jalapenos, even fewer poblanos, and zero bell peppers.

It all looks really good! What are you going to plant next year? If you're like me, you're itching to try something new.

I dunno!

All have been thinking about is that tree having to come down and how I am going to have to rebuild the boxes. Probably a few different strains of hot peppers and maybe a different kind of onions.

Onions! I love onions. I plant hundreds of them, and harvest them all summer while small (thinning the rows), then cure a fair amount for storage and winter. Sweet onions, yellow onions, shallots and garlic. Yum. I can't say they do a whole lot for pest control as many suggest. I still have flea beetles and Japanese beetles everywhere. I ignore those. Except for the eggplant, I got plenty of everything else.

I took down a tree a couple years ago, and now I have full sun on large portions of my garden all day long. You'll be happy once it's done. I sure was.

You've been doing this as long as I have. The first year groundhogs and deer ate everything, The second, I put up rickety fence, and they still got everything. The third year, a great fence around an 8 by 12 foot plot and the tomatoes robbed everything else of sun.

Years 4, 5 and 6 have been in a new house, with a fenced in but very small yard, maybe similarly sized to yours. No critters other than squirrels and birds. Now that I can actually grow stuff, the trick will be to grow stuff I actually eat. I waste a lot of space on okra, eggplant and peppers, which neither do well, nor do I really eat them much. I have to grow more lettuce and brassicas. I really want to grow corn, but I do not have that kind of space without blocking sun on other stuff. I might try growing a variety that supposedly grows in containers. Maybe some flowers for drying.

Good morning! Nice chatting with you today.

Yes! What a journey of discovery while producing fresh food! Kinda like crypto mining for your diet!

I will have to some to you for some advice on which onions to start with and how. I have a handful of red onion we threw in there as extras from a free high school greenhouse sale and I just picked the first one.

All hail Hive Gardeners!

I get onion sets from Fedco Seeds, my go-to source for almost everything except berries, for which I use Nourse Farms. They both have huge selections, so choose for your climate and desires. I love the roderique shallots! This will be the first year I plant Fedco garlic, hard neck cuz I love those large cloves. In the past, I've just popped in cloves from stuff I bought at the supermarket. Both companies sell out early, so get cracking! If you're going for red raspberries, Joan J is the one you want. Large, juicy, sweet, thornless, and two crops a year. I put in two plants spring 2023, and got more berries than I could eat in this year's first flush, and the second flush, the big one, is setting fruit out there now.

Your garden is very rich and healthy, the tomatoes and the cucumber did a lot of things to my taste buds... 😁

I think I have had tomatoes and cucumbers on every sandwich in the last 2 weeks so they are helping my tastebuds too!

Good morning my friend, I hear you about a short growing season. Lately, we've had some nighttime temps in the low fifties and some leaves are already turning colors and decorating the ground.

It's great to see that your cukes are doing swell this year, if I remember correctly you didn't have a very good harvest last year. I can feel the heat from the peppers you've got growing right through the screen.

Herbs, flowers, and veggies all look great, despite leaving #mother #nature in charge while spending a week at the cottage.

The summer goes by so quickly and before you know it we will be comparing notes on how Old Man Winter is treating us.

Enjoy the remainder of the weekend and garden on.

Oh ya no matter the season, we will have tales to tell and fun to have here. The rain has been on a tight schedule that it falls right when my rain barrel gets low so it is really perfect. Just have to work on drainage for the basil.

The cucumbers were a challenge last year but I found a better place for them to grow this year and they are a blessing. All about the experimentation to see what works in our urban space. The reward is plenty of food and sharing the excess with others!

Your family garden is indeed so rich and colourful, I could pick from the tomatoes, the pepper, the cucumber and make some very delicious meals.
The Bloom and their fragrances would grace my dining... 😊

It takes a couple months up here in Canada for the garden to start to yield but most of our meals include veggies from the garden in August and sept for sure!

You are enjoying for sure!