Wednesday, September 01st, 2010 | Author: Tammy

The summer gardening season definitely started out slow.  It took forever for the tomato, pepper, and melon plants to get going.  All my watermelon died this year but i will give them another go next year.

Here are some pics of my tomatoes and peppers on the plant.

The first pic is of a giant Cherokee Green that is about to ripen.  From what I have read, the fruit has a yellow tinge when it is ripe.  I can’t wait to try this tomato.

Next to it is a picture of the bottom of my cherokee purple tomato plant.  What a productive plant.  I think this may beat out my marvel stripe for productivity.  This is just the bottom foot of the plant and there are approx. 20 fruits just in the 1 foot.

Below, there is a marvel stripe.  This plant is not only productive but the fruit are HUGE.

Here is a jalapeno pepper.  Can’t wait to make some salsa.

I also have some cherry tomato plants that are pumping out pints of tomatoes a day…just picked about 3 pints today.  They are delicious but we cannot keep up.  Tomorrow, hubby is bringing a bunch of tomatoes into work.

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Category: Gardening  | Tags: Tomato  | Leave a Comment
Sunday, June 27th, 2010 | Author: Tammy
I just wanted to update you all on my mango tree experiment.  My Carrie, Ice Cream and Lancetilla all died. :(
The ice cream and carrie were doomed from the start and when I got them, they were not healthy and had this weird goopy material on them.  They never really did much and I eventually stopped watering them.
I am really sad about my lancetilla.  It grew a ton last year and I even had a few small mangoes on the tree until i pruned them off.  The lancetilla made it through this winter without any protection and even put on new growth once the winter ended.  It died when we transplanted it from the pot to the ground.  I think we may have been a little rough with the roots and as soon as it was inground it just died within 1-2 weeks.
So I bought another tree.  This is an alphonso mango.  It looked great when it came to me so I have higher hope for this tree than the others that were shipped from Florida.
This is my Glenn Mango from Laverne nursery that I got last year.  It is the only survivor of my “freshman” class of mango trees.  It made it through the winter fine without and protection and here it is blooming.
If i get any small mangoes I will prune them off and give the tree another year to grow.
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Category: Fruit Trees  | Tags: Mango  | 2 Comments
Sunday, May 16th, 2010 | Author: Tammy

Yup, that’s what we are eatting right now.  We just picked the last of the sweet peas and pulled out the plants to make room for our summer garden.

Our strawberries are kicking butt.  They are perfect and sweet.  I actually got to try one today.  I need to take pictures but it is so hard to take them before we eat them.

We have also had a few ripe blueberries.  It is about a month earlier than the first ripe blueberries from last year which is surprising because it has been a wetter spring than last year.

The blueberry bushes are just loaded with berries and some of the berries are quite large.

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Category: Berries  | Tags: Blueberry  | One Comment
Saturday, May 01st, 2010 | Author: Tammy
Well this is our second year with blueberry bushes and so far they are doing pretty good.  They are loaded with berries this year with very little maintence.  We also added a sharpblue blueberry bush to the mix because my mom found one at Costco.  It had a few blossoms but no berries this year.
Here is the Misty Blueberry.  This is a healthy, lanky looking plant that is loaded with berries.  Here is a pic of one of the branches and a close up of some of the berries.
Here is the Sunshine blueberry bush.  It is a shorter, bushier plant with a bunch of really small berries on it.
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Category: Berries  | Tags: Blueberry  | 2 Comments
Friday, April 30th, 2010 | Author: Tammy
We are in the midst of cherimoya season.  Boy are these fruit delicious.  I ordered a box from calimoya.com to see if there was a difference in quality from cherimoya.com but i am happy to report that they are both quality places to order cherimoyas.  I was able to try some varieties of cherimoyas that are not easily available in stores.
Here are the cherimoyas I received: Booth, Chaffey, Dr. White (aka White), Selma and a hybrid.  The hybrid was gigantic, about the size of a largegrapefruit.
Selma Cherimoya
Here is the infamous and rare selma, a pink fleshed fruit.  It is a smaller fruit and irregular shaped.  The taste was really great.  Sweet with good acid.  It has an intense cherimoya flavor and a little graininess near the ski.  My mom loved this one the best.  It is very delicious but almost too sweet for my taste so I was not able to eat more than 1/4 of it.
Booth Cherimoya: Unfortunately I did not take pics of the inside but this had a very similiar flavor, shape and size to selma.  It is very sweet with good acid.  A very delicious cherimoya.
Chaffey Cherimoya
I am growing the chaffey cherimoya so I was very anxious to try it.  It is a juicy and sweet cherimoya with mild flavor.  I can also see why it is not a big commercial variety as the skin is VERY thin and it bruises easily.  This variety probably has more graininess than other varieties but my husband actually liked it because it reminded him of the pears he grew up eatting in pear country.
Dr. White Cherimoya
What a sweet and juicy cherimoya the white is!  We all really enjoyed this fruit.  It is larger and has a mild cherimoya flavor.  I can see why this is so popular with commercial growers.
Calimoya Hybrid
This fruit is humungous.  I can see why it is so popular.  Unfortunately by the time we ate it, it was overripe so it was too sweet and mushy for me.  I will try it again and review it again.
I am getting alot better at knowing when to eat the cherimoya.  I like them when they just start to soften up before they get overripe.  I think that is when i detect the licorice flavor is from overripe fruit.  I only tasted it with the hybrid.
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Monday, March 29th, 2010 | Author: Tammy

Just a quick update on the cherimoyas…yes that is cherimoyas, plural.  I got a fino de jete from Roger Meyer.  It is also smaller than the chaffey I got last year from Laverne but hopefully it will catch up soon,

The Fino de jete arrived without leaves and just this week I noticed bud swelling.

The Chaffey has dropped most of its leaves so I expect the buds to start swelling in the next week or so.

Last year the chaffey did not drop its leaves until mid april so we are a month ahead of last year…yay ;)

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Monday, March 29th, 2010 | Author: Tammy

I haven’t had much computer time so I have greatly neglected my blogs.  Here is a brief summary of what is happening here.

The Waldo Peas that I planted last fall overwintered and are going gang-busters.  We are picking sweat peas daily.  Jackson loves to snack on them.

Babcock Peach Tree has fully blossomed and has set a ton of small peaches.  I was worried with the rains that we had that I would not get any fruitset but I guess I was wrong.  This tree seems to set fruit very easily.  I did not do any dormant spray to it and it now has leaf curl.  I will have to remember to spray it next year.

My New fruit trees order of budding out from first to last:

Santa Rosa Plum is full of green leaves.  It has about 4 blossoms on it this year but no fruit set.  I would not be surprised to get some plums next year.

Pluot tree (4 in 1) has also bloomed and i do not see any fruit on it.  It is also covered in nice healthy leaves.

Hollywood plums: I got 1 blossom on 1 tree but alot of reddish-green leaves.  A very vigorous grower.

Baby Crawford Peach: no blossoms but I see leaves so at least i know the roots are ok.

Reine Claude Doree (Old Green Gage): no blossoms but leaves

Fuyu Persimmon: leaves just started to push out last week.  I read that it is actually heat units, not chill hours that wakes up the tree.  Some newly planted fuyus do not push out new growth until august.

Reine Claude Bavay (Bavay Green Gage): This whip got me worried.  Although it has the thickest caliper, it has looked dead for weeks now but just last week the buds started to swell and they are finally turning green.  This is a late season plum.

Kiwi vines:

I just planted an orange and yellow female kiwi plant from roger meyer as well as a fuzzy male from raintree.  All of them are very vigorous growers so we need to get the arbor up ASAP.  I also planted some yellow kiwi that I grew from seeds from tradewinds.  The leaves look different than the leaves of the male fuzzy and Yellow and Orange Chinensis kiwis.  I guess only time will tell what they actually are.

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Sunday, March 21st, 2010 | Author: Tammy
Hey everyone,
This will be my second year gardening and I decided to try growing plants from seed.  Last year I mostly grew things from seedlings (tomato, squash, melons, peppers) because I was really intimidated by the idea of having a light system, and fans occillating to make the plants stronger, etc. 
This year encouraged by some garden buddies I decided to give it a try.  (Cue the music…time for my thank you speech)….
Thanks to Trudi from http://wintersown.org/ for not only providing most of the seeds but also giving great instructions for how to save seeds.  I was able to save my marvel strip seeds and they all germinated!!  She also gives great tomato growing advice in general.  Thanks also to Carolyn, Digdirt, Rnewste for sharing their great knowledge and to Sprtsguy76 (Damon) and Tn_veggie_gardener (steve) for their tomato enthusiasm and support.  Most importantly thanks to my wonderful husband for taking the babies so I can have time to baby my plants.
I did not have any fancy equipment, just some coffee filters, baggies, and plastic boxes. 
Here is the what I am growing from seed, most are from trudi_d at wintersown.org:
cherokee purple
isis candy
black cherry
early ssabukis aliana
goji faranji
green tomatillo (from baker creek)
marvel strip (from seeds i saved last summer)
I am going to donate the plants to my son’s pre-school since they have a great garden as well as give them to friends that I have encouraged to start gardening.
How to Germinate Seeds (Coffee Filter Method)
Day 1: February 13, 2010
I took some coffee filters I had and cut them in half so I had 2 little envelops.  I wet the filters and lightly squeezed them dry then put the seeds between the layer of coffee filter.  I then put each seed variety in its own little labeled sandwich bag (with a bit of air in each bag). 
I placed the sealed baggies in a tupperware container that i put on top of my computer (where i know it stays warm).
Day 6: February 19, 2010 germination!
Within 6 days most of my seeds had germinated and I planted them each in some cups that I found in our garage. 
Day 6: February 19, 2010 Plant in cups
I labeled each cup and started out putting 1 seed in each cup, then got lazy and started putting 2-3 seeds in each cup. My plan was to seperate them again when they got bigger. I placed these plants near a window that gets great morning light.
Day 36 : March 21, 2010 I got me some tomato (& tomatillo plants)!
Around March 10th I started to put the plants out when it was not too cold, windy or raining.  I first started out in some shade for a couple of hours a day.  Then I put them in full morning sun, but out of midday sun for a few days.  On overcast days, I would just leave them out all day.  I did make a mistake and leave them out in full sun on thusday when it was a clear day and reached 80 degrees.  3 of my plants got some burnt leaves but I just got rid of them.&nbsp

; It was a little tight in my plastic box so now it is not so squished.

There are a few things I will do differently next time:
1. after seeds germinate I will plant them in a seed tray and then seperate the plants when they are small and plant them in individual cups.
Hope this pictorial encourages others to try to grow tomato plants from seed!  Let me know if you have any questions.
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Category: Tomatos  | Tags: Tomato  | 11 Comments
Saturday, March 20th, 2010 | Author: Tammy
Spring is finally here.  I am so excited to get back into the yard and start gardening.
Here is a picture of my Babcock peach tree in bloom.
We have cleared out the garden beds and are prepping the soil by adding compost. 
We still have some pea plants in the wood bed.  I planted these at the beginning of fall and they finally decided to grow.  They are loaded with pea pods.
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Saturday, February 20th, 2010 | Author: Tammy

I received my trees from Raintree on thursday so we decided to plant all the trees on sunday before they came out of dormancy (it rained all day saturday). 

Here is the order as I received it and out of the box.

I ordered:

1 Old Green Gage (Reine Claude Doree) on citation rootstock
1 Green Gage Bavay on citation rootstock
1 Baby Crawford Peach on citation rootstock
1 4-in-1 pluot with Dapple Dandy, Flavor King, Flavor Queen, and Flavor Supreme on citation rootstock
1 Fuyu Persimmon on D. Lotus rootstock
2 Hollywood Plums on Mariana 2624 rootstock
1 Kiwi
2 grape vines (forgot the variety)
3 raspberry bushes (BACKORDERED)

The trees from Raintree Nursery came in pretty good shape.  They were about 4 feet tall and the width above the graft was thicker than my thumb on most of the trees.  The raspberry bushes were backordered so I do not have those yet.  The raspberry and grapes were actually “freebies” that the nursery gave to me so if i can’t find a place to plant them, I will donate them to my son’s preschool garden.
The only disappointment was the Old Green Gage (Reine Claude Doree).  Supposedly it came from Andy Mariani’s orchard so I was really excited to get it but it was a VERY puny plant, about 1/3 the size of the other trees.  When I called Raintree to complain about the tree, they offered to refund me 1/2 the tree price.  I thought that was great customer service and will check my cc bill to see if it was ever done.
I picked up a santa rosa plum tree from the local Sloat Nursery on saturday.
Here is the lineup.  We planted the trees then I pruned most of them around 2.5 feet because I want them to start branching low and stay a manageable size.

I am really excited about the vatiety of fruit trees I have and also excited to graft different varieties on the trees…just have to teach myself how to graft now ;)

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Category: Fruit Trees  | 4 Comments