Saturday, May 30, 2009

Progress

The garden is coming along, here are some pictures from a couple weeks ago that I've been meaning to post for a while.


I created a support system for the peas because the were kind of floppy. Chopsticks are useful for so many things.
They've grown a lot in the past few weeks, here's one from today:

You can see that they're a bit dry and yellowing towards the bottom even though it's been raining for the past couple days. Any ideas on why that is or what I should do?

The peas are strangling each other, or embracing each other; I guess it depends on how you see it:

We have a green tomato and a bunch of flowers on the tomato plant:

We had one strawberry, but it totally rotted before it got ripe. I guess we won't be totally self-sustaining this summer.

Thursday, May 7, 2009

The Weather

Lots of rain recently. The plants like it. But they also like sunlight.

Sunday, May 3, 2009

2 weeks spent...

Repotting!

[Here is my cat Izzy digging in my parents' garden]

From Smoggy Basil



I had several lovely rounds of repotting to do:

1) Last Sunday, I took my store-bought basil and rosemary plants (! I know, I know...cheating) and repotted them into larger vessels. Before repotting and notice the mint plant in the Ziploc:
2) I pulled a mint plant from the ground at my parents' house and transported it into the city in between some damp paper towels so I also had to put the mint in a pot with dirt

[Sidenote: the mint at my parents' house comes from a long defunct Italian restaurant in Bedford, NY called Nino's. Nino's, towards the end, had mint growing everywhere outside its main steps. My brother and I - we were around 9 and 10, respectively, at the time - pulled a piece of a mint plant out of the ground and brought it home. The rest is minty history!]

[Sidenote 2: After Nino's closed and its building languished for a decade or so, Richard Gere bought the space and recently opened a new restaurant. Minty fresh celeb news!]

3) Today I snipped the Jiffy pellet mesh off my seedlings and put them into big girl pots with real dirt. Before picture is below; dill on the bottom right really grew during the last two weeks.
However, The seedlings look absolutely tiny in real pots and some have wilted over - I will post a picture of how puny they look next week. Any tips on what to give the seedlings that will make them react the way Popeye did to spinach? They need a little muscle!

The store-bought basil and rosemary have been adjusting nicely to their new and larger surroundings and the mint seems very happy in its new urban setting