Tag Archives: Nasturtiums

The Calla Lily Bloomed

DSC02789 My dark calla lily is in bloom today!  It popped up fast about three weeks ago.  My white calla lily is getting big, too.  This must be calla lily time.

DSC02796 Our male sago palm has produced a  flower for the second year.  They flower only after 15 years.  I trimmed it a lot,  because the lower leaves become unattractive.

DSC02794 The peach tree is bearing fruit.

DSC02795 Nasturtiums are still blooming.

DSC02790 But the columbine is about done and has seed pods.  You can see some weeds, including grass,  which I periodically pull.

 

 

 

Planting Nasturtiums

DSC01815 There were forty-five nasturtium seeds in this packet, which said to file each seed, so I did.  One of the main reasons I wanted to plant nasturtiums was because they help to control certain garden pests.  We are doing organic gardening.  According to The Vegetable Gardener’s Bible, by Edward C. Smith, nasturtiums discourage squash bugs and whiteflies, so I planted some individual seed next to the freshly planted cucumbers and eggplant,  near each of our three citrus trees, as well as next to carrots and cabbage in the main kitchen garden.

On the Burpee website, it said that nasturtiums have whiteflies as one of their several possible pests.  I can speculate that there is no contradiction, but I will watch and see what happens here.

I had never paid so much attention to planting individual seeds as I did today with the nasturtium planting.  I filed each seed, and soaked them in water for a couple of hours before planting each in its own, well-spaced little hole, the locations of which I only approximately know.  I am hoping to be able to recognize them when they come up by way of them not looking like weeds, and by these approximate locations.

Southwest Kitchen Garden Bed Planted on February 21, 2014

DSC01801 All the weeds are pulled from this bed.  We had landscape fabric under some mulch, which had been overtaken with weeds and grass. Then I dug it up in most places,  amended the soil with a bag of garden soil, raked it, and planted it with the vegetables  okra, cucumbers, and eggplant.  These plants, which “fruit” in the botanical sense, should be quite safe to eat from the lead point of view, because of the triple barriers to any lead from soil to the “fruit”.

  1. The soil to root barrier
  2. The root to stem barrier
  3. The stem to fruit barrier

Besides that the soil had been replaced after we had painted our house the first time.

Additionally, because there was a lot of space between the vegetable plantings, I sowed some flowers, blue bonnets, lavender, and some nasturtiums among vegetables and each other.  I hope I will be able to distinguish most of the seedlings as they emerge, because there were a lot of weed roots that I could not completely remove.  After the sowing was done, I applied some of the plantain and stick mulch, as much as I could, and watered it well.