Tag Archives: Dill

A Garden Learning Curve

Marjoram DSC01757 This marjoram plant is a real survivor.  Planted last fall, most of its sibling plants did not grow, or started to grow, and died.  I tasted a bit of its leaf, and this plant has a definite herbal flavor.  A few other plants may have survived, but the true marjoram is rather difficult to distinguish from a certain weed which is right now about the same size.  Lesson learned:  Plant marjoram in the early spring.

The fall planted plants which did not fare very well were chives, short dill, short radishes, dill which was lower lying right next to the back edge, carrots, beets, onions, sage, basil, sorrell, marjoram, oregano.

Oregano and either weeds or marjoram DSC01758 The shorter, more bluish plants are oregano.  They also have an herbal taste.  but the taller plants might be weeds, or they might be marjoram.  I cannot tell yet.

So I have to learn to tell some weeds from seedlings.  When I have just planted seeds, and a lot of them sprout soon afterward, this is easy.  When I have planted a lot of seeds, and they do not grow well, it is hard to tell if a plant is a weed or a sprout.

I need to learn to plant the seeds of different kinds at the right time to maximize their growth.   The plants which eventually grew fairly well were large radishes, larger dill, lettuce, parsley, cilantro.

I need to learn which plants are annual, and which are perennial.  For example, I understand that most vegetables are annual, and may even be planted several time a year.  But herbs can vary in this respect.  For example, sorrel is perennial, parsley is biannual, and cilantro is annual.

I need to learn how much of the different kinds of plants we like to eat.   Perhaps, though we may not get very much sage, we may not need very much sage.

 

Garden, 13th Week

DSC01132 Eight days to go until winter solstice!

DSC01136 There are at least four radishes in here, ready to harvest.  Not very much, considering that I planted two packets of seeds for at  least a dollar each.  There are quite a few less developed radishes that may grow better when the days begin to lengthen.

DSC01133 Young red cabbage plants are doing a little better than they were, but still not visible from a distance.  There is a little mesclun mix in there.  Some newer seedlings are emerging again, now including a red lettuce, which did not come up before.  We’ll see what time does.

DSC01135 Dill does not like it too wet, because the dryer dill a little elevated from the near trench at the edge of the garden, where moisture and rain accumulate, is doing better, now.  But in the heat and dryness of the early fall, the dill was sprouting much better next to the garden’s edge where the higher level of moisture was a definite plus under these dryer conditions.

Next week will be just before the winter solstice, and in two weeks, we will be just after the winter solstice.

Garden, 10th Week After Planting

Garden, End of 10th week after planting DSC01021 View of garden, some things grow better

Best radish so far DSC01029  Best radish with slightly swollen stemBest parsley DSC01035 Best parsley showing speeded up growth

Best lettuce DSC01040 New lettuce seedlings.  All others disappeared

. Best dill plant DSC01030 Best cilatro DSC01036 Best cilantro, growing better

Some plants are starting to take off!  As you see the garden is shaded by the houses a lot, because we are getting close to the winter solstice.  Nine more weeks from now there will be more light than we have right now.  The light will begin increasing in 4 1/2 weeks at the winter solstice, and it is our experience that in general things in the yard slowly begin to grow at that time such as clover and grass.  Maybe parts of the garden will grow better again.

It seems that caterpillar season is over.  I did not see any crawling today, although the temperature on the font porch was over 70 degrees.  The beets and carrots have been eaten off to the ground.   There are some new leaves of lettuce coming up.  It has been apparently eaten off several times, but a few new seedlings are popping up, yet again.  Time will tell.

For sure we will have a few herbs to harvest as needed for our kitchen in a few weeks!