Tag Archives: Winter solstice

Winter Solstice 2013, Garden, Galveston, TX

DSC01196 The garden one hour after the Galveston, TX Winter Solstice which occurred at 11:11AM CST.  It is cloudy today, so we cannot see the shadow marking the lowest point that the sun goes at  noon.  The photo was taken at about 12:20 PM, close enough to noon to have been interesting.

DSC01197 Winter Solstice narcissus, which will bloom one place or another over the coming weeks.DSC01198 Narcissus in the background  beat out the grass.   The Narcissus is darker green than the grass to the right.   The multi-colored green plant in the  foreground is  variegated ginger, which grew well before Ike.  The grass seemed to protect its roots, so that it is now flourishing for the first time in over five years.  I will check on the edibility of the roots.  I think that I know it is edible.

DSC01199 The narcissus around this cypress comes up later than some of the other bulbs.  This may be becaus I was placing coffee grounds around the cypress tree, and it raised up the level of the soil (fact), which may be the reason that the narcissus comes up later, (the kind of opinion that we could call a hypothesis).

.DSC01200 Dense narcissus around the live oak.

This summer solstice gives an opportunity to benchmark some of the plant progress in the kitchen garden, and the front  landscape garden.  It was a rainy 68 2/3 degrees Fahrenheit today.  Weeds will begin to grow again, soon.

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.