- Author: Toni Greer
One year ago I wrote a blog regarding pomegranate bushes and trees which my husband and I planted up north. Three of the original bushes, which have been in the ground 3-4 yrs have given us our first substantial harvest. The fourth bush was eaten by grasshoppers earlier this year and is now starting to recover. The two trees were planted last year and are too young to produce fruit.
I can tell you that while not being ruby red in color, the flavor is quite good. They were picked a bit early since we weren't sure when we would next be up at the property. I was able to make a yummy salad with the arils and home grown herbs.
While there are many methods of de-seeding poms, my favorite is sitting on plastic covered with newspaper and just breaking into the fruit. If you have an over abundance the arils can be frozen in a single layer on wax paper. Once frozen, put them in a plastic bag and keep frozen until you need a few.
The botanical name for pomegranate is Punica granatum and is either a shrub or small tree. If you are thinking of planting one, place it in the sunniest, warmest part of your yard, or orchard in our case. Once established they do well in drought conditions. However, to have good fruit you must water occasionally. The fruit will appear at the tip of the new growth only, so shorten the branches for the first 3 years carefully. Select the cultivar specifically for your area as with any plant. As note of warning- some of the plants have thorns, pick carefully.
I've loved this fruit since I was very young, whether it was the fruit or the juice and I still love it today.
- Author: Jenni Dodini
Did you happen to read the "Home Seller" insert in the local paper on Sat/10/10? I tend to just flip through the pages and occasionally something will catch my attention besides the price of homes in our area. There is generally something pertaining to gardens or gardening in there that is well worth the time spent reading. Anyway, there was an article on "Keyhole gardens: A drought friendly twist on raised beds." This REALLY caught my attention and piqued my curiosity/ interest since I have been participating in the Master Gardener group that has been going places to speak about drought related topics.
I spent some time on the internet and looked at YouTube videos that others had posted. The two links that were the most informative were "Dave's Garden" and "Texas Co-op Power". The YouTube videos were what I needed to make what I read turn into something that I can (and probably will) do in my yard.
I guess that it would be appropriate to actually relay a bit of information at this point.
To quote Bev Walker, from the "Dave's Garden" site: "A keyhole garden is a raised bed, lasagna garden, composting and recycling system all rolled into one. The design creates a garden that uses recycled materials, less water and maintenance, and can be made handicap-accessible."
It was developed by humanitarian charities and missionaries for use in impoverished countries with poor soil, bad weather, and starving people. The process was started in the schools in Africa to teach the children so that they could take the knowledge home to their families. It became common in Texas after they experienced a prolonged drought there and somebody, not mentioned, heard about it and started making them. It is reported that three such gardens can feed a family of ten for a year!
Basically, what a keyhole garden is is a raised circular garden about 6 feet in diameter with a hole in the center about 1 1/2 feet diameter in which the compost bin is made. There is a "wedge" in the circle that provides access to the composting area. The outside edge of the big circle can be made with just about any thing imaginable that will create a wall to hold the soil in. One picture showed a wall that looked like it was created from empty wine bottles! Another was built into an old boat. The outside wall is built to about waist level, 3 - 4 feet tall, depending on where one's waist might be. The base of the composting area is built up a bit with rocks and the edges are made with wire mesh or some type of water permeable material in the shape of a tube that is about 1 foot higher that what the soil level in the bed will be. The inside of the wall in the bedding area is then lined with cardboard and then twigs, small branches, cardboard, old newspapers, etc are used to create the "lasagna" for the base of the bedding area. This layer is then watered to get the breakdown process started. Garden or topsoil is then placed on top of that and tamped down with the soil in the center around the compost tube higher and sloping toward the outer wall. The bed is then ready for planting. Once the plants are established and the composting area starts doing its thing, the watering is done solely via the composting tube where it wicks outward, thereby saving water, and providing nutrients to the soil from the compost. It is recommended to make a little roof over the composting tube to help prevent excessive drying during the really hot weather and too much water from getting in should it rain. Also trellises can be added so that shade cloth can be placed or a cover in the cold weather to create a little green house! If needed due to extreme heatwaves, drip irrigation can be incorporated to get the garden through the terrible heat.
This whole concept seems very exciting and pretty simple as well as self sustaining no matter what Mother Nature has in store for us. I will still pray that El Niño hits us, but we have all been through drought times and know that they will come again regardless. I hope that you will get online and learn more about this topic too.
- Author: Mike Gunther
Blue October skies
Orange pumpkins in the patch
Harvest moon glowing
- Author: Kathy M Gunther
In my last blog, I talked about the fact that one difference between gardening in Michigan and gardening in California is the length of the growing season! While Californians are harvesting beautiful lettuces and such, Michiganders are shoveling that last 18 inches of snow that just fell!
Another difference in these two gardening areas is: SOIL. You know…Dirt!! That stuff that gets under your fingernails and into the knees of your jeans! While Michigan has some of the most beautiful, black, rich loamy soil…California has some of the heaviest clay I've ever seen. BUT, just because you can work the soil much easier in Michigan, doesn't mean California's clay is not good. After taking the “Soils and Fertilizers” class at Solano Community College, we found out that although the density of our clay restricts plant roots somewhat, it is also a very nutrient-rich soil. And, as we also learned from our instructor Ken Williams: the correct answer to every question in that class is: Add Organic Matter! The organic matter helps to break up the compaction of the clay and gives spaces for water and oxygen to get to the roots and also adds more micro organisms which include bacteria, fungus, nematodes, worms and other wonderful plant-loving stuff!
When you get enough organic matter incorporated into the clay soil here, you can grow pretty much ANYTHING! Granted, it takes quite a bit of organic matter to really make a difference, but it is well worth the effort. Mike and I have been adding organic matter every time we plant any new plants. Eventually, we hope that our soil will be teaming with microbes that will help the plants assimilate all those lovely nutrients! To be continued...
- Author: Susan P Croissant
Other worldly, alien-like. A triangular head (turns 180 degrees), a pair of large compound eyes (in some cases made up of thousands of miniature eyes) and prominent spikey (serrated) front legs held in a prayer-like position. Photo variations: http://davesgarden.com/guides/articles/view/3021
Camouflage. Blending themselves into the background (both attack and defense). Ground species tend to be spotted brown, tree species green and leaf-like, some look like grass, even stones. The hay-color in my photo (on Bergenia cordifolia), matches the dry weeds at ground level--that photo blurred). The Flower Mantis (various species) mimics different species of flowers. Common species in U.S.: California mantis (Stagmomantis californica), non-native European mantis, (Mantis religiosa), non-native Chinese mantis (Tenodera sinensis), native Carolina mantis (Stagmomantis carolina).
Most of the 2400 species are ambush predators, waiting patiently for prey to stray within striking distance and be devoured alive, slowly, often head first. Feeds on insects (flies, crickets, grasshoppers), capable of killing prey 3 times its size (mice, small turtles, even snakes). However, since they do not know the difference between beneficial and non-beneficial insects, in some instances they could do more harm than good (i.e. bees). Lady beetles appear are optional predators in the garden.
Ah, sexual cannibalism. The much larger femme fatale lures a male with her pheromones, he engages in a courtship dance and, if worthy, she allows him to hitch a ride on her back and commence fertilization. She eats him after, even during mating, voraciously chewing off his head or legs. Protein. To create an ootheca (egg mass surrounded by protein for protection--cockroaches create them too). He still functions. Lab observations claim the male seems to thrust more vigorously without his head. Some studies cite sexual cannibalism as a way to increase the success and duration of copulation. In the wild, this occurs less than 30% of the time.
Mantids are visual predators, the only insect (invertebrate) proven to have 3D vision (stereopsis) like humans. Macaques, cats, horses, sheep, rabbits, toads and barn owls also have 3D vision. At Newcastle University's Institute of Neuroscience, scientists have been fitting super-small 3D glasses on mantids, indicating it may help program algorithms that will allow 3D vision for robots. They are attached with beeswax, the mantis placed in front of computer-generated moving images to determine if they can see the object standing out in depth in a similar way to humans and monkeys. They say the Mantids seem unbothered by the glasses, attached with beeswax, both then removed and mantids returned to their room to feed on crickets (Huffington Post, April 2014.) Video link:
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2014/04/28/praying-mantis-tiny-eyeglasses-video_n_5213319.html
Popular as pets, complete praying mantis care starter kits are found on-line, and some garden centers sell nymph eggs. Each species requires specific conditions to thrive, especially temperature and humidity, and should be researched thoroughly. Recommended feeding is an assortment of live insects. They can live as pets for over a year with proper care. If provoked, they will bite, but are not venomous.
A cool site on caring for a pet mantis: http://www.wikihow.com/Take-Care-of-a-Praying-Mantis
Some mantis facts: http://www.jcehrlich.com/blog/5-praying-mantis-facts/