finnime
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Post by finnime on Aug 9, 2022 17:08:19 GMT -5
Yes, and why all my summer squash blossoms so far are blind. I'm longing for the freshest of fresh squash. Is it the heat?
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MarionTh230
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Post by MarionTh230 on Aug 10, 2022 20:08:21 GMT -5
My tomatoes are still growing and putting on blossoms. But, they are extremely slow to set fruit. Very little fruit setting. The heat is just too much. Without divulging too much identifying information, I am much further south than the rest of you and the heat is brutal. The best tomatoes I ever grew were last year. I put a plant out quite late. Maybe September or October? I had so many tomatoes all the way until a few days after Christmas when the frost finally got the plant.
Petunias died a month or two ago. Begonias, verbena, and dianthus are quite happy despite the heat. Wildflowers and zinnias are going strong as expected. I have one watermelon from my one little watermelon plant! Excited to see what it does. Bell pepper plant put a good bit of fruit out. Then stopped. Looks to be setting fruit again, which is good. I'm tired of buying bell peppers at the grocery store!
I also live so far south that I think crepe myrtles are evil. I have recently discovered that I have one in my "front" yard. It's really on the side of the house right next to the fence of the back yard. I had a huge hardwood tree removed a few months ago since it was too big and I was worried about the wrong storm causing it to fall on either my house or my neighbor's house. Once that tree was removed, all of a sudden I started seeing crepe myrtle blooms. I guess that big tree had choked the crepe myrtle out in such a way that it hasn't ever bloomed in the years we've owned this house. But, the stupid thing is not only blooming now, but it's huge. I can see the entire thing in all it's glory now that the other tree is gone. I'm eventually going to have to get the tree company back out to remove it too. It's too big and too close to both houses. If the people that owned this house 30 years ago wanted a crepe myrtle, they should have put it in the front yard where it could be properly pruned and monitored before it turned into a dangerous giant!
I have a Calibrachoa Kabloom that I grew from seed that is in a nursery pot. I need to transplant it before it loses its vigor. I also have a snapdragon that I grew from seed in a nursery pot. From what I understand, snapdragons don't care for heat. I do need to transplant it out of the nursery pot, but, I'm not real sure what I'm going to do with it right now. It's just so hot down here, and it will be quite some time before it gets cool enough for it to thrive outdoors.
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jerseygirl
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Post by jerseygirl on Aug 10, 2022 22:11:59 GMT -5
Nice to grow so many tomatoes! Crepe myrtles are very beautiful
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ken a.k.a OMK
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They killed Kenny, the bastards.
Joined: Dec 21, 2010 14:39:20 GMT -5
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Post by ken a.k.a OMK on Aug 11, 2022 8:10:10 GMT -5
I'm in Md, the Northern most zone (7) for Crepe Myrtles, and this town is loaded with them. I have 3, not by choice, but they are pretty. I have shoots coming up in the stone driveway! Mine are light red. I've seen dark red, pink and white. The 90° + weather is making them all bloom. My tomatoes seem to be on heat hold. Not reddening up and no new blossoms. The squirrels are eating them green though.
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MarionTh230
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Post by MarionTh230 on Aug 11, 2022 8:45:44 GMT -5
In the right conditions, the crepe myrtle can be quite a prolific grower. The magenta pink is most common around here. Although, quite a few people have moved to planting the white ones. I do think the flowers look nice. It's just, the trees need so much pruning and attention or they get out of control so quickly. I've been fortunate the squirrels haven't shown much interest in my tomatoes. They were more interested in the bird seed from the bird feeder and the sunflower seeds I attempted to plant.
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ken a.k.a OMK
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They killed Kenny, the bastards.
Joined: Dec 21, 2010 14:39:20 GMT -5
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Post by ken a.k.a OMK on Aug 11, 2022 9:46:21 GMT -5
It took me many reseeding tries to realize I didn't have a germination failure but squirrels were digging up the seeds. I finally covered the bed with netting. My feeder has been empty for a few weeks. Need to buy sunflower seed for birds.
BTW nice to meet you here and other threads. Keep posting.
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happyhoix
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Post by happyhoix on Aug 11, 2022 10:00:36 GMT -5
In the right conditions, the crepe myrtle can be quite a prolific grower. The magenta pink is most common around here. Although, quite a few people have moved to planting the white ones. I do think the flowers look nice. It's just, the trees need so much pruning and attention or they get out of control so quickly. I've been fortunate the squirrels haven't shown much interest in my tomatoes. They were more interested in the bird seed from the bird feeder and the sunflower seeds I attempted to plant. I plant four of the bush type crepe myrtles several years back - imagine just the top of the myrtle, no trunk. They’ve stayed the same 3-4 foot high, basically balls that have a nice showy white flower. They’re hard to kill so I like them. Don’t have to prune them bu I planted them in front of three little camellias that are now pushy robust camellias that are taller than the house, so I have to prune them back a bit at the base to give the myrtles a chance at some light and air. Since the myrtles bloom now and the camellias bloom in the winter we get two rounds of flowers from that bed, which is nice. Also screens that end of the screened porch from the neighbors.
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Deleted
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Post by Deleted on Aug 11, 2022 16:33:45 GMT -5
We are huge crape myrtle fans in zone 9. In the backyard I have a standard size white one (25'?), plus a lavender miniature (12'), pink miniature (15'), red miniature (7-8'), and two dwarfs, red and dark pink (3-4 feet). In the front yard we have another, deep pink, miniature that stands about 15', probably its maximum. We do minimal pruning, just enough to keep the big white out of the electric lines, the mini lavender off the shop roof, and the front deep pink up off the grass so you can get a lawnmower under it. I even have a pot with a lavender one that obviously came from the lavender mini. Our whole community is full of crape myrtles, some 40 to 50 years old - every color imaginable. I don't know anything else that can withstand 13 degrees in the winter and 105 in the summer and make pretty flowers too. I really want some of the Black Magic crape myrtles with the dark leaves but we don't have any room
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Cookies Galore
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Post by Cookies Galore on Aug 11, 2022 16:33:58 GMT -5
Not me in my backyard this morning yelling at two squirrels to stay away from my tomato plants. Sigh...
I managed to make a no cook tomato sauce with three super sauce romas, that's it. Such a disappointing year for my garden. The 10 day forecast shows low 80s and chances of rain, so I'm hopefully no tomato flowers will get scorched and actually produce some fruit. I'm ready to rip up my two plants that aren't giving me anything but they also make good squirrel decoys. I dunno. I hope September and October give me something. The one banana pepper I had was taken by the squirrels and my cabbage is still looking like a Brussels sprout.
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Tennesseer
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Post by Tennesseer on Aug 11, 2022 16:37:42 GMT -5
Not me in my backyard this morning yelling at two squirrels to stay away from my tomato plants. Sigh... I managed to make a no cook tomato sauce with three super sauce romas, that's it. Such a disappointing year for my garden. The 10 day forecast shows low 80s and chances of rain, so I'm hopefully no tomato flowers will get scorched and actually produce some fruit. I'm ready to rip up my two plants that aren't giving me anything but they also make good squirrel decoys. I dunno. I hope September and October give me something. The one banana pepper I had was taken by the squirrels and my cabbage is still looking like a Brussels sprout. I imagine the weather has been rough on man and beast(s) this year. Too dry and hot in so many places. Food and water/moisture scarce.
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Deleted
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Post by Deleted on Aug 11, 2022 16:42:36 GMT -5
I've decided to give up veggie gardening, except in pots so DH and I have cleared out the plants in our raised beds so the landscaper can use the soil to repair the areas damaged during the recent sewer line replacement. The area will be filled with flagstone and I will focus on herbs, chives, multiplying onions etc in pots, and some flowers.
For us veggie gardening was either feast or famine. One bell pepper when I needed four, 50 jalapenos when I needed two and so on.
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MarionTh230
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Post by MarionTh230 on Aug 11, 2022 17:42:08 GMT -5
It took me many reseeding tries to realize I didn't have a germination failure but squirrels were digging up the seeds. I finally covered the bed with netting. My feeder has been empty for a few weeks. Need to buy sunflower seed for birds. BTW nice to meet you here and other threads. Keep posting. My squirrels were kind enough to dig up my sunflower seeds about 2 - 3 days after I planted them. They were also kind enough to leave holes behind and little squirrel tracks. I never had to wonder if it was a germination problem, that's for sure!
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MarionTh230
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Post by MarionTh230 on Aug 11, 2022 17:45:28 GMT -5
We are huge crape myrtle fans in zone 9. In the backyard I have a standard size white one (25'?), plus a lavender miniature (12'), pink miniature (15'), red miniature (7-8'), and two dwarfs, red and dark pink (3-4 feet). In the front yard we have another, deep pink, miniature that stands about 15', probably its maximum. We do minimal pruning, just enough to keep the big white out of the electric lines, the mini lavender off the shop roof, and the front deep pink up off the grass so you can get a lawnmower under it. I even have a pot with a lavender one that obviously came from the lavender mini. Our whole community is full of crape myrtles, some 40 to 50 years old - every color imaginable. I don't know anything else that can withstand 13 degrees in the winter and 105 in the summer and make pretty flowers too. I really want some of the Black Magic crape myrtles with the dark leaves but we don't have any room Your giant white one sounds like the same variety I have, only this one is the standard magenta pink kind. This one is about 30 ft or so. We have decent sized yards, but the space between the houses is not very large. Basically the lots are long but not very wide across. Just not a good spot for that giant thing. What I don't really understand is why the crepe myrtle was planted there to begin with? There is a row of azalea bushes in the front yard. It would have been fine there. And away from my house and the neighbor's house. Makes no sense for it to be where it's at and now it's a giant in a bad spot.
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Cookies Galore
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I don't need no instructions to know how to rock
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Post by Cookies Galore on Aug 11, 2022 17:50:52 GMT -5
Not me in my backyard this morning yelling at two squirrels to stay away from my tomato plants. Sigh... I managed to make a no cook tomato sauce with three super sauce romas, that's it. Such a disappointing year for my garden. The 10 day forecast shows low 80s and chances of rain, so I'm hopefully no tomato flowers will get scorched and actually produce some fruit. I'm ready to rip up my two plants that aren't giving me anything but they also make good squirrel decoys. I dunno. I hope September and October give me something. The one banana pepper I had was taken by the squirrels and my cabbage is still looking like a Brussels sprout. I imagine the weather has been rough on man and beast(s) this year. Too dry and hot in so many places. Food and water/moisture scarce. That's what I'm telling myself, and it's true, but my friends' gardens are faring much better than mine. I know it's the intense, direct sun I get in my yard. Ah well!
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MarionTh230
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Post by MarionTh230 on Aug 11, 2022 17:51:08 GMT -5
I've decided to give up veggie gardening, except in pots so DH and I have cleared out the plants in our raised beds so the landscaper can use the soil to repair the areas damaged during the recent sewer line replacement. The area will be filled with flagstone and I will focus on herbs, chives, multiplying onions etc in pots, and some flowers. For us veggie gardening was either feast or famine. One bell pepper when I needed four, 50 jalapenos when I needed two and so on. Oooohhh, all my gardening is in pots. Except for the wildflower patch and a very small flower bed outside the bay window. My watermelon plant - yeah it's in a pot. I just let the vines grow out into the yard to make a watermelon patch. Sometimes I think container gardening is underrated. You can do well and it limits you just enough that you have to pick the things that you are really interested in growing. But, you can also get more flexibility. I move pots around as the sun changes to get the right amount light during the right time of the day. Containers do need more watering, but, depending on how many pots you have it's not really laborious to do it. I'm interested to hear how your chives do if you go that route. I've had zero luck with chives from seed. I bought one chive plant. But it may be coming to the end of its life soon? It looks a little pitiful. So if you plant chives in containers I'll be anxious to hear your stories, tips, and tricks!
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Deleted
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Post by Deleted on Aug 11, 2022 18:31:44 GMT -5
We are huge crape myrtle fans in zone 9. In the backyard I have a standard size white one (25'?), plus a lavender miniature (12'), pink miniature (15'), red miniature (7-8'), and two dwarfs, red and dark pink (3-4 feet). In the front yard we have another, deep pink, miniature that stands about 15', probably its maximum. We do minimal pruning, just enough to keep the big white out of the electric lines, the mini lavender off the shop roof, and the front deep pink up off the grass so you can get a lawnmower under it. I even have a pot with a lavender one that obviously came from the lavender mini. Our whole community is full of crape myrtles, some 40 to 50 years old - every color imaginable. I don't know anything else that can withstand 13 degrees in the winter and 105 in the summer and make pretty flowers too. I really want some of the Black Magic crape myrtles with the dark leaves but we don't have any room Your giant white one sounds like the same variety I have, only this one is the standard magenta pink kind. This one is about 30 ft or so. We have decent sized yards, but the space between the houses is not very large. Basically the lots are long but not very wide across. Just not a good spot for that giant thing. What I don't really understand is why the crepe myrtle was planted there to begin with? There is a row of azalea bushes in the front yard. It would have been fine there. And away from my house and the neighbor's house. Makes no sense for it to be where it's at and now it's a giant in a bad spot. Most folks just don't really understand the mature size of a tree when they plant them. When we bought our little house, there were 3 pecan trees in the backyard. 3! Pecans get very big. We had 2 removed and a hurricane took out the last 1. The irony of our white crape myrtle is that it's a volunteer. One day I was poking around the yard and saw some crape myrtle shoots. Google said to pick 5 of them and bind them together to make a tree and, for once, Google was right. The location is actually perfect. We tried to find out the exact variety as it's very different from all the other white ones in the area. I was told by some smart folks that most varieties are hybrid and, when they come up as volunteers, they revert to one of the original varieties and look nothing like their immediate ancestors. It's an exfoliating variety that sheds its bark each year and the underlying wood is cinnamon brown - very pretty
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Tennesseer
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Post by Tennesseer on Aug 11, 2022 19:40:48 GMT -5
Your giant white one sounds like the same variety I have, only this one is the standard magenta pink kind. This one is about 30 ft or so. We have decent sized yards, but the space between the houses is not very large. Basically the lots are long but not very wide across. Just not a good spot for that giant thing. What I don't really understand is why the crepe myrtle was planted there to begin with? There is a row of azalea bushes in the front yard. It would have been fine there. And away from my house and the neighbor's house. Makes no sense for it to be where it's at and now it's a giant in a bad spot. Most folks just don't really understand the mature size of a tree when they plant them. When we bought our little house, there were 3 pecan trees in the backyard. 3! Pecans get very big. We had 2 removed and a hurricane took out the last 1. The irony of our white crape myrtle is that it's a volunteer. One day I was poking around the yard and saw some crape myrtle shoots. Google said to pick 5 of them and bind them together to make a tree and, for once, Google was right. The location is actually perfect. We tried to find out the exact variety as it's very different from all the other white ones in the area. I was told by some smart folks that most varieties are hybrid and, when they come up as volunteers, they revert to one of the original varieties and look nothing like their immediate ancestors. It's an exfoliating variety that sheds its bark each year and the underlying wood is cinnamon brown - very pretty I have four or five crape myrtles along my backyard fence (dark pink flowers) and about 17 feet tall. Because I like the smooth bark of crape myrtle, I planted two 'Sarah's Favorite' crape myrtles (white flowers), one on each side of the patio. Sarah's Favorite have no problem growing 25 feet plus tall and the canapy almost as wide. When they reached maturity I had a problem with them. Their branches were hanging over the roof allowing unwelcome critters on the roof. And when it rained, the flower petals washed down to the cement patio and turned into a messy slush. So I had them cut down. Good tree-bad location. Very bad location.
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happyhoix
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Post by happyhoix on Aug 12, 2022 9:10:37 GMT -5
Not me in my backyard this morning yelling at two squirrels to stay away from my tomato plants. Sigh... I managed to make a no cook tomato sauce with three super sauce romas, that's it. Such a disappointing year for my garden. The 10 day forecast shows low 80s and chances of rain, so I'm hopefully no tomato flowers will get scorched and actually produce some fruit. I'm ready to rip up my two plants that aren't giving me anything but they also make good squirrel decoys. I dunno. I hope September and October give me something. The one banana pepper I had was taken by the squirrels and my cabbage is still looking like a Brussels sprout. Something has been creeping through the fence around my raised beds and eating my ambrosia cantelopes down to the rind. I got three before the varmits caught wind of the heavenly fruit - I probably won’t get another one. Don’t know if these are small varmits like mice that squeeze through the fence or ninjas like possums and raccoons that mission impossible themselves over the fence. I hate them.
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Deleted
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Post by Deleted on Aug 12, 2022 9:53:26 GMT -5
happyhoix I vote for ninja possums and raccoons. I don't think mice are into fruits and veggies
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cooper88
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Post by cooper88 on Aug 12, 2022 17:22:45 GMT -5
I've planted several crape myrtles here and I love them. They're bulletproof and drought tolerant. You do have to be careful to pick the right mature size for the space. My biggest ones will top out at ten feet.
I'm having the weirdest garden year. I've had all kinds of problems with germination. Excessive heat. Drought. My tomatoes, which should be long dead, are thriving. We were over 100 for a few weeks straight and they never stopped setting blossoms or fruit. Okra, on the other hand, should love these conditions and struggled all along.
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MarionTh230
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Post by MarionTh230 on Aug 12, 2022 17:48:52 GMT -5
I'm over the extreme summer weather. I'll keep tending to my garden and attempt to nurture what I have. But, I'm thinking about fall plants. I may try my hand at a few of those. Something to look forward to during this oppressive heat.
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Deleted
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Post by Deleted on Aug 12, 2022 18:01:10 GMT -5
I've planted several crape myrtles here and I love them. They're bulletproof and drought tolerant. You do have to be careful to pick the right mature size for the space. My biggest ones will top out at ten feet. I'm having the weirdest garden year. I've had all kinds of problems with germination. Excessive heat. Drought. My tomatoes, which should be long dead, are thriving. We were over 100 for a few weeks straight and they never stopped setting blossoms or fruit. Okra, on the other hand, should love these conditions and struggled all along. My tomatoes were doing great until the squirrels got to them. They even produced little tomato babies after the squirrels stripped them of tomatoes. And even though it was so, so hot here. The squirrels ate all of the little tomato babies too. I think that, if not for the squirrels, I would have had a pretty good harvest of tomatoes. One of my coworkers that grows vegetables said today that his tomato plants haven’t been doing anything, and whatever type of pepper he’s growing (I forgot) haven’t done anything either.
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CCL
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Post by CCL on Aug 12, 2022 22:14:25 GMT -5
Grandbaby came over and first thing he wanted to do was see his pumpkin. It was green last he saw it. He was so excited to see it changed colors he could hardly stand it.
I couldn't convince him he could leave it in the garden for a while. He wanted to pick it, so we did. He had so much fun showing everyone his orange pumpkin and rolling it around the back yard lol.
I don't know if it will last til Halloween, but no matter. It was worth it to see all the fun he was having. We will have more if I can keep the bugs away.
After the great pumpkin roll he decided the best thing for us to do was to have Popsicles and ice cream on the patio. Hahaha, smart kid.
I also picked a few pears off my tree. First year I've really had any to pick. Yummy!
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CCL
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Post by CCL on Aug 12, 2022 22:16:13 GMT -5
I've planted several crape myrtles here and I love them. They're bulletproof and drought tolerant. You do have to be careful to pick the right mature size for the space. My biggest ones will top out at ten feet. I'm having the weirdest garden year. I've had all kinds of problems with germination. Excessive heat. Drought. My tomatoes, which should be long dead, are thriving. We were over 100 for a few weeks straight and they never stopped setting blossoms or fruit. Okra, on the other hand, should love these conditions and struggled all along. My tomatoes were doing great until the squirrels got to them. They even produced little tomato babies after the squirrels stripped them of tomatoes. And even though it was so, so hot here. The squirrels ate all of the little tomato babies too. I think that, if not for the squirrels, I would have had a pretty good harvest of tomatoes. One of my coworkers that grows vegetables said today that his tomato plants haven’t been doing anything, and whatever type of pepper he’s growing (I forgot) haven’t done anything either. I've had a lot of tomatoes and peppers, but tomatoes have been small.
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weltschmerz
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Post by weltschmerz on Aug 14, 2022 23:47:02 GMT -5
I picked a big bunch of snowballs. I filled out the rest of the bouquet with crabapple branches, with little red apples. It looks absolutely stunning.
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Deleted
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Post by Deleted on Aug 15, 2022 16:59:15 GMT -5
Our landscaper is coming tomorrow to repair the damage from the sewer line replacement, and to remove my raised veggie beds and replace them with flagstone. The yard has looked awful this year because the temps and humidity were simply too much for me to spend the needed time outdoors. DH is rightfully unhappy with the appearance so it's time to move on to something easier to maintain. I wanted to try some herbs in pots but the crazy hot summers and freaky cold winters have dramatically changed what will survive here.
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cooper88
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Post by cooper88 on Aug 16, 2022 20:06:17 GMT -5
I've been out randomly deadheading stuff. It's really been neglected this year due to excessive heat. The areas I got done look great, if I do say so myself.
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azucena
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Post by azucena on Aug 17, 2022 7:55:09 GMT -5
I let things go during crazy heat too. Part of why I love gardening is that a little work can make a big impact.
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MarionTh230
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Post by MarionTh230 on Aug 31, 2022 15:29:29 GMT -5
I don't think my watermelon is growing anymore. I think we will go ahead and pick it today or tomorrow. I started some seeds Sunday afternoon for some fall plantings. I don't normally do fall gardening. There was just that one oopsie tomato plant last year. I'm not real clear how well it will go, but, what the heck. It should be fun!
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CCL
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Aug 31, 2022 21:12:10 GMT -5
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Post by CCL on Aug 31, 2022 21:12:10 GMT -5
Marion, What are you planting for fall?
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