Since I planted all those seeds and was all, "Hey! It's gardening time! Let's watch my seeds grow all fat and happy since the frost date has passed!" and then we all sat around for two months (seriously, since March) wondering what the eff the deal was with the weather/seeds/plants/weather.
OK, so it was probably mostly me
Y'all, it's been a vuuuuuuuuurry cool and rainy spring. To the point where putting on a dress and heels instead of jeans stuffed into albeit hot knee-high boots with a sweater and scarf makes me ultra nervous because I'm sure that as soon as I walk outside and The Weather sees that I'm not battened down for winter, the sky will open and a deluge will soak me in my summer wear. And I can't have my new dress soaked with a June rain.
Rain in June? Really? Snow in the Sierras? Really? Nature - I thought we were friends. What is this BS? I don't know you anymore. You've changed.
Anyway, despite the craptastic weather we've had since I planted the garden back at the end of March (which, I'll admit, is a bit brazen anyway), all plants are now accounted for and actually growing. And we even have some newcomers that were brought in to ride the bench in the event that some of our first-stringers decide to get chewed by mystery bugs.
Because it's obviously the little seeds' choice whether they live or die at the teeth of a mystery seedling devourer, don't you just know. I take no blame for this whatsoever.
And to kick off this garden update right, I'll start with our Adopted Crop, the infamous African Horned Cucumber Jelly Melon.
Yes, people, you chose this monstrosity, so don't get all, "What the fuck is that? I voted for tomatoes." because tomatoes weren't on the list. I plant those automatically. Nice try, liars!
Good news is, for those of you who did vote for the jelly melon and are man enough to admit it (even if you're a girl, you can be man enough for something. True story.), that late comer has actually germinated. Finally. After I stared so hard at the soil (and resowed the seeds 3 times)(Three)(THREE)(!) that I nearly pooped my pants.
He already knows I'm strange, so no worrying that he's going to leave me for a Normal Wife, he gets it.
And then I saw that the previously empty watermelon mound was suddenly inhabited by TWO sprouting watermelon seedlings. TWO. HOLY CRAP. Again, nearly shit myself. This was the third sowing there, too, so I was getting worried that I might have to give up and go find ready-made seedlings at the nursery and give up my dreams of The Giant Watermelon That Looks Like a Snake and The Nerf Football Sized Melon That Looks Like a Weapon of Space War.
The excitement was short lived, however, because when I returned to squeal at the melons a day later, half the jelly melon seedling had been gnawed and the watermelon seedling was leafless. It had a stem, but the two emerging leaves had been eaten and the emerging seedling, still wearing its seed hat, had been demolished.
Current melon seedling status:
1 half-eaten but stalwart jelly melon seedling
1 stem-only watermelon seedling
1 normal watermelon seedling
This changes day to day, so I'm going to let this status stand because I can't be coming back here every day with updates because it would bore you. Not that I wouldn't do it, but you'd leave me. I know you would.
Though, when I tell you what I'm about to tell you, you might never leave again and you may beg me for daily updates because EXCITEMENT (do whatever you do when you get excited) the first tomatoes have landed.
These are the Black Krims, which are popping loose with an unpredicted amount of wrinkles, much like a newborn Sharpei puppy, but way more delicious (I assume. Your puppies are safe around me. Promise.) and I can only assume they will grow up to be like grown-up Sharpeis but with less attitude. Basically, bigger and less wrinkly versions of their baby selves.
And not to be outdone, the Better Boys have started setting fruit to, so as not to be outdone by the new glamorous tomato addition.
Also exciting, because excitement in my life is as easy as seeing a plant do a new thing, are the beans. Which have now begun to latch on and climb their poles just like the little strippers that they are. What? You don't agree? Beans are not strippers to you?
You know they wear strings, right? Because these are both string varieties and who's to say that they're not G-strings? Not you or I, that's who.
Yes, I'm very nerdy. I've just proven that beyond a shadow of a doubt.
Wow. That was at LEAST a PG-13 rated gardening post. Innuendos all over the place. Fun.
ReplyDeleteYour Black Krims are way more wrinkly than mine were last year. That's weird. But I'm sure they'll still taste delicious.
i love that you call the pole beans strippers. really made me laugh.
ReplyDeleteand, i have recently been called a "pea pincher" because, like you, i need to know what is going on inside those opaque shells. are there full-sized peas in there, or just a lot of hot air and some tiny little baby peas?
thanks again, for the garden giggles.
may i just say i love that as my garden is dying and done for the season, yours is kicking in. makes me feel like we are in a disney movie and this is all circle of life ish.
ReplyDeletealso, i want a cherry tree. Oh my goodness, how delicious do those look?
Also? (final also) there is never enough gardenbalahblahblabhablahbalhbalba
Can a gardening post be too long? Not if you've got one as funny as yours! You've inspired me to add to my boring pictures with more fun info about my veggies. SO jealous of it all. Patiently waiting for mine to start growing gangbusters like yours. P.S. I decided to give artichokes a try this year. Any tips?
ReplyDeleteeven if you're a girl, you can be man enough for something. True story That's funny.
ReplyDeleteGood gardening advice on the cuc growing. I do love pickles as well. But tell me, how are THOSE pickles?
I love that you wrote out a "melon seedling status". I would have been crying to see one chewed down to the stem. Also I totally agree that sweet relish (or sweet pickles for that matter) are the devil's work. Nothing worse than biting into a pickle and finding it to be (barf) sweet.
ReplyDeleteHunh, I don't know if my Black Krims have ever been that wrinkly. I'll keep a close eye on them this year. I wonder if it's the cooler weather (I know I shrivel up and get wrinkly when it's as cold as it has been!), so maybe that's what's going on here?
ReplyDeleteI'm totally jealous of your cherries!! Seriously! I've finally got a couple healthy looking cherry trees in, plus a 4-in-1 that's a little iffy looking...but I don't expect fruit for a couple years now.
Do you ever find your cherry leaves are really wilty/sad looking? I'm wondering if it's our heavy clay soil.