The garden is smaller, but no less interesting. Things are moving along well.

Perfect weather means remarkable growth

What fun I am having! We are still harvesting lettuce, chard, collards, kale and various herbs - including that most important of home grown delights, basil. Those crops are now joined by summer squash, and within a week, cucumbers and snap beans.

The Veterans Healing Farm garden is revealing much as well. The long row of in-ground tomato plants is struggling mightily. The straw bale tomato plants are thriving. Since the ground in which the tomatoes have planted has been used for some years, including growing tomatoes, it is not surprising that diseases are hitting the plants hard. My suspicion is that verticillium or bacterial wilt are the culprits. Happily, all of the straw bale tomatoes are thriving, and fruit set appears to be very heavy. There are instances of early blight and septoria here and there but nothing that isn’t being managed with regular infected foliage removal. I need to get some representative pictures to post.

Zephyr summer squash

As for the back yard tomatoes, I’ve had time to be very rigorous with plant care. We are quite dry and warm, so the plants get a deep morning watering and a lighter evening watering to keep the plants as stress free as possible. Feeding happens weekly. I am continuing my strict pruning, and each indeterminate plant that is not caged or a cherry variety has 4 fruiting stems - the main plus 3 suckers.

I’ve had 2 issues emerge - extensive blossom end rot on Cherokee Purple (very rare, from my long time experiences with the variety), and possible pith necrosis on Lillian’s Yellow Heirloom. I’ve removed 20 small BER fruit from the Cherokee Purple plant and will watch to see how future tomato development proceeds. As for Lillian’s, I am rooting a healthy sucker taken from a Vet Farm plant in case a back up is needed.

The plants are growing roughly 2 inches per day, and a few varieties are already reaching the top of the stakes. Fruit set is reflective of the ideal weather we’ve had. I’ve experienced no damage from critters yet. The main disease issue is a bit of early blight, and septoria leaf spot, especially on lower foliage of Sun Gold.

Beans on the way

I’ve attempted several crosses. 2 look like they have taken - Sun Gold F1 onto Captain Lucky, and Cherokee Chocolate onto (Dwarf Choemato X Dwarf Walter’s Fancy) F1. I am watching Cherokee Purple onto (Dwarf Zoe’s Sweet X Dwarf Walter’s Fancy) F1, and Lucky Cross onto (Dwarf Blazing Beauty X Dwarf Walter’s Fancy) F1. All of these will be complex, interesting and fun to work with.

I will get better with picture taking. The screen on my Pixel phone cracked, and I’ve been frustrated getting it to do what I want. A new phone should arrive in a few days and I will be back in business.

Watching our dogs watch for our cats - view from the hammock

One month from planting - here's a progress report

June 5 view of the garden

That was a really fast month. The May 6 blog detailed what was planted. This entry will take a look at the various crops and plants. We managed to squeeze a week at Ocracoke Island (lots of kayaking and seafood consumption), so the following represents 3 weeks of garden care. Please also note that I am now engaged in my weekly Instagram Live sessions (my name there is @nctomatoman), Fridays at 4 PM eastern.

Flower garden, early April

flower garden, early June - and all of this was there (perennials are such fun!)

Above are two views of our main flower garden. Pretty much everything vanishes over the winter. Warm weather wakens the various perennials planted in there, and we get the view shown in the second picture. At this point, astilbe, miniature roses and spider wort provide the color. Soon, zinnias, salvia, phlox, echinacea and rudbeckia will join the show.

Zinnias, chard and herbs May 4

June 5 view

What a difference a month makes. The small zinnia, chard and basil plants really took off over the last month in this new raised bed. We are cutting the zinnias to bring in, and using the chard and basil in our meals preparations.

Lettuce, chard and herbs May 4

June 5 view - wow!

Lettuce grows very quickly in cooler weather. We are having a lot of salads - we steal outer leaves - but the plants will bolt soon. I started some new lettuce plants so that we can take advantage of the partly shaded location of this new raised bed #2. Nothing tastes better in the spring than home grown lettuce!

June 5 view of bush snap beans that were direct seeded into the bales

June 5 view of direct seeded cukes

June 5 view of direct seeded summer squash

The above pics show the strawbales that were direct seeded in early May. Due to the warmth created by the composting interior of the bales, growth is shockingly rapid. We expect to see blossoms on all of the above very soon, and harvest of the various crops within a month or less. Strawbales really work so well!

Eggplants on June 5

Peppers on June 5

Above our pics of the eggplants and peppers planted into the strawbales on May 3. Both heat loving, it took some time for them to really catch on, but they are now growing very well. The plants were very tiny when planted. Small buds are showing on all plants.

The tomato Polish on May 3, just after planting

The same tomato plant, Polish, on June 5.

Dwarf Zoe’s Sweet X Dwarf Walter’s Fancy F1 in mid May

Dwarf Zoe’s Sweet X Dwarf Walter’s Fancy F1 on June 5

The set of pictures above show the remarkably rapid, healthy growth of the tomatoes, from 2 inch tall seedlings in early May to 3 plus foot tall beauties on June 5. The staking and/or caging is all in place, and plants have been pruned to 3 suckers each (for 4 fruiting stems) - except to those in cages that will not be pruned (Captain Lucky, Sun Gold, Mexico Midget and Egg Yolk), and the three new Dwarf X Dwarf hybrids, that will not be pruned at all.

That is it - a tour of the garden roughly one month from planting. So far, so very, very good (knocks on wood, crosses fingers!). I hope the gardens of all of you are off to a great start.

Garden on May 11 - compare to the first pic in the blog, June 5 view!

Sue on the beach at Ocracoke during our May escape