Posted on September 3, 2022September 3, 202209/03/2022 rain lily daytime view Two Ceratina bees on the rain lily today!!! A little closer view. If you zoom in the wing veins are even in focus as is the whole flower! We’re still so excited about this plant.
Posted on September 3, 2022September 3, 202209/03/2022 about to bloom The surviving plant of Mexican sage from Judy is thinking about blooming!
Posted on September 2, 2022September 2, 202209/02/2022 Y A Y As the sign says, it’s our one rain lily! I planted it this spring from the NPSOT plant sale. Norman got 1.4″ rain yesterday. The rain lily was beautiful, and now home for a spider building its web from the lily flower to the ground.
Posted on August 19, 2022August 19, 202208/19/2022 I tried cantaloupe in my oatmeal this morning, hoping it would be magical like peaches, but I think they’re best eaten cold and alone. The melon, not the person doing the eating. Gram is too tall to stretch under this chair. He came out from under the chair to stretch, then went back under the chair to continue observing his Doggie. Two new blooms on the two leaf senna!! I think one of the juniperleaf cuttings had some nearly ripe seeds on it and they sprouted!!! I kept them in standing water in the shade for the first few days as a cutting, then moved them to a dry spot but still in the shade, where they are now. Still watering every day. This is additionally interesting because the seeds I collected from the original juniperleaf in the winter have not sprouted anywhere I put them. I was reading today in Nokes’ germination book that sometimes fresher seeds don’t have such an impermeable seed coat. A few little grasses in the backyard where I sprinkled the native grass mix from Plants of the Southwest! The mix was blue grama and buffalograss.
Posted on August 19, 2022August 19, 202208/13/2022 harsh sun Paula noticed some of the baby Coryphantha sulcata were possibly getting sunscald, because they were turning a bit brown on the tips. She has cleverly shaded them with thin coffee filters that let some light in. They seem to be happier now. Presumably this better imitates where a baby cactus might grow up in the wild.
Posted on August 14, 2022August 14, 202208/14/2022 fermenting slimy seeds I did some reading and it seems like we should actually be fermenting the canteloupe seeds, so I threw out the others (which were crunchy with dried goo/slime). Here’s the seeds from today’s snack. White currant tomato seeds looked pretty fermenty in the cupboard today so I rinsed them in the strainer and plopped them onto a paper towel. We set the paper towel by an air vent. This has worked for these seeds in the past, as this year’s plant is from harvested seeds.
Posted on August 14, 2022August 14, 202208/14/2022 straw bale potatoes We lifted and sorted through our two straw bales of potatoes since the leaves were all eaten off by blister beetles. Upon moving the bales, we found eight bess beetles… One fast isopod… A second fast isopod… Three baby house mice… And one click beetle. This brings us to a total of 14 photographed animals plus a whole nest of ants and a small earwig that got away. Compare this to our glorious harvest: ten potatoes from two bales. Paula is researching where we went wrong. I feel like maybe we should just go back to growing them in soil. (These experiments were my idea so I’m not blaming anyone else.). At least this year’s harvest is safer than last year’s crop of black widow spiders??
Posted on August 13, 2022August 13, 202208/13/2022 shucking A full range of glass gem popcorn corn ears! Some kernels started to pop in the hot dry shade which is what prompted us to bring them inside. Not sure if this is popping or fungus or something else. Some kernels appear scratched up but we’re not sure why. A few ears did not get fully pollinated and were not covered with kernels completely. These ears had several kernels that popped open. Natural lighting shows off the colors best. Everyone’s thumbs are sore from removing kernels. I used the colander to sift out a bit of chaff. I think Paula has plans to do more later. Two bowls full. 1,146 g total including our earlier test.
Posted on August 7, 2022August 7, 202208/07/2022 bulb time Wild Hyacinth bulbs arrived in the mail yesterday! We planted the three bulbs in a little crescent along the edge of this drier strawberry/honeyberry bed, and reinforced the dirt berm to trap a little extra water. Prairie Moon Nursery says they like medium-dry at most, but will generally do okay if it’s wet during the bloom time (which is usually our rain times). New earwig… We saw it moving around as we dug into the hard packed dry soil! It was somewhere between 2-6″ down. Just as bone dry the whole way. It swam across the water mud as we watered in the new bulbs. Hoping it might be a native one but waiting on what inaturalist or friends say.
Posted on August 6, 2022August 6, 202208/06/2022 tiny successes The fall obedient plant has some tiny flowers. One partridge pea has pods! This is important because it’s an annual. I have 2-3 individuals that were blooming at one time so hopefully the seeds make. Did some tomato pruning and found a lot of tomatoes, one Madhu ras cantaloupe melon, and Paula got an okra.