scrubjayspeaks: macro photograph of ladybug climbing a blade of grass (garden)
scrubjayspeaks ([personal profile] scrubjayspeaks) wrote2023-07-08 08:41 pm

Pandemic Garden Club

Welcome to the July edition of Pandemic Garden Club! Growing good things in strange times!

Anyone is welcome to comment with what they're growing right now, things they would like to try, problems they're encountering, and questions they have. Share resources, answer questions, shout encouragement.

As for myself...

A large brown and green aloe plant, around which a wire basket can be seen in places. Well outside of that, an offset of the parent plant has come up through the ground.

Containment breach! When I put the first succulents in the ground, they got planted in heavy hardware cloth enclosures. I have some clumping ones that continue to put out pups, but they're staying close to their parent. This little gremlin, though, is a runner off of Flat Fuck the Aloe (who was a lot flatter when living in a pot). It is nowhere near the boundaries of the basket. I don't object. If it can survive the gophers, more power to it. A strong, independent aloe who don't need no wire basket.

A stand of bright green corn stalks, ringed at the base by squash leaves and bean vines.

Oh, look at that: corn, beans, and squash, all coming up together. Very satisfying. I feel like they should be farther along for the time of year. In fairness, though, my sense of seasonal timing this year seems to be hilariously off. I blame the extended period of rain in early spring. I no longer have any idea when things should be growing.

Several walking onion plants, which look like green onion stalks but are topped by clusters of bulblets with their own leaves and twisting tentacle-like growths.

After professing an aversion to them as unsettlingly weird, mum still gave in and planted walking onions. They still haven't produced anything usable for cooking. But they are, as promised, unsettlingly weird. Alien tentacle clusters.

A closeup of a shrub with arrow-shaped green leaves and closed trumpet flowers in marbled white and magenta.

I'm once again delighted to see that the four o'clocks have reseeded themselves. It's a mix of standard and marbled ones coming up. It's particularly nice because they kick off when everything else but the hollyhocks have died back. They'll hang around until the first frost kills them in autumn. Very good.

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