Wednesday, August 31, 2022

Tomato Tonnage

Weight of tomatoes harvested so far: 1574g.

Much more to come.

Monday, August 29, 2022

Special Day

 Those who know know why it's special.

This is this morning's harvest:


I found the cantaloupe detached from its stem. It was telling me "eat me, eat me." It weighs 1010g, two pounds plus, and its aroma is delectable

The beans keep on producing: 512g, more than a pound.

The tomatoes are coming are coming: 509g, more than a pound.

Then I spent a few minutes admiring the lovely bee-loved rosemary bush that, along with some happy friends surround the juniper:



Friday, August 26, 2022

Green Beans & Tomatoes

 The first batch of salsa di pomodoro for the first of many (I hope) such is on the stove. Fall, winter, and spring fare:


There will be more beans this late summer. This morning's catch was three quarters of a kilo. Almost two lbs. I froze the batch in four pouches for later consumption. Freezer full of beans (and awaiting tomato sauce):



Thursday, August 25, 2022

Go Tomatoes!

However late, and for whatever reason, my tomatoes are ripenng. Here is this morning's catch, on a bed of green beans with a neighborhood friend:


The tomatoes weighed 855g, nearly two pounds, and because the crop promises to be good, I will be weighing my tomatoes as I pick them. Meanwhile the beans keep producing at a prodigious rate. The zucchini have been coming too, a variety that seems to have mutated: these grow on long vines, and are thicker than your common zucchini. Delicious.
And look what's coming:

These are my heirloom tonatoes.


and these are my San Marzano.

Monday, August 22, 2022

August 22 update

1. I received this response to my inquiry of Aug 4 from the U of A extension division:

I believe this is cat facing.  Here is a link about some challenges in 
growing tomatoes.

https://extension.arizona.edu/tomato-challenges

This is very helpful. Incidentally, that was the only tomato affected by the problem.

2. The good. My green beans have produced most abundantly, both the bush and the pole variety. Every morning I spend an average of half an hour harvesting beans. I have many packets of frozen beens in the freezer.

The tomatoes are growing beautifully. They are late, but gorgeous. The spinach has come up. The bok choy is growing. The chard is producing, as are the few carrots I planted. Cilantro has gone to seed.

3. The bizarre. I had five pole bean plants in one of my raised gardend close to the greenhouse. One by one, over a period of a few days, each had been severed, about 3-5 inches from the soil. I could not guess who or what was the culprit.

Then, in the greenhouse, I discovered that one of my two cantaloupes had been cut at the stem, and a good portion of it had been eaten. I put a trap out and a couple of hours later found a large rat had been caught and destroyed. Good riddance. I am assuming the rat is who did a number on my pole beans, By the way, we ate the remaining cantaloupe (properly trimmed) and it was delicious.

4. The bad. Yesterday I caught this rascal on a tomato leaf in the greenhouse:


For some reason I find these critters disgusting, especially when I cut them into pieces.

Until next time...

Thursday, August 4, 2022

Tomato problem

 I have a problem to solve: indentify and treat what is ailing this tomato growing in an otherwise healthy plant.


These are not insect bites, but, I think a growth of some kind (that I tried scraping).