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Fantastic Gardeners' To-Do List for June - blog.fantasticgardeners.co.uk
blog.fantasticgardeners.co.uk
07.08.2023 / 11:43

Fantastic Gardeners' To-Do List for June

We strongly believe that planning and preparing are crucial for success in every area. Gardening is no exception, but sometimes it can be difficult to know what you are supposed to do this month—especially if you have limited experience in the gardening area.

Six on Saturday: Bees and Blooms - ramblinginthegarden.wordpress.com - Spain
ramblinginthegarden.wordpress.com
05.08.2023 / 11:35

Six on Saturday: Bees and Blooms

…well, one bee, although there were several on the echinops above, E Arctic Glow’, when I was trying to take a photograph, but they wouldn’t stand still or long enough! The garden, is, however, currently swarming with bees and butterflies, which is good to see.

June 17th Potatoes from a Waterbutt - gardenerstips.co.uk
gardenerstips.co.uk
01.08.2023 / 14:45

June 17th Potatoes from a Waterbutt

This £1 packet of supermarket potato tubers have just been harvested to cook as new potatoes tonight. The variety was Charlotte, they were chitted in February and planted out in a frost shelter in March.

Six on Saturday: Butterfly Fest - ramblinginthegarden.wordpress.com
ramblinginthegarden.wordpress.com
29.07.2023 / 17:49

Six on Saturday: Butterfly Fest

The last week or two has seen an influx of butterflies in the garden, which may or may not be the norm at this time of year; some have even paused long enough for me to photograph them, which is certainly not the norm! I hadn’t planned to seek them out for Six on Saturday, the meme hosted by Jim of Garden Ruminations, but nevertheless they still wangled themselves into the photographs. Above is a meadow brown.

Snowman Hands Can Prevent Food-borne Illness - hgic.clemson.edu
hgic.clemson.edu
24.07.2023 / 12:33

Snowman Hands Can Prevent Food-borne Illness

Yes, you read that right – snowman hands. When I started teaching food safety practices to children I wondered how to teach them about proper hand washing. We all know how important it is to thoroughly wash our hands before preparing food, after touching raw meat and poultry or any other potentially contaminated surface. We can easily explain to children (and adults!) that singing happy birthday twice, while scrubbing hands, equals the prescribed 10 to 15 seconds that we should do while washing. However, how do you explain how much soap to use to create a good lather?? The answer: snowman hands! Use enough soap that your hands look like a snowman’s hands after rubbing them together! I have found great success with this tip while teaching children (and now my own children) to wash their hands properly. And guess what – it takes a good 10 to 15 seconds of scrubbing soapy hands together to create those snowman hands! Bonus to the singing of happy birthday while washing hands! So next time you are washing your hands, use enough soap to create snowman hands. This will help prevent the spread of food-borne illness (and those nasty cold and flu bugs too!).

SC Fruit and Vegetable Field Report June 21, 2021 - hgic.clemson.edu
hgic.clemson.edu
24.07.2023 / 12:11

SC Fruit and Vegetable Field Report June 21, 2021

Rob Last reports, “Given the rainfall and humidity levels, we are seeing increases in foliar and fruit diseases on a range of crops. This includes cottony leak in cucumbers, anthracnose in peppers, tomatoes, and cucurbits. Also, please be aware cucurbit downy mildew is very active now. As a result, it is going to be really important to maintain fungicide programs in both a timely manner and to be robust. That being said, we have some great quality melons, both cantaloupe and watermelons, coming to harvest, as well as good volumes of quality peaches, blackberries, and a host of other vegetable crops.”

SC Fruit and Vegetable Field Report – June 14, 2021 - hgic.clemson.edu
hgic.clemson.edu
24.07.2023 / 12:11

SC Fruit and Vegetable Field Report – June 14, 2021

Zack Snipes reports, “We received some welcomed rain, but 5+ inches in a day or so was a bit much. Conditions this week will dry things out. I cannot stress enough how important it is to get out fungicides once you can get in the fields. I saw a few squash fields going downhill last week. Upon closer examination, I found thousands of squash bugs. They tend to congregate on the crown of the plant and will hide under the plastic when you look for them.

SC Fruit and Vegetable Field Report June 7, 2021 - hgic.clemson.edu
hgic.clemson.edu
24.07.2023 / 12:10

SC Fruit and Vegetable Field Report June 7, 2021

Rob Last reports, “After some welcome rain in the area over the weekend, crops are looking good. However, given the humidity and rainfall, we are likely to find disease pressure increasing. Strawberries are all over. The wet, humid conditions have spiked infections of botrytis and water-soaked berries. Blueberries, blackberries, and peaches are all coming to market with good quality and volumes, with few insect or disease pressures being seen currently. Watermelons and cantaloupes are developing well, with some early planted crops coming to harvest. In response to rainfall and increased humidity, keep an eye out for diseases such as bacterial spot in pepper and tomatoes. In addition, some cantaloupe crops are beginning to show Alternaria leaf spot. Make sure fungicide timings are good using a robust program.”

Six on Saturday: Clumps - ramblinginthegarden.wordpress.com
ramblinginthegarden.wordpress.com
22.07.2023 / 19:35

Six on Saturday: Clumps

Venturing out despite the rain to take photos for Jim’s Saturday meme on his Garden Ruminations blog, I changed my focus partway through as I was increasingly bowled over by the glorious clumps of perennials around the garden. I have mentioned a massive hellebore previously, now not the only one, and even the dandelions seem to be on steroids! It is not just the size that impresses, but the wonderfully rounded shapes of them too – look at Centaurea ‘Jordy’ above, and the echinops, probably E ‘Blue Globe’, below:

Six on Saturday: In Brief - ramblinginthegarden.wordpress.com
ramblinginthegarden.wordpress.com
22.07.2023 / 19:35

Six on Saturday: In Brief

Those wisteria flower buds that avoided destruction by woodpigeons are beginning to open and show colour

Six on Saturday: Small Successes - ramblinginthegarden.wordpress.com
ramblinginthegarden.wordpress.com
22.07.2023 / 19:35

Six on Saturday: Small Successes

Having successfully got five streptocarpus through the winter and into bloom I am a little more hopeful of my prowess with them, but will feel more confident once I have got them through a second winter too – and may even be tempted to add one or two more! The fern behind them is a couple of plantlets lifted from the saucer under a pot of sarracenia,  kept topped up with water and seemingly an ideal breeding ground for ferns – the asplenium is understandable as there is a lot of it in the garden but I don’t know what this fern is or where the spores have come from.

Six on Saturday: Progress - ramblinginthegarden.wordpress.com
ramblinginthegarden.wordpress.com
22.07.2023 / 19:35

Six on Saturday: Progress

Apart from the quick Wordless Wednesday post, I don’t think I have looked at my blog at all since Monday, having instead been taking advantage of available time and clement weather to pursue the endless list of tasks necessary in a spring garden. No sooner is one crossed off the list there is another to replace it, but at least progress is noticeably being made.

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