Tuesday, June 15, 2010
Climbing Beans 2010
Climbing Beans (Stringless Blue Lake).
What: Yates Seed.
Where: Round Bucket.
When: 6 June 2010.
Sown in: Recycled Potting Mix.
Fertiliser: Thin layer of RICHGROW: Organic Blood and Bone + Trace Elements & Sulphate of Potash 100mm below surface. Weekly application of YATES: Multi-Nutrient Plant Food with Seaweed at 5ml/L.
Advertised Germination: 7-10 days.
Actual Germination:
Advertised Maturity: 10-12 weeks.
Actual Maturity:
I found a fat caterpillar had moved in made short work of one of the seedlings and was working on a second already! >_<
Oriental Radish (Daikon) 2010
Oriental Radish (Daikon).
What: D.T. Brown Seed.
Where: Large black container.
When: 15 June 2010.
Sown in: Recycled Potting Mix.
Fertiliser: Thin layer of RICHGROW: Organic Blood and Bone + Trace Elements & Sulphate of Potash 100mm below surface. Weekly application of YATES: Multi-Nutrient Plant Food with Seaweed at 5ml/L.
Advertised Germination: 5-8 days.
Actual Germination: 4 Days.
Advertised Maturity: 6-8 weeks.
Actual Maturity:
Beetroot (Detroit Red globe)
Beetroot (Detroit Red globe).
What: D.T. Brown Seed.
Where: Rectangular self-watering container.
When: 6 June 2010.
Sown in: Recycled Potting Mix.
Fertiliser: Thin layer of RICHGROW: Organic Blood and Bone + Trace Elements & Sulphate of Potash 100mm below surface. Weekly application of YATES: Multi-Nutrient Plant Food with Seaweed at 5ml/L.
Advertised Germination: 10-14 days.
Actual Germination: 8 days.
Advertised Maturity: 10 weeks.
Actual Maturity:
Improved Apollo Tomato 2010
Tomato: Improved Apollo
What: Yates Improved Apollo Seeds
Where: Yogurt container.
When: 6 June 2010.
Sown in: Mixed Potting Soil
Fertiliser: Blood and bone.
Advertised Germination: 10-12 Days.
Actual Germination: 8 Days.
Advertised Maturity: 12-14 Weeks.
Actual Maturity:
It's past the ideal season for these but it did so well last time I thought I'd have another go at them.
Monday, June 14, 2010
The Pitfalls of Going on Holiday
We had a fantastic time on our holiday back to
BEFORE
The fish survived although my external pump blew out but miraculously re-sealing itself and thus avoiding pumping the tank dry and flooding the apartment. This was not fault of my Mum’s however as I’d neglected to clean the filter before we departed. The filter ended up being a right-off and I had to make a frantic purchase on Ebay to get everything going again.
No problems with the mail and not too many bills to come home to which was nice.
Now on to my poor old ‘veggie patch’. As a disclaimer I should note that my Mum has ‘black thumbs’, a point I’ve known for a long time. About the only plants that she’s able to avoid killing are the type that you stick in vessels of water (lucky bamboo and the like). I think I set the fear into her when I suggested that my tomatoes were incredibly thirsty plants requiring lots of water every day.
We returned home and I found half the veggie patch a sickly yellow colour with puffs of mould here and there and what wasn’t yellow looked like Swiss cheese. A bunch of aphids and a tribe of caterpillars had moved in and made short work of anything that wasn’t yellow and / or mouldy. I salvaged what I could and junked the rest.
AFTER
Mum always taught me to look for the positives in any negative situation.