Friday, May 17, 2019

I am the NIGHT!


Welcome back to another episode of Lost in the Farmers Market. This post is going to obviously be a lead-up to Sunday’s garden tour and as such the topic will mirror to some degree last week’s post. Before we get into the tour-teasing photographs I’d like to talk about the use of Night-blooming plants to supplement your garden. Despite what you might want to think just because the sun has set does not mean your garden is any less active, certain creatures continue doing what they do regardless of time of day where as some are daytime only and night time only. Certain plants have biologically evolved to bloom late in the day to provide nectar for these night preferring species. This is just the tip of the iceberg as there are numerous species that don’t become aromatic until the temperature begins to drop ever so slightly at night. For those who know me well, I plant several species of night blooming flowers just as much for the night critters as much as for the fact that my garden is still something of note at night. Some commonly available examples of night-blooming perennials, biennials and annuals that you can use in your garden are as follows;

Evening Primrose – Oenothera species.
Angel’s Trumpet – Datura metel
Four ‘O Clock – Mirabilis jalapa
Evening-Scented Tobacco – Nicotiana sylvestris
Devil’s Trumpet – Brugmansia species
Moon Flower – Ipomoea alba
Night Phlox – Zaluzianskya capensis

I am absolutely certain there are others but the above listing contains every night blooming plant I’ve ever successfully grown or seen grown in the Sandhills region of North Carolina. Another reason to grow night blooming plants aside from the wonderful scent is that they do attract several species of moth which come to feed, but not necessarily to lay eggs. In the growing years at the test gardens where I grew Datura near Tomatoes and Peppers, I noticed that I never had hornworm problems in those given years. It could be that by feeding the moths, they simply don’t prefer to lay eggs where they get a nice meal or it could be that by feeding them, they then end up being picked off by bats, since two types of bat visit my yard nightly. Either way, the scent from the Angel’s Trumpets is heavenly, and the big flowers are simply gorgeous. Likewise, I notice that the now naturalized Evening primroses that appear in the yard attract both assassin bugs (a vicious predator) and night flying pollinators so it’s a double win for the test gardens. It is certainly something to think about when you think about biodiversity in your yard, but let’s move on to this week’s pictures.

 
What could this handsome and vigorous plant be? You'll have to either go on the tour to find out@
 I did warn about teasers and heres the first one, the above plant which is clearly some type of bush self-sowed itself in a pepper pot probably by way of bird, survived the winter and is currently planted in the ground some where in the garden.

Now that's some strange looking compost

Hey look this compost comes with instructions!
These two pictures show how well recycled paper that is first crumpled up and soaked over night breaks down in one year. The compost was grey and scentless but full of small worms and somewhat crumbly in texture. Not sure I would try this again since as you can see in picture two, it didn't fully break down and I can actually read the print on some pages.

This Amaryllis will likely be faded before the tour so here it is at it's peak.
This amaryllis was supposed to be red or pink and clearly said 'To hell with that noise!' not that I'm complaining. this bulb was kept in a 6" pot for a full year before being planted at the beginning of April, I'd say it's very happy.

Well...hello there, what are you?
Another mystery plant you will have to go on the tour to find out the identity of, but here's a hint, it's a perennial native to this region and is almost never grown in a garden despite being well behaved and not at all invasive.

 
Sneak Peek, are those beans in your garden or are you happy to see me?
 I set up this trellis yearly for those little beans down there, but what are they? The answer is a simple one those are Purple Hyacinth Beans ( Dolches leblab/ Lelblab purpureus), also in this bed are Spanish Flag ( Ipomoea lobata ) a semi perennial relative of moonflower, potato vine and morning glories. The color will be outrageous later in summer.

What is that?
I'm going to leave this evergreen perennial's identity to the imagination until the tour.

Hey Iris, dont threaten me with a good time!
 I thought this photo was worth including because few have seen an Iris seed pod. It's not all that common that Irises get successfully pollinated and this patch of Iris was one of the earliest donations to the test gardens. These irises have been at the location depicted for almost ten years, and when I got them they were blue with splotches of white and slowly faded to pure white. Just yesterday I transplanted this entire batch to the crescent garden.

Pot-binding, definitely not kinky at all.
The above picture is a textbook example of long-term pot-binding. Pot-binding is when a plant is in a given pot for so long that it's roots just keep circling forming dense unhealthy mats that need to be sliced up during repotting or planting just to give the plant a chance at being anything close to healthy. If you dont loosen or damage the roots there is a chance said roots may keep blindly going in circles. In the case of this Century Agave ( Agave americana ) those thick white roots are actually offsets and I planted this slow-growing perennial in the nick of time.

This part is a bit sad.
Accidents happen, that's just the nature of gardening. The creature seen isn't a snake but actually a Slender Glass Lizard ( Ophisaurus attenuatus ), I accidentally cut the poor creature in half while digging the new beds for the white irises mentioned earlier. Now in case you are wondering you can easily tell a glass lizard from a snake by the fact that they have eyelids and will blink. Thye have no venom and prefer flight to attacking a person. Slender Glass Lizards are beneficial because they eat invertebrates, arthropods, other lizards and small snakes. While this particular individual's accidental death is unfortunate it does highlight another hallmark in the growing biodiversity of the test gardens. Creatures like this do not set up shop in places that are poorly managed obviously there is enough food and a desirable environment to host such animals. Where I have accidentally killed one, I suspect there are others that I have not seen keeping pests in check.

More info on this beneficial reptile can be found here:
http://herpsofnc.org/slender-glass-lizard/

For the record in the last few years it has been confirmed that there are a small population of green tree frogs, southern toads, Fowler's toads and varied forms of small lizard on site. In addition to this there is the Barred Owl ( Strix varia ) that comes through at night, the two species of Bats that come through and the mated pair of Hawks. So that's definitely a success story wrought with ten years of effort.

With all that garden goodness covered this is the part of the blog where I have to advertise for the Fayetteville City Market. Now I know you readers probably don’t much like advertisements, but by booth at the City Market helps to cover the costs of running the test garden and literally maintains the Research & Development budget that is used to bring you the information that has made up the backbone of this blog. Also, as of the start of 2019, my booth can now process credit or debit cards thanks to the acquisition of s a Square reader so your payment options have doubled. With that said, if you want to get some GMO-free, Organic vegetables, herbs and fruiting shrubs come on down to the Fayetteville City Market on 325 Maxwell Street in downtown Fayetteville between the Hours of 9:00 am and 1:00 pm on Saturdays. Even in bad weather the market goes on though you might have to look for me under the ‘arches’ of the Transportation Museum’s front entryway.


Plants & Stuff Available Now:

Herbs:
Basil, Sweet: 3” - $3.00
Basil, Thai: 3” - $3.00
Etruscan Santolina: 3” - $4.00
Garlic, Jerimiah’s Heirloom  3” - $3.00
Lavender, ‘Elegance Purple’: 3” - $3.00
Lavender, ‘Elegance Pink’: 3” - $3.00
Self-Heal, Pink Lace: 3” - $3.00
Rue, Marbled: 3" - $4.00
Tansy, (Feverfew): 3" - $3.00

Fruits & Vegetables:
Peppers, Tabasco: 3” - $3.00
Peppers, Thai Dragon: 3” - $3.00
Peppers, Oxhorn: 3” - $3.00
Peppers, Ghost: 3” - $4.00
Tomato, Black Cherry: 3” - $3.00
Tomato, Carolina Gold: 3” - $3.00
Tomato, Chocolate Cherry: 3” - $3.00
Tomato, Gardener’s Delight: 3” - $3.00
Tomato, Gold Nugget: 3” - $3.00
Tomato, Gold Millions: 3” - $3.00
Tomato, Paul Robeson: 3” - $3.00
Tomato, San Marzano: 3” - $3.00
Tomato, Sungold: 3” - $3.00

Garden Perennials:
Salvia, New Dimension Blue: 3” - $3.00

Coming Soon:
Tobacco, Night-Scented
Tobacco, Lime Tree
Balloon Flower, Astra Blue
Balloon Flower, Astra Pink
Balloon Flower, Astra White
Lily, Formosa
Basil, Cinnamon
Basil, Mirihani
Coneflower, Cayenne Red
Cotton, Mississippi Brown
Datura, Black Currant
Datura, White Ballerina
Okra, Red-Burgundy
Pomegranate, Dwarf: 6"

These days I am generally at Leclair’s General Store once a week, for the weekly Sustainable Neighbors meeting at 5:30pm through 7:00 pm. If you have questions then I will be there to answer your questions. Since our meetings have an open-door policy you don’t need to sign up for anything or join anything, you can come on in ask for us and join the meetings. If not, you can always send me questions through this blog or visit the farmer’s market or pay attention to what Sustainable Neighbors is doing at the link below.

https://www.meetup.com/SustainableNeighbors/

                        This brings to a close the tenth LITFM post of the new year, stay tuned the next episode which should be posted on the 31st of May (three times the LITFM action!). There will be more garden updates and other cool stuff.

*On the 19TH of may there will be a garden tour at the test gardens I’ll have the tour book ready for viewing so visitors can see what the soil looked like back in 2009 when I started the new test gardens.

Monday, May 6, 2019

May All The Way!


Welcome back to another episode of Lost in the Farmers Market. Here we are, it is finally May, that miracle month that isn’t exactly spring anymore but isn’t quite summer yet. Mother’s Day is right around the corner and as we all know the threat of frost is replaced with the threat of pop-up thunder storms. Why, just looking out your window demonstrates the magical time of year because everything is so green and growing so fast it’s not even funny. But of course, that brings us to the first post of May which is two days late because I am busily preparing the test gardens for visitors on the 19th. This isn’t an excuse, but a statement of fact as it takes time to really clean up the effects of two off-years and push back the ‘jungle’ to make certain parts of the gardens presentable as they should be. I know in the last few years we had a full-out garden tour with multiple locations, but as we discovered getting locations on the tour wasn’t easy as not everyone was confident enough in their garden to want to host visitors. More so, the complexity of keeping the locations reasonably close to each other proved a daunting task. This year Sustainable Neighbors opted to offer a single-location garden event once or twice a month so in in the month of May if you are interested in touring the Botanical Test Gardens you can RSVP at the Sustainable Neighbors site listed below:


The tour is on May the 19th which is a Sunday and is between 2:00 pm – 5:00pm, You can RSVP and get the address for the tour on the 12th as a updated notification through our meetup group. Or you can visit my table at the Fayetteville City Market on the 18th to get the address information.

The most common question I get in regards to the tour is “why should I go?” The answer is fairly straightforward, you will get to see plants you’ve never seen in the landscape before. additionally, via the tour book you get to see the evolution of a garden over the course of a decade and, you will discover methods to crate a garden that perhaps you are not familiar with that may just help you solve your gardening difficulties. If that doesn’t whet your appetite for touring my gardens in specific there will be a few amusing stories, some free plants given away (some in pots, some have to be dug) and a fun quiz, ‘Weed or not a Weed’ which won’t be too difficult but may challenge your established notions of how we define weeds. I look forward to seeing all of you on the tour and I hope that my gardens can help you in the fullest.

Now onto the best part of any LITFM blog post, the garden photographs and this week as a teaser there are some pictures of the gardens that will get your creative gardening drive going as they are teasers for the big tour this month.

In a prior post or two I spoke about 'Reversion' this is an excellent example.
 Reversion is when a plant reverts to it's original form as a result of environmental stresses or some other factors that make it's original form more advantageous than the form we have cultivated. Int he case of the Fringe Bush ( Loropetalum chinense 'Rubrum' ), this shrub for whatever reason is trying to revert to it's normal green coloration. The reversion will mean that the fringe bush's green parts will grow noticeably faster than it's purple parts and if left unchecked the entire hedgerow of fringe bushes could all go green. On that last part it is purely my theory that when a few of a specific type of bushes revert in larger group and suddenly they all start going green it may be due to the plant's foliage and roots touching which spreads the reversion through chemical triggers and hormones. This is why any sudden patches of solid green in an otherwise colored plant group should be handled immediately.

Teaser Alert! This Amaryllis will be faded by the time the tour happens, but the garden it is in may be in bloom.
This one is for my Pepperheads at the market.
I get asked fairly often what the status of my super-hot peppers is and this picture and the next few should answer the question. The plants for sale are developing and have been put out for 'sunning' to get them ready for sale, the crop plant's status is next.

 
Burn Baby Burn! Fayetteville Inferno!
 The Fayetteville Inferno plant is looking real good, lots of pretty foliage and the first flower buts are already on the plant, I'll probably have to move it away from other peppers so I can harvest some pure seed this year.

Good Ol' Aji Limon, look at the heavy base branching.
 Aji Limon has been my favorite go-to spicy/hot pepper for general use for most of a decade. The plants are fairly vigorous and tolerant of heat, but a bit wary of drought.

'Roid Rage Basil!
Commonly called Lettuce-Leaf Basil ( Ocimum basilicum 'Lettuce Leaf' ), this is a selection of sweet basil for comparatively massive leaves. If  I recall right from the test gardens in the 1990's this was the basil that got to three or four feet tall and was stopped from getting taller because someone snapped off the growing tip. Either way, these plants will be MASSIVE, and they are under  limited trials to test their viability in southern gardens. In case you are wondering, the following basils have already been tested.

Sweet Genovese - Passed
Cinnamon - Passed
Thai - Passed
Red Rubin - Inconclusive
Lemon - Failed
'Pesto Purpetuo' - Inconclusive
Spicy Globe - Failed
Boxwood - Failed
Magical Michael - Inconclusive
Sweet Dani - Inconclusive
Blue African - Passed
Holy - Potential Invasive
Mirihani - Currently being tested
Lettuce Leaf - Currently being tested 

Milkweed or Plerusey Root at the age of about 9 years.
 The Milkweed ( Asclepias tuberosa )pictured above is is the single oldest herbaceous perennial in the Botanical test gardens with a close second being the Indian Pinks ( Spigelia marilandica ) and in third a Swamp Mallow ( Hibiscus moscheutos ) planted by the mailbox. By the time of the tour the milkweed will be in bloom and it's offshoots that have popped up in the bed behind it will be noticeably tall. This plant has a funny story attached to it that I'll tell visitors on the 19th.

Teaser Alert! The Triangle bed...
 The triangle bed is a story unto itself that I will be telling during the tour, for the time being however it is pictured so that you can get a feel for some of the heavy work done to get the gardens ready because it most certainly did not look like this last year. A major change is that every plant in the bed has a metal tag with it's common name on it. There are a few other changes you will find out about on the 19th.

More Teasers?! You bet!
Well, you knew it would be like this, in the garden this lone Herbal Gentleman grows in a protected location after his recent transplanting. But what sort of herb is he? Is he evergreen or deciduous? If I water him does he get water or does the water get him instead? Will he be a feature of 'True Facts about the:" on LITFM? All you fine folks will get closure on the 19th, and this herb isn't the only mystery I'll be teasing, expect another next week.

With all that garden goodness covered this is the part of the blog where I have to advertise for the Fayetteville City Market. Now I know you readers probably don’t much like advertisements, but by booth at the City Market helps to cover the costs of running the test garden and literally maintains the Research & Development budget that is used to bring you the information that has made up the backbone of this blog. Also, as of the start of 2019, my booth can now process credit or debit cards thanks to the acquisition of s a Square reader so your payment options have doubled. With that said, if you want to get some GMO-free, Organic vegetables, herbs and fruiting shrubs come on down to the Fayetteville City Market on 325 Maxwell Street in downtown Fayetteville between the Hours of 9:00 am and 1:00 pm on Saturdays. Even in bad weather the market goes on though you might have to look for me under the ‘arches’ of the Transportation Museum’s front entryway.

Plants & Stuff Available Now:

Herbs:
Agastache, Golden Jubilee: 3” - $ 3.00
Basil, Sweet: 3” - $3.00
Basil, Thai: 3” - $3.00
Etruscan Santolina: 3” - $4.00
Eucalyptus, Dwarf: 3” - $4.00
Lavender, ‘Elegance Purple’: 3” - $3.00
Lavender, ‘Elegance Pink’: 3” - $3.00
Sage, Common: 3” - $3.00
Self-Heal, Pink Lace: 3” - $3.00
Rue, Marbled: 3" - $4.00
Tansy, (Feverfew): 3" - $3.00

Fruits & Vegetables:
Peppers, Tabasco: 3” - $3.00
Peppers, Thai Dragon: 3” - $3.00
Peppers, Oxhorn: 3” - $3.00
Potato, Dark Red Norland: 3" - $2.00
Tomato, Black Cherry: 3” - $3.00
Tomato, Carolina Gold: 3” - $3.00
Tomato, Chocolate Cherry: 3” - $3.00
Tomato, Gardener’s Delight: 3” - $3.00
Tomato, Gold Nugget: 3” - $3.00
Tomato, Gold Millions: 3” - $3.00
Tomato, Paul Robeson: 3” - $3.00
Tomato, San Marzano: 3” - $3.00
Tomato, Sungold: 3” - $3.00

Garden Perennials:
Salvia, New Dimension Blue: 3” - $3.00
Milkweed, (Asclepias tuberosa: 4" - $4.00
Milkweed, Whorled: (Asclepias verticillata): 4" - $4.00

Coming Soon:
Basil, Cinnamon
Basil, Mirihani
Coneflower, Cayenne Red
Coneflower, PowWow Wildberry Mix
Balloon Flower
Cotton, Mississippi Brown
Datura, Black Currant
Datura, White Ballerina
Okra, Red-Burgundy
Pomegranate, Dwarf: 6"


These days I am generally at Leclair’s General Store once a week, for the weekly Sustainable Neighbors meeting at 5:30pm through 7:00 pm. If you have questions then I will be there to answer your questions. Since our meetings have an open-door policy you don’t need to sign up for anything or join anything, you can come on in ask for us and join the meetings. If not, you can always send me questions through this blog or visit the farmer’s market or pay attention to what Sustainable Neighbors is doing at the link below.

https://www.meetup.com/SustainableNeighbors/

                        This brings to a close the ninth LITFM post of the new year, stay tuned the next episode which should be posted on the 17th of May. There will be more garden updates and other cool stuff