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A View of the Back Garden in May |
The back garden in May is also in transition from spring to summer with the spring flowers dying and the summer plants starting to grow. What looks like a pile of dead branches in the middle of the picture is where I am hoping to have my corn patch! We put the branches we cut from the curry leaf tree over the freshly planted bed of corn to keep Mama Cat from considering it a giant litter box and to keep Chicken Little from eating the corn! Eventually, I want M to put up some chicken wire fencing around it. He planted the corn a week ago and we have one or two seedlings making their way up:
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The First Corn Seedlings |
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Phacelia and Celery Going to Seed |
Just behind the newly planted corn patch, there is an Asian pear tree and these wildflowers called phacelia and the red stemmed celery which has bolted. I am allowing the celery to form seeds and will try to collect the seeds. The phacelia is there for the bees.
Nearby, in another newly dug planting bed, the okra seedlings are just starting to pop up:
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Okra Seedlings |
Last year, the okra didn't do well, at all. Only a few seedlings grew and none of them grew taller than a foot or so and only one of them produced one single okra! I hope that it will be better, this year. Okra was selling for $5.99/lb. at the ethnic grocery store, the other day when I was there!
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Under the Orange Tree |
We cleared the osteospermum plants that were growing under the orange tree as they had finished flowering. They will return next spring, I'm sure, but, in the meantime, I am wondering if I should plant something else there or cover it with mulch.
The next photo is a close up and comes with the warning, "Objects in the photo are larger than they are" - baby oranges, about half an inch in diameter!
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Baby Oranges |
Nearby, just behind the orange tree, the feijoa/pineapple guava tree is full of flowers:
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Feijoa/Pineapple Guava Flowers |
I am hoping that we'll get some fruit this year. Last year, there were plenty of flowers like this, but, there weren't any fruits!
There are lots of flowers on the gaura plant, too:
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Gaura |
It is growing under the peach tree, where the peaches are starting to ripen:
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The Peach Tree |
The peaches are ripening later than they did in previous years, but, I am okay with that.
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Apple Seedling |
Nearby, we have the apple seedling I grew from a seed. I've no idea if it will bear fruit and what kind of apple it will be, but, I'm thrilled to have another grown from seed fruit tree to keep the avocado tree (also grown from seed) company!
Another star of the garden is the dogbane/scaredy cat (it doesn't really seem to bother the garden cats); I just love their light purple flowers!
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Dogbane/Scaredy Cat |
Just next to them, we have the Berkeley Tie Dye tomato plant with a couple of very tiny tomatoes growing!
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One Tomato |
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Two Tomatoes |
There are more flowers on the tomato plant and hopefully, we'll get a good crop of tomatoes!
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Serrano Chilies |
Also growing under the peach tree, I have my Serrano chili plant, with a good crop of green chilies to pick. If I leave them on the tree, they will eventually turn red, but, picking them while green triggers the plant to produce more flowers and, hopefully, more chilies. I use them when I cook curries or make egg salad for sandwiches or make cucumber salad to add a little heat.
In the meantime, the self sown mirabilis/four o'clock plants have taken over the area under the lemon trees where the chrysanthemums are planted! They grow as weeds in my garden, but, their flowers are so pretty that I leave them in place.
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Chrysanthemums and Mirabilis |
Among the stars of the garden, right now, are the blueberry bushes:
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Blueberries |
Nearby, we have what I am calling M's "stonery". I collected some small stones and pebbles from the garden and put them around the post that supports the patio roof. The stones are too small to be considered rocks, so I can't call it a rockery, but, M has been planting various plants he brings me among the stones. The sedum had been growing in a pot, but, it is thriving in its new location. The fern is a new addition as is the blue agapanthas "Elaine" that was planted last week. There are some succulents growing there, too. Maybe I need to find some bigger rocks and make it a proper rockery instead of a stonery!
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"Stonery" or Rockery Wanna Be! |
Or, maybe I should relocate the stumps over to this area!
Without the osteospermum flowers to distract, other garden flowers, such as this hibiscus, are being appreciated, more:
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Hibiscus |
And of course, there are still some roses:
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Pink Rose |
There are also much clearing and tidying up to do. The crocosmia have finished flowering and have set their seeds and have flopped over. They need to be cut down and the area cleaned up; the bulbs will remain in place and will grow again in the fall.
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Crocosmia |
Then, there is the wilderness at the very back, behind the garage and the shed:
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Root Stock Roses Growing Among the Weeds |
It's a mixture of root stock roses, gazania, and grasses. M doesn't have enough time to water and clear the weeds. I must start taking over the watering so he can weed and tidy. There's an even worse area, where the Martha Washington geraniums are growing! We are waiting until it has finished flowering - M wants to dig up the plants, clear the weeds, and then, replant the geraniums. Until then, I'm just calling it my patch of tall grass prairie!
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Patches - hiding from Mama Cat |
And that is the back garden in May! Thank you for strolling around the garden with me.