After years of trying every conceivable twine, string, and other modern tomato-securing convenience (what?) I finally stumbled on gift ribbon. For tomatoes in our bucket SIPs it's ideal, especially now when plants are tender and easily broken on gusty days.
Curling ribbon is waterproof, unlike twine, which absorbs moisture and holds it against vulnerable stems and leaves. It's also easy to tie into bows, allowing frequent adjustments as plants mature. Plus it's ubiquitous and tres inexpensive.
Wednesday, May 15, 2013
Using Curling Ribbon To Tie Up Tomatoes
Tuesday, May 14, 2013
EWG's Superbug Report
If you're a Chicago carnivore, Butcher & Larder offers beautiful meats raised responsibly on nearby farms.
Friday, May 10, 2013
More Dramatic Weather Swings for Chicago
Are you thinking I'm weather-obsessed? I actually never followed the weather until the last few years brought temperature strangeness. Check out the forecast for two upcoming days: record lows in the 30s on Sunday and approaching 90 degrees F on Tuesday, a 50 degree-plus swing.
What's a grower to do?
Sunday
HIGH/LOW
56°/34°
(Mothers Day): Early April-level
temperatures 13-degrees below normal with a near record or record low
likely and the threat of frost late Sunday night.
Mixed sun as the Sunday gets underway is
likely to fades as extensive cloudiness develops. Northwest winds 8 to
18 mph and occasionally gusty. The nighttime frost threat targets
portions of the metro area late Sunday night as winds ease beneath
partly cloudy skies. Nighttime lows are likely to range from the low 30s
coldest inland locations to the near 40 near Lake Michigan.
Tuesday
HIGH/LOW
87°/64°
2013's warmest day yet likely to generate
Chicago area's highest temperatures since the 90-degree high which
occurred 8.5 months ago on September 4.
Mostly sunny and quite windy with wind gusts
topping 30 mph. Strong southwest winds are to average 14 to 28 mph Dew
points, a measure of atmospheric moisture, are to surge into the mid 60s
Tuesday afternoon producing a markedly more humid " feel" to the day. A
90-degree high is not entirely out of the realm of possibility. Daytime
highs approaching levels 20-degrees above normal!
http://www.chicagoweathercenter.com/forecast/
Wednesday, May 8, 2013
Gardening: Return on Investment
Average food garden ROI is $530 (click for larger image).
Not counting all the hours of pure joy.
Off to the roof...
Monday, May 6, 2013
Planting Tomatoes Early
Sunday I used Art's sturdy cart, garbage-picked from under the El tracks (pause for low bow)...
The master plan: plant tomatoes about two weeks early for our region (at least this has been the case for the last 50 years). With the weather changing dramatically and my work schedule tight, I either plant today or in two weeks. So I'm going for it.
The forecast looks promising, a nice period of temps in the 70s and 60s with lows in the 50s and high 40s. OK, so there's a high in the 30s in there too. Since all weather bets are off, I'm willing to try it and hopeful the plants will be hardend off if temperatures drop.
We've got the low tunnel on the roof to shelter these babies during the hardening off period. I took the tomatoes up yesterday as I prepped their SIPs and they did fine last night (I planted six today).
By the way, I'm planting all our tomatoes this year in 5-gal food-grade buckets, using fabric tapes to wick water from the reservoir. With automatic watering on the roof, the need for buckets with a larger volume (and reservoir) seems limited:
...to bring back the tomatoes Bruce and Blake took last week to put under the lights. Here they are, with some burgeoning basil.
The forecast looks promising, a nice period of temps in the 70s and 60s with lows in the 50s and high 40s. OK, so there's a high in the 30s in there too. Since all weather bets are off, I'm willing to try it and hopeful the plants will be hardend off if temperatures drop.
We've got the low tunnel on the roof to shelter these babies during the hardening off period. I took the tomatoes up yesterday as I prepped their SIPs and they did fine last night (I planted six today).
By the way, I'm planting all our tomatoes this year in 5-gal food-grade buckets, using fabric tapes to wick water from the reservoir. With automatic watering on the roof, the need for buckets with a larger volume (and reservoir) seems limited:
I wonder if we're starting the tomatoes too early. They're more than ready to be transplanted.
Some are even setting flowers.
The plants themselves look terrific. Thanks, Bruce, for tending and befriending. Happy growing, everyone.Thursday, May 2, 2013
Monday, April 29, 2013
Anomalous Weather The New Normal + First Salad Greens
Following an extremely wet Chicago spring--and one of the coolest--on Sunday the temps popped up to the 60s, the cool-weather greens that had been languishing on the roof perked up, and...
First salad (not the asparagus)
Today's high: 76F
Tomorrow's: 82F (20 degrees above seasonal normals)
Wed: 75F
Then we're back to highs in the 50s and lows in the high 30s (the greens will thrive).
Pendulum weather: wild temperature swings are apparently the new norm.
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