Wednesday, June 30, 2010

Garden Blogger's Death Day :: June 2010

Ding, Ding, Ding… bring out your dead!

Welcome back to Garden Blogger's Death Day! We're here to list our losses for June, 2010! This is the day for gardeners who overwater, underwater, maim, prune or otherwise neglect their plants to a state of dismal droopage or untimely death. This is the day for gardeners like me with black thumbs who kill more than they cultivate, for cadmium-green-thumbed gardeners who have a lapse in judgment and commit accidental planticide, and for any poor soul whose plants fall victim to that fickle mother who controls us all - Mother Nature.



June is the month where I realize it's time to give up the goat, throw in the towel and let the garden fat lady sing. I allow my garden to fall victim to the elements - the heat, the humidity, the heat, the weeds, the heat and the bugs. I can't go out in the garden during daylight hours and still remain conscious and coherent. My boys refuse to go outside too, so I have to visit the garden after they go to bed. They're still young enough that "before they get up" doesn't exist, so there's no visiting the garden early in the morning.

As any mother can tell you, that list of things you promise yourself you'll do after you get the kids in bed is really long. You have all these great aspirations of all the things you'll get accomplished once you have the house to yourself. You envision yourself waltzing around your house folding clothes, organizing closets, scrubbing floors and writing novels. The problem is that sometimes you become a victim of that Life-Sucking Vortex of Doom that lives inside your couch. You get the kids in bed, sit down on the couch for one minute, put your feet up and the next thing you know you burst back into consciousness, look at the pitch dark windows, realize it's 10 pm and you haven't moved an inch.


So after a few nights (weeks) of this, my garden has become an overgrown soupy mess of death that I have all but given up on. I'm not proud to admit this, but it's time I came out of the gardening closet and let you all see what my garden has become.


The beans are rusty, dried up and withered. The tomatoes are still producing - sort of. The tomatoes are tiny and covered in stink bugs, which I have yet to figure out a way of killing short of EG's method using the "thumb of death," which isn't really my style. The squash never produced anything but dead squash. The eggplants are turning a strange color. The cabbage is dead. The cucumber is dead and withered.


The grass and weeds are knee high. There is thick angry Florida grass coming up through the landscaping cloth (aka cheesecloth) in my raised beds. I'm embarrased to share these photos. I much prefer to stay in the gardening closet and give off the vibe that I've got it all together.


Okay, okay - yes, everything has bit the dust…

…except my leeks! I don't know what it is about leeks and my garden. They're like peanut butter and jelly - they just go together perfectly. So my leeks are looking fantastic. It's what I cling to until the Fall planting season, which for us is known as the heart of hurricane season.

So how about all of you? What fell victim to your gardening wrath this month? Feel free to leave a comment with a link to your blog showing what you killed or maimed this month. We're here for you. Let's not judge, but support each other like a good pair of pantyhose or a well-staked garden trellis.

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On a different note, are any of you bloggers having blogger issues? My scheduled posts aren't working anymore. I usually write a post the night before and schedule it to appear in the morning. They aren't appearing now. Like this post should have shown up this morning since I wrote it last night and it didn't. Hmph. Also, I approve comments right from my email, but lately when I log in to blogger it'll tell me I have 10 comments awaiting approval. When I click on the link, it comes up empty. Very strange... Anyone else?

9 comments:

  1. I'm sorry to read that your garden is dying a slow death. :( It's been so hot and dry where we are, if we don't water it will wilt.

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  2. I came across your blog yesterday and I have to admit, your 'death day' posts are brilliant! What a great blog you have! Oh and my garden in the Alabama heat is having a similar fate, your not the only one. Have you thought about putting a linking tool up so folks can link their posts to yours so everyone can see each others?

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  3. I forgot all about death day today, and I have LOTS! I will get busy this evening and post, I have plenty of photos in the queue waiting patiently this month LOL!

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  4. I see the same thing with the comments sometimes.

    Don't fret, Kate. You'll be producing mounds and mounds when we're weeping through winter.

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  5. Kate, look at the bright side. I remember when you couldn't grow it at all, it just died shortly after birth. Now you grow stuff! It actually has a life before death! You can't control the weather, and I don't blame you for giving up on those bugs. Now, how about tackling one small area at a time (at night with a flashlight? LOL), weed it out really well, and plant a small fall garden. Call it you KISS garden...Keep It Simple, Sweetie!

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  6. Good on you for keeping it real, Girl! I thoroughly enjoy your blog!! We have 2 brand new baby chicks from our broody momma - hatched out overnight. Blogger's latest bugaboo for me is the word verification thingy. It won't give me a word to verify (space is blank) until I try to post my comment - then it sends me back and gives me the word.

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  7. I came across your blog when I saw the keywords "kamikaze iguanas". How funny is that? Anyway, your blog is a good read, and I'll stay attuned to it.

    I recently started my own blog, recording my efforts at gardening 1-2 days a week (all I'm able to!). It's a new endeavor, and I'm sure I'll have more "Death Day's" than just June! But one has to chase the green dream, right?

    Anyway, here's my Death Day for June:
    http://kamikazegardener.wordpress.com/2010/06/29/swiss-chard-agony-and-sunless-flowers/

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  8. My veggie garden is looking the same way. The bugs are having a feast in it. Won't be too long before we can start again.

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  9. This month's Death Day totally slipped past me. Nothing really died this month, but I pulled a few non-producing plants.

    So sorry about what's going on now, but at least you'll have a second chance to get some things growing.

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