Tag Archives: corn

May we present……?

Gorgeous corn! In spite of inconsistent weather and some temporary nutrient deficiencies, our ‘Silver Princess’ sweet corn has matured and borne at least one ear per plant.  The tallest plants have 2 to 3 ears apiece, and one even has a fourth (immature).  Some ears are still filling out, but today (drum roll please) we harvested the first 5 ears! Almost clockwork to the day….70 days from planting.

First corn pickings and smiles of success

First corn pickings and smiles of success

Irresistible sweet corn var. Silver Princess

Irresistible sweet corn var. Silver Princess and not an ear worm to be found.

While enjoying our fresh, tender corn this week we’re keeping our eyes open for the next onslaught of squash and lemon cucumbers, after a slight respite.  And, contemplate when the dozen “personal size” spaghetti squashes will mature, and ponder if they really are what the package claims; fortunately they stopped growing awhile ago.  We’re also relieved to hear that formerly predicted “colder than average temperatures” for the rest of August won’t be likely; we need more warmth for our great crop of big, green tomatoes.

Colorful bounty: corn, eggplant, banana sweet pepper, cherry tomato

Colorful bounty: corn, eggplant, banana sweet pepper, cherry tomato

It worked!

Next morning, neighbor Patty feel asleep within a few minutes of getting up at 04:00.  I went out shortly before 06:00, as I’d planned, once my old cat went into his morning routine of waking me anywhere between 05:00 and 06:00 to feed him.  I was delighted to see no more browsing!  And, even with thunderstorms moving in later in the night, there was no evidence this morning of any damage.  I could still smell some residual Irish Spring soap odor on the lines, although very little odor on the soaked rag strips.  We haven’t seen any distinct hoof prints of the deer, but the Ferti-loam doesn’t hold any form wherever it is dry, and I think they were browsing from the edge of the row, while standing on the bark mulch around the blueberries.

Meanwhile, summer is further procrastinating, so we hear, for another two days, upon which temps will jump to 90°!  Today it is just clearing 70° and raining heavily as I write.  At least I got in a few hours of yard cleanup and transplanting (good weather for that!) beforehand.

Applied a foliar spray of fertilizer to the corn leaves, and raked in more granular 5-5-5 along the rows and around the bases of the bushing plants, to boost the nitrogen.  Having withheld water for 5 days last weeks, the plants already showed signs of greener new leaves, but I realized time had flown by and more fertilizer was needed by some plants.  It is quite different growing the veggies in this largely composted manure base, versus in my house yard where, given some of the same plants, there has been no deficiency.  However, they were watered less, and grew more slowly.  Plants are fascinating that way, as are “soil types” for that matter.

Knee-high by the Fourth of July

We’ve got knee-high corn!  What this means for a harvest date in the Willamette Valley is anyone’s guess, given the area’s propensity towards chilly nights in early July, even amidst near-90° heat. There have been tomatoes forming over the last couple of weeks, and there are 10 good-sized fruits growing on my Roma in the house yard, but they still may not ripen until August.

We’re hoping that this current 5-day heat wave will boost the bell peppers and scallop squash out of their stupors before the arrival of the next cool front of marine air moves in during this coming week.  As usual, our summer doesn’t really settle in for some days after July 8th.

Better than knee-high corn on July 4th.....

Better than knee-high corn on July 4th.....

Summer solstice

The corn is shin-high and we’ve got small tomatoes!  We’re having a relatively cool and blustery start to summer, most likely making up for 3 days of record-setting warm, clear weather over Memorial Weekend.  Thunderstorms passed, and for much of the last two weeks the weather has been cloudy, with beautiful sun breaks in the late afternoon, as southwest breezes come in.  The combination of warm soil and wind prompts near-daily watering for a few minutes.  We’ve had some chilly nights again, near 40°F, but there seems to be enough daily warmth for the tomatoes to keep growing; the squash and cukes are expanding and crawling.
The final scallop squash that was seeded 10 days after the others is still small, having missed the initial boost of heat during Memorial weekend.  It is simply waiting for some more heat to show up, which may be another week or so.

June 6-2009

The garden on Summer Solstice-2009. Where's Juniper?

Squash, cucumber, and sunflower section; young blueberries off to the right

Squash, cucumber, and sunflower section; young blueberries off to the right

Yes, as other front yard gardeners across cyberspace will attest, these conversion projects tend to bring more interaction between neighbors.  On our little cul-de-sac we’ve all tended to acknowledge each other through the years anyway, but this has noticeably increased some formerly hesitant interactions.  Every resident has given a nod of approval or a thumbs-up to the new garden, which is always appreciated, even if they chose not to be part of it.

One neighbor teased that it is all “too orderly,” to which I laughed and promised to loosen it up a bit next year.  Then ensued a discussion about how some ancient cultures used to plant corn, beans, and squash seeds in the same hole, some 3” above a buried fish head.  Come to think of it, that might be a good experiment, substituting in organic fertilizer for the fish head.  The corn supports the beans, and the squash will wind around down below.  Good idea for tight “square-foot” gardening, too.  The beans would also contribute some nitrogen into the soil once nodules formed on the roots.

From another standpoint, corn is quite an “energy hog,” requiring a lot of nitrogen fertilizer to sustain its huge stalk, leaves, and a cob of high carbohydrates, plus a good shot of phosphorus to get that cob to flesh out.  And, all this just to produce 2 ears of corn on one plant, if the weather cooperates, and earworms don’t do much damage.  But, having never had a garden spot with enough full sun to even bother with corn, I wanted to try it out, as did everyone else.  Just a few ears for each of us would be plenty.  Plus, stalks add some vertical height and interest to the landscape.  We’ll see what happens.