Sow There!: Leaving a road behind you, July 20, 2018

July 19, 2018 at 10:27 pm

Just a few weeks ago I was driving north to yet another chat with strangers for a possible job as a teacher. This interview was no different than the others. We all smiled and made eye contact. I responded to questions. I knew I was being judged. The job interview process is messy, and in my mind inexact, always leaving me with words I wish I had said.

Driving back to Chico, I traveled a different road, taking unknown backways and allowing Google Maps to reset my course to home. There’s a quiet in a moving vehicle, windows up, the outside world dulled by the hum of air conditioning.

During the daily grind, helpful self-talk can become buried under worry and endless-to-do lists. In the semi-silence of my drive, I doubted I had landed a job that day. Yet, I had a strong sense that the next right steps for my life would soon find me.

After my Handsome Woodsman died in the car crash Nov. 1, 2016, working on my teaching credential became my distraction. From other people’s perspective, my hard work may have seemed noble. In reality, it was easier on my heart to focus on those things right in front of me than to slip into the dark void.

People in my inner circle and more distant orbits gave me praise. “I’m impressed by how hard you’rer working,” they said, or “You’ve really kept your focus, despite …” (Always those trailing thoughts — those things that don’t need to be said).

Yes.

Sure, I thought.

“Thank you,” I said.

You can hear praise a dozen times, and usually it doesn’t sink in, until a time when you’re alone in a car and passing rows of orchards and miles of open pasture.

On that dry day, nothing had changed. I did not yet have a job. I likely bombed the interview. Yet, down this different road I was pleased with where I had traveled so far.

“Here I am,” the previously hidden voice said.

There are a lot of really bad things I could have done in the past year and a half. I could have wallowed in self-pity, sunk to the depths of self-destruction or lashed out at loved ones. Maybe I did those things, a time or two. Yet, I did not conclude that because nothing in life is certain, I might as well not try.

Instead, I’ve spent a lot of time surrounded by people who are all about the future — teachers and children. There’s so much joy that takes place in a classroom, I can see clearly now that my recent time has been well spent.

When I returned from a vacation with family, my new life was waiting.

Starting next month, I will be transformed into “Miss Hacking,” a towering and cheerful presence in the lives of third graders at a local charter school. The school garden is lovely, the people are over-the-top kind, and the walls in my classroom are pale yellow.

It’s now time to put all of my energy into the next new things.

ZOUS, zucchini of unusual size, can hide well among super hot summer foliage. (Photo by Heather Hacking)

Green foods abound

In the heat of summer, it’s not uncommon for flowers on our vegetable plants to go to waste. Bees won’t fly, plants are conserving energy and let’s face it, living things move slowly when they’re half-baked.

This week I found my first ripe and ready zucchini, the kind of green bullet that would make a nice snack for Jolly, that supersized green giant. Next week I’ll pass by my favorite squash merchant at the Thursday Night Market. (He’s on Third Street, just past the nut guys). I won’t need to buy squash for at least two weeks.

Note to self: check zucchini daily or you might have food more suited for a catapult than a frying pan.

Tagged | Comments Off on Sow There!: Leaving a road behind you, July 20, 2018

Sow There!: Summer plants get by with a little help from friends, July 12, 2018

July 12, 2018 at 10:36 pm

My seemingly short and well-deserved vacations this summer caused me to cash in on friendship equity. My dad’s side of the family organized a cruise to Catalina and beyond, as well as a hop to Hogwart’s castle. When you’re gone for a week during a heat storm you need more than one reliable friend. To keep my potted plants alive, I created a watering schedule then asked several friends to commit to stopping by on a certain day.

I sent electronic reminders while I was on the road.

Long ago, my dear friend Kara was my go-to gal when I needed someone to go above and beyond. Kara’s heart is as big as the Grinch’s heart at the end of the story. I wasn’t the only person who noticed her (seemingly) endless willingness to do for others.

One day Kara said she had decided to stop being everyone’s helping hand. I agreed wholeheartedly. “Good for you. People really do take advantage of your kindness,” I said adamantly. “But you’ll still water MY plants when I go out of town, right?”

Kara was right, of course. So I’m trying not to burn out the friends I was able to ask for this recent journey out of town.

Green plants are a true testament of friendship. (Photo by Heather Hacking)

That vacation came and went. Just a week later, I had an unscheduled call to leave town for a week. This was really pushing it. I had just recruited folks, nagged via social media and said thank-yous.

I’m not willing to make major life changes, but I’m beginning to wonder if I have too many plants. I should have/could have installed a drip irrigation system years ago. Or – gulp – maybe I should pay some reliable teenager to make the rounds with a garden hose in one hand, and her cell phone in the other.

In the meantime, I’m feeling grateful that my friends were willing to do me yet another favor.

Things I learned the hard way

Simply because a plant is listed as “hardy” or “full sun,” does not mean that plants thrive when left with very little water in 100-plus degree temperatures. When you leave home, move all the plants to partial or even full shade. Having all the important plants in one place also makes it easier for your incredible.

Other potted plant tips

Water runs through a pot quickly, and a contained plant will need more water after a day in the sun. In summer, liners under the pot allow the roots to absorb additional water. Keep an eye on things, however, because standing water for long periods of time will damage roots and could lead to a nasty mosquito problem. Some folks use hydrogel crystals, which absorb water then release moisture to the soil. However, I don’t like the idea of adding polymers to perfectly good soil.

Mulch does wonders in the raised garden bed, as well as in a container. With mulch, less water evaporates and the soil is protected (a bit) from the heat of the sun.

Overall, container plants need a steady diet of fertilizer. Each time water flows through the soil, nutrients are whisked away. Adding compost is a good plan to improve the quality of the soil. Yet, I rely on Osmocote (available in bulk at Northern Star Mills), a time release fertilizer. I add a teaspoon of the granules whenever it occurs to me, usually once every 2-3 months. Do not add fertilizer to a dry pot, because you can burn the roots.

In summer, potted plants may actually need watering every day. You can use this information when you are asking friends for a much-needed favor. One reason is that as plants wither with neglect, then regain their shape, it takes a lot out of the plant. Better to get a small shot of water every day than to go through the trouble of looking half dead (until they’re really dead).

Allowing for loss

The first time I left town for an extended vacay, I was seriously bummed when I returned and found dead plants. Of course, I blamed my friend Thor who was housesitting. Surely, he did not provide the right kind of plant love I had learned over the years. However, I’ve lost more than one plant this summer despite an abundance of loving intent. I’ve also learned to tell the kind-hearted hose-haulers that it’s OK if something drops dead while I’m gone.

The final vacation garden tip is to surround yourself by really nice people and be prepared to return the favor.

Comments Off on Sow There!: Summer plants get by with a little help from friends, July 12, 2018

Sow There!: Harlequin bugs are unwelcome house sitters, June 28, 2018

 

PUBLISHED: June 28, 2018 at 10:40 pmWhen I returned from a quick vacation I found uninvited kale sitters in my garden. A hundred harlequin bugs would not be an exaggeration for the number of critters that were happily munching and reproducing on the large kale plant that remains.

I knew they were harlequin bugs because just a week before I had been amazed by some fascinating egg clusters on my garden leaves. David Walther, garden guru at Spring Fever Nursery and Gardens, saw my social media post. I had posted a magnified view of some “amazing” critters, which looked like jewelry glistening in the hot sun. David knew they were harlequin bugs, new to this area and hard to kill.

“Squish those guys,” he wrote.

When I arrived home from my journey, it was much later and “those guys” had grown. They had gathered. They were greedy and having a rowdy time on the plant near my fence.

I didn’t bother to unpack my bags. My homecoming included working until the fall of darkness, scooping up red and black harlequins and dropping them into the trusty silver bucket filled with soapy water.

Luckily, harlequin bugs don't swim in soapy water. (Photo by Heather Hacking)
Luckily, harlequin bugs don’t swim in soapy water. (Photo by Heather Hacking)

I must admit, I was once squeamish about touching bugs, smooshing bugs between my bare fingers. I might still scream when I see a hairy spider or when a bug flies into my hair. Yet, recently I have become a bug warrior.

When those books recommend hand-picking, what they really recommend is to get elbow-deep into a bug’s life and take charge of the underside of those leaves.

After most of the visible harlequins had been whisked into a watery grave, I began the search for the next cycle of life. Under nearly half the leaves I found the neat columns of silvery-looking eggs, which are actually black and white when viewed through a zoom lens.

David said that the harlequin is “new” to this area. My research notes that the kale-lovers are persistent pests for plants related to cabbage, and suck the life out of plants.

They’re rarely found north of Colorado, according to a University of Florida bug website. Apparently, the authors of this blog did not have a chance to check out my back yard.

“Eggs of the harlequin bug resemble tiny white kegs standing on end in a double row. Approximately 12 eggs are laid together in one batch, usually on the underside of the leaves of the host plant. Each egg is marked by two broad black ‘hoops’ and a black spot. The eggs hatch in four to 29 days, the time varying with the temperature.”

I can attest that in this weather, the eggs hatch in about a week.

Among the favorite daytime snacks, harlequins munch on collards, cauliflower and radish. They’ll also go for fruit trees, eggplant, okra, beans and tomatoes.

Another website said kale is often used as a “trap plant.”

When I read, this I was very pleased that I had allowed one kale plant to remain while I traveled. Only six feet away, my two tomato plants are doing well and currently bug-free. Believe me, I checked.

I found a nasty hornworm and three tank-shaped stinkbugs, but no harlequins on the tomatoes and zero egg masses under the leaves.

Tagged , | Comments Off on Sow There!: Harlequin bugs are unwelcome house sitters, June 28, 2018

Sow There!: A view of the garden in slow motion, 6-7-18

The fun is over when the kale hits the bucket. (Photo by Heather Hacking)
The fun is over when the kale hits the bucket. (Photo by Heather Hacking)
PUBLISHED: June 7, 2018 at 6:58 pm

I’m convinced that if we could view the world in slow motion, what we could learn would be without limit. We seldom give ourselves time to linger with eyes wide open, but when we do, colors grow brighter and we can learn more about the space within our reach.This week I’ve been mesmerized by the insects in my raised bed. Of course, I have spotted the creepy-crawlies many times before — the gray, black, green or red buggers that make our food crops pock-marked and sticky. The bugs likely don’t notice me at all. They keep munching as my shadow comes and goes.

I had intended to yank the kale weeks ago, but became sidetracked. (It was hot and doing any work outside fell lower on my to-do list). By the time I looked again, the aphid population had grown about tenfold.

Then things became interesting.

Ladybugs arrived, their broad red, folded wings a sharp contrast to the sun-scorched green of the remaining kale.

Ladybugs (more accurately known as lady beetles) love to eat aphids, and for some reason I did not want to deprive them of their feast at my garden version of the Home Town Buffet. More ladybugs arrived, as well as those black and bright orange bugs that breed in dry leaves.

As I spent more time watching I noticed the amber-colored specks on the back side of the leaves, eggs of unknown origin. I also found silver clusters, arranged like a piece of jewelry — too small to view without a magnifying glasses.

I’m certainly no entomologist, but I felt a certain kinship with bug watchers. I imagined Charles Darwin, sitting on a rock on the Galapagos, silent and breathless as he watched flightless beetles. What a luxury to have so many minutes to string together, that time spent watching nature would lead to evolutionary theories.

But my fun had to end. I had other things to do, don’t you know.

When you look closely, there's quite a lot to fill your eyes in some failing kale. (Photo by Heather Hacking)
When you look closely, there’s quite a lot to fill your eyes in some failing kale. (Photo by Heather Hacking)

Bug control

Spraying soapy water really does work for bug control. After a good squirt, you return to a blackened bug boneyard. The Colorado State University extension theorizes that the suds damage insect cell membranes, and remove the protective wax from their bodies. This works with soft-bodied bugs including aphids, mealybugs and spider mites.

Ladybugs, lacewings and bees should be OK, the smart folks at Colorado State say. Yet, I still wouldn’t want to douse the bodies of my beneficial insect friends.

In the end, if the bugs get too bad, and you repeatedly spray with diluted soapy water, you can cause damage to the plants, the wise folks at the extension continue. This is especially true for garden stalwarts like tomatoes and Portulaca. If you try this at home, wash off the plant with water within a few hours after giving aphids a soapy squirt. The Colorado State website also reminds us to use just a dollop of soap in our squirt bottle (one or two teaspoons per pint), and stay away from harsher soaps like what we use for laundry.

By the time I had watched, waited and watched some more, the kale was so infested it would have taken a Costco-sized jug of soap to keep the critters under control. Rather than wait for an army of ladybugs, I filled my 10-gallon bucket with soapy water, clipped the kale at the roots and dunked large branches into the suds. Maybe next year I’ll have the time to sit by the raised bed and discover what would have become of those silver, jewel-like eggs that had been a sweet diversion.

Comments Off on Sow There!: A view of the garden in slow motion, 6-7-18

Sow There!: Delayed garden plans and mysterious squash, May 31, 2018

Photo by Heather Hacking

Something mysterious is tucked into the corner of the yard, where seeds have sprouted in the compost pile.

PUBLISHED: May 31, 2018 at 4:45 pm | UPDATED: June 18, 2018 at 11:35 am

My modest vegetable garden is in full swing and I’m pretty darn happy about it. I give all the credit to the resiliency of plants. When I was busy/busy I nearly forgot about the two tomato plants I bought from Kinnicutt Family Nursery at the Saturday Farmers Market. The hot concrete of my front porch radiated heat into the nearly lifeless containers and twice I watered the young plants just in time.

Weeks after my hope-filled purchase, I made the life-saving move and gave the tomatoes a home in the planter box — the black plastic truck bed liner filled with soil.

I will pat myself on the back when I harvest a bowl of tomatoes later in the season. However, the true reason for the success of tomato plants is that they possess a will to live.

This week I spotted a green plum tomato and more tomato flowers ready to be tickled. (Gently tickling the stem of the plant, just below the flower, helps with pollination. Bees are in short supply these days and I like to give the flowers a jiggle to help the pollen move from place to place. Plus, tickling makes me feel useful.)

In my continued effort to test fate, I proceeded to neglect the basil plant I bought from Angela Handy along Third Street at the Thursday night farmers market. The basil had been hiding in plain view near the volunteer wild grapevine that is threatening to eat my screen door. The basil snapped back with a little water and now has a home in a 15-gallon pot near the tortured tomatoes.

Basil, by the way, will die early if you let the plant produce flowers. The natural cycle is for the seed to sprout, grow into a plant, produce flowers (and seeds) and then die. By pinching off the basil flowers, the plant will keep growing and trying to produce those flowers. Better yet, give the plant a sharp pruning midway through the growing season and add the leaves to your salad. The plant will reward you with new growth.

Trader Joe’s sells those lanky basil plants, on display in the wooden cart near the entrance of the store. If you buy one, take it home, make some pesto, then put the shortened version of the plant in a pot by the kitchen door.

Runaway squash

As I buy and abuse more plants, the raised bed is filling up. Meanwhile, the best thing growing in my garden is the accidental squash sprawling across the compost pile.

Last winter I bought a winter squash, a Delicata, which sat like a decoration on my kitchen counter. Squash, I have learned, can last for months and remain edible. I like to bake squash and I realized if I did not eat it soon I would be warming up my house while baking squash in a sundress.

After the squash was dutifully consumed, I tossed the seeds and shell in the compost pile. The seeds sprouted and created a lovely mass of greenery in an otherwise stinky hot spot. I’ve been watering the squash, which can only be good for the compost as well.

Volunteer squash can’t be trusted. I learned this the hard way in my early days of overly-enthusiastic gardening. Back then, I composted by digging a hole in the ground and throwing in food scraps until the hole was filled. Then I’d dig a new hole in a new location. My theory was that over time, I would improve the soil in many different locations. Way back then, something that looked like a squash plant arrived when I was not looking.

The leaves on that plant were monsters, and looked like something they would use to build shelter on the show “Survivor.” The plant continued to take up space until it covered an area the size of a Winnebago.

My nephew was young at the time and when the fruit began to grow, we were hopeful. The fruit turned out to be fun — day-glow orange, and shaped like a football. But when we sliced the mysterious object, it took brute force to make a dent. We ended up chucking the mystery balls back and forth in the yard as their shape suggested.

My nephew is in his 20s now, and lives in the Upper Peninsula of Michigan. If the squash growing in my compost pile ends up producing play-toys, rather than kitchen counter decorations, I’ll bring in a big box of fun to my future classroom.

In the meantime, I’ll wait for the mystery to unfold.

Comments Off on Sow There!: Delayed garden plans and mysterious squash, May 31, 2018

Sow There!: Saying goodbye to Kindergarteners, 5-17-18

PUBLISHED: May 17, 2018
Tuesday was the day I have known would arrive and I said goodbye to the 28 bright lights in classroom 6. My final day as a student-teacher was similar to the days that came before, except the children knew and I knew that it would be my last.

When you begin the teaching credential program, no one warns you about the ache of knowing you won’t be there the next time a child loses a tooth or when yet another child learns to tie her shoes. Yet next, new mouths and feet arrive.

I was flattered and my eyes a bit misty when the kindergartners asked if we could do the acorn dance one more time. We curled up in a ball on the floor, then moved through the oak tree life cycle, gently swaying in the autumn wind before growing spring flowers. I hummed Johann Strauss’ “Blue Danube Waltz.”

My wise and kind mentor teacher and indispensable room helper asked the children make me a going-away book titled “Why You Must Hire Miss Hacking.” In the children’s pictures, my smile was wide and my arms outstretched, somewhat like an oak tree. “She taught us,” to do math, spell and “how to be a superstar,” were among the parting words. Another boy wrote “You must hire Miss Hacking because she loves me.”

I’m so glad he learned that.

The document may end up being used as one of my letters of recommendations.

Celebration

After nine months as a student-teacher, 2 ½ years of attending classes and nearly a year without a real paycheck, the idea of become a teacher is becoming very real. A few weeks ago, I received the news that I passed the most recent make-or-break, high-stakes, super-stressful hurdle — a passing grade on a 61-page teaching plan and written reflection.

I celebrated the victory for approximately one minute, then started stressing about the next super-stressful, high-stakes part of the process — the job interview.

I have a new circle of future-teacher friends and frequently we ate burritos before class. Recently we talked wistfully of a time when we could sleep in late, stop worrying about test scores and begin making crafty displays for classroom learning tools.

“It must be so hard on your own kids when their mom has been so busy with school,” I said to my friends who are moms.

“I have a cactus that blooms at night and only for one day,” I said as we ate quickly to make it on time to class. “I was so busy this week I realized the cactus had bloomed and I had completely missed it.”

My cactus is certainly less important than soccer games and reading bedtime stories to your own children, but we all agreed we looked forward to the end of the college semester.

Over the past year and a half I have joked darkly that if the Handsome Woodsman had not died, I surely would have neglected him over the past few years. Right now, I really wish he was here to help celebrate.

Second chances

After the conversations with my teacher chums, I received a bright reminder of how many joys remain ahead. My cactus — the one that blooms for only one day — decided to bloom again. This time, I remembered to rush out at night and gaze at it under the glow of the solar lights.

Lasting learning

Thank you to the readers who sent a quick note about the lingering drought habits. Chris has a bucket in his shower that he uses to flush his toilet, every so often. Others shared news about similar routines.

During dry times, Chris and his family installed low-flow sprinklers, and use them about once a week.

“I think I’m still using water conservation as an excuse to avoid washing my car,” he wrote.

Maurice said his family took out their lawn. They worried what the dog might think, but their fur-covered family member adjusted just fine. The hard part about the continued conservation effort, Maurice said, is to not get upset about others who have jumped back to watering all the time, even when it is raining.

Don’t worry Maurice. Another drought will come along, and you’ll be ahead of the game without your lawn.

Comments Off on Sow There!: Saying goodbye to Kindergarteners, 5-17-18

Sow There!: Garden habits: Did the drought change your life? 5-10-18

PUBLISHED: May 10, 2018 I’m curious if anyone else is sticking with those water-saving lifestyle changes we made during the most recent long, miserable drought.

I know my friend Jim had his lawn hauled away in a dump truck and replaced it with wood chips. He planted less thirsty plants, installed a drip line and sold his lawnmower on Craigslist. My mom and my friend Bitz did the same. Countless others cashed in on rebates for low-flow appliances and toilets.

Those permanent changes to turf and machinery will continue to create water savings until today’s homes fall down and are replaced by high-rise condos.

Other folks I know bought rain barrels, or built them based on YouTube videos.

During the drought, water leaders talked about teaching people new habits and changing the way we live life as we know it.

Statewide we had a great public relations campaign with a temporary outcome. Or did we?

I still have a five-gallon bucket in my shower. I know that’s weird, but it doesn’t bother me and I live alone. After a shower, I have enough water to pour into the toilet and save a single flush. I’m glad I don’t have a thirsty dog who likes to lap up soapy water.

Yet, before you give me a mental high-five, I need to admit that I planted grass seed and am currently watering my lawn once a week.

When I need to mow the lawn I grunt and grumble and wonder why I did not stick with the wisdom of the drought propaganda.

Please share

What’s up with water in your life? Have you made lingering changes? Are you back to pre-drought habits? What’s changed? Any regrets?

Disappearing kale

I’ve talked about the lush green kale that’s been growing in the black plastic truck bed liner where I grow things. Now that I learned to strip out the stems and massage kale with a little olive oil, I should be pale green from eating so much iron-enriched greenery. I shared the news with friends on social media and repeatedly offered the leafy stuff to my friend Anjanette.

Anji is about as busy as I am and the kale remained in my back yard.

My friend is the type of friend who will say no when offered a favor, but will always come through when she is asked a favor.

In this case, I desperately needed cardboard paper towel and toilet paper rolls for an engineering design lesson in my kindergarten class. When Anji dropped by my doorstep to deliver the goods, she remembered that she could grab some kale.

The thing is, she didn’t have any scissors.

When I watered the kale that afternoon I thought the raised bed had been rampaged by gophers. Entire plants were gone. That’s how gophers work. They yank at things 14 times their size and leave nothing in return.

Did my friend take the entire plant?

Yep.

I wasn’t upset. Actually, I was relieved gophers had not found a way to infiltrate the plastic truck bed liner. It was just that yanking the entire plant wasn’t the way I would have done things.

Then I realized this was the push I needed. Each day that goes by it is bugs that are devouring my kale jungle, not gophers. I check each leaf at harvest, and these days about one in four has a colony of tiny critters. I smoosh the leaves together to stop the life cycle, but this is time consuming, and frankly rather gross.

Anji was right. It’s time to say goodbye to the kale and make room for something new.

Comments Off on Sow There!: Garden habits: Did the drought change your life? 5-10-18

Sow there! Three cheers for an empty space, privet be gone, 5-3-18

A stump remains where a privet used to stand, spreading its evil seeds. - Photo by Heather Hacking
A stump remains where a privet used to stand, spreading its evil seeds. – Photo by Heather Hacking
PUBLISHED: May 3, 2018Privet.

Just the sound of the word has a certain sting. It’s a sharp two syllables. If you say the word quickly and repeatedly, it sounds like the voice of a small, angry animal.

Privet. I hate it. Left unchecked, a small sprout of privet becomes a bush, which becomes a tree, which becomes a very real problem.

One of these trees grew, until recently, at the edge of my yard.

Privet produces about a million black berries each year. Birds love them and love to discard the remains onto white patio furniture and the hood of your car. The juice dries like the muck they use to reseal the cracks in big-box parking lots.

The sprouts are unassuming at first, usually hidden beneath plants that we love. By the time privetis knee high, you need to yank with all of your might, often unearthing the plants that you love.

If you know privet, you know exactly what I mean.

My privet tree thrived at the edge of the property line, growing swiftly to shade part of the raised bed where I grow summer vegetables. The Handsome Woodsman hacked back the overhang several years ago, but the plant now knows he is gone. Way back when, I asked him to kill it with his chainsaw, but he said he preferred to keep it for the privacy.

Last summer PG&E sent me a note in the mail that said the trees along my property line would be trimmed to provide clearance for the power lines. I wrote a note on a paper plate and pinned it to the fence post: “Please feel free to cut down this entire tree.”

When the work crew arrived, I was at home. I raced out there in my pajamas and told them, perhaps frantically, that I would really, really, really love it if they could chip the entire tree into sawdust.

I was told the tree was not on their to-do list. The guys kept driving and didn’t look back.

Garden art

Despite the fact that every weed list on the planet includes the evil and invasive privet, people actually plant it. It makes a nice hedge for hiding your elegant mansion. People spend hours and days pruning it into shapes, including Mickey Mouse or dancing ladies.

The art of privet sculpting likely emerged as a way to vent frustration in a positive ways. I’m thinking high-end gardeners also encourage the planting of privet for job security.

Garden gnome

Recently, I’ve become friends with Mark and Linda Carlson. Mark is an enthusiastic, energetic, retired landscape man, and shares a deep understanding about my dislike of privet. One day we were chatting in his lovely back yard, and he mentioned he could probably take care of my privet problem.

I haven’t known him that long, and you know how these things go. I smiled and nodded, and generally thought that sounded like one of those ideas that would never happen. Why would a new friend do something so grand?

One morning I backed out of my driveway and noticed something was different. Actually, a lot was different. There was sun on my raised bed and a giant stump where my worst garden foe once thrived.

Except for some sawdust and about a million black seeds on the ground, all of the greenery and wooden mass of misery had been hauled away. I had been so busy with student-teaching that I had not noticed that days earlier the garden gnome (Mark) had performed a grand deed.

I must say, at first I missed the privacy. My property line is in an alley, and that alley leads directly to a liquor store. Some nice people cut through my alley, others are not so nice. Now there is a clear view from the high-traffic pedestrian zone into my back yard. It felt a bit like when you get a new haircut, it always seems too short for the first few weeks.

Yet, would I trade the open space for the privet?

Nope.

The stump remains as statement of what has come and gone. The remaining wood is more than a few feet across, standing almost defiant. Mark, whose kindness has not seemed to end, said he would spend more time this summer, when I have finally earned my teaching credential, and help me decide what to plant next.

Whatever it is, I’ll need to make sure it’s fast growing. I’m fairly certain some of those hundreds of thousands of berries are eager to take over the barren terrain.

Garden enthusiast Heather Hacking can be contacted at sowtheregardencolumn@gmail.com, and snail mail, P.O. Box 5166, Chico, CA, 95927.

Comments Off on Sow there! Three cheers for an empty space, privet be gone, 5-3-18

Sow There!: Losing the bug battle and bagging the greens, 4-26-18

PUBLISHED: April 26, 2018 at 7:22 pm

The battle with the bugs of the leafy greens has begun. I see my defeat on the horizon. I am outnumbered. Even if I continue to kill the critters each time I turn over another leaf, more will be on their way. The next generation and the next, will fight to the death to defend their homes.

I harvest kale and spinach and smash eggs that reappear faster than a regenerative foe in a video game.

I shouldn’t be surprised by the bug cycle. It happens each year around this time, just when my cool-season greens have reached their prime. You can’t blame the bugs. The weather is cool and inviting. I leave the food sitting out all day and all night.

Unlike years in the past, my plan is to not continue to fight. My plan is to quickly strip all of the spoils of the war and fill my freezer with bagged spinach and kale.

So far, I have managed not to eat too many bugs, although I have stopped eating directly from the garden. I check each leaf at harvest and smash eggs if I find just a few. I realize I may be eating some bug goo, even if I wash carefully. Luckily, this doesn’t bother me that much. What I don’t want to come across at the end of my fork is a stinkbug.

So far, I have only killed one helmet-shaped critter among the greenery.

Stink bug patrol

We should all be on the lookout for stink bugs, by the way. I wrote about them three years ago when the county ag commissioner said the garden invaders are here to stay. They like to make winter homes in piles of leaves and under our houses, ready to emerge in the spring. My neighbor has reported the critters crawling up the walls in her living room. So far, the stinkers have kept away from my inner sanctum.

Our ag commissioner, now retired, said that chemical control does not work on the bugs, which emit an offensive odor when squished. In January, Laura Lukes, a Butte County Master Gardener, provided some tips of stink bug control, https://tinyurl.com/y7mu6wdl. If you check Laura’s helpful hints you will note these tips sound like a lot of work. My best advice is to learn to enjoy squishing them, and to be thankful that they move slowly.

Tomatoes

This week I planted my tomatoes in the raised bed, with the aforementioned stink bugs likely looking on with joy. One trick for planting tomatoes is to bury the plant more deeply than the container in which they were purchased. This means burying the lower leaves under the soil. Tomato plants will send out more roots from the submerged stem and become established more quickly. This year I opted to bury part of the stem sideways, so that the plant stem was horizontal for several inches, with the largest leaves above the soil.

My plan was to water the new plants sufficiently. I set the hose on drip and set the timer on the my microwave. When the dinger alerted me, I couldn’t remember what I was supposed to remember.

The next morning I heard that microwave dinger in my head. I had left the hose running all night. Two days later, the tomatoes were still alive and I’m hoping the long soak in the raised bed will also cause the cucumbers and zucchini seeds to sprout. I bought fresh seed packets for summer veggies and planted them the same day I forgot to turn off the hose.

If you still intend to plant veggies by seed, the UC Davis seed planting guide suggests cucumbers, lima beans and melons planting by seed for the month of April.

Garden enthusiast Heather Hacking can be contacted at sowtheregardencolumn@gmail.com, and snail mail, P.O. Box 5166, Chico, CA, 95927.

Comments Off on Sow There!: Losing the bug battle and bagging the greens, 4-26-18

Sow There! Watching gory tomato hornworm videos from afar, 4-19-18

PUBLISHED: April 19, 2018

My tomato plants remain hidden in plain view on my front porch. When it hailed Monday afternoon, I was glad I had forgotten to transplant them from their four-inch pots to the raised bed.

I bought the beauties from Kinnicutt Family Nursery more than two weeks ago at the Saturday farmers market. On that day, I was wearing shorts and had intentions of planting the tomatoes before dusk.

Beth, the plant gal at the market, had an inspiring display of plants. She helped me decide on Isis candy cherry tomatoes. I drew a word picture in my mind — Egyptian goddess, sweet and cheery. Beth also suggested champion, a tomato type that produces early with medium-sized fruit.

Limited space

There’s only one raised bed in my back yard and I’m a bit concerned about planting tomatoes in the same place again this year. There are plenty of gardening rules of thumb, most of which I don’t follow. One is that you need to rotate your tomato to outrun the tomato hornworms.

Just in case you aren’t familiar with tomato hornworms, these are those green gobblers that systematically devour the leaves from your tomato plants. If you don’t check your plants for three days, the worms will have grown to a ghastly size and made your plant as pitiful as Charlie Brown’s Christmas tree.

Most gardeners with the time will stand over their plants for extended periods of time searching for the monstrosities. The easiest tactic is to find a stem that is almost entirely stripped of leaves, look for dark green globs of worm poop, and look under the leaves for the cigar-sized (or smaller) worms. The worms will be exactly the same color as the tomato leaves.

If you don’t catch hornworms, they will burrow into the soil where they pupate, emerge as glorious sphinx moths, then spread eggs on your tomato plants like Mardi Gras confetti.

Commercial farmers rototill the soil after each season, which will dice up the pupating critters. However, I’m not going to dig through my entire raised bed. That’s just not going to happen. If I had that kind of free time I would clean my house.

Hornworm video stars

To successfully avoid cleaning my house, I spent some time watching tomato hornworm videos. One gore-filled clip should have included a warning for viewer discretion: https://tinyurl.com/y8xozegj.

The videographer, named Steve, got up and ugly with tomato hornworms, showing every step of the lifecycle — from egg, to plant-sucking worm, to grubby burrower.

Just when I thought I was done watching the action, Steve zoomed in on a hornworm “natural predator,” the yellow jacket. In the video, the yellow jacket digs into the hornworm’s flesh, like some zombie horror movie. I hate horror films, but while watching this insect film I found myself rooting for the predator.

These days you can watch just about anything on YouTube, including this short flick of a yellow jacket eating meat out of a man’s hands, https://tinyurl.com/yaoa7jr2. I am grateful to Steve. I’m understandably wary of yellow jackets after being stung and walking around with an arm swollen to twice its normal size. In Steve’s images, I was able to calmly watch a yellow roll meat into a neat ball, which the bug carried off to devour privately.

Do I still generally hate yellow jackets? Yes.

However, seeing them in this new light gave me respect for their meat-grubbing ways. In spring and early summer, yellow jackets eat insets in the yard, including hornworms. It’s later that yellow jackets crawl into your sugary soda can.

Tomato rotation

As for the tomato hornworms, ideally you should rotate the location where you plant tomatoes each year. I asked Beth about planting tomatoes in pots, but she reiterated what I already knew. Tomatoes don’t do well in pots. However, hot peppers grow well while contained, she said. Beth suggested trying peppers and cucumbers in a large pot. Add a tomato cage and the cucumbers will grow up the wire, she added.

Hail check

During my recent visit to the garden at Nord Country School, I watched as the children planted cucumber seeds. Inspired, I rushed home and planted cucumber seeds in my own garden. Nothing grew.

More recently I checked the seed packet, which is marked for sale in 2011.

Meanwhile, I finally ate the winter squash that had been sitting on my counter since mid-January. Now I have dozens of squash seedlings growing out of my compost.

Garden enthusiast Heather Hacking can be contacted at sowtheregardencolumn@gmail.com, and snail mail, P.O. Box 5166, Chico, CA, 95927.

Comments Off on Sow There! Watching gory tomato hornworm videos from afar, 4-19-18