July 9, 2013
- Kim’s Weekly Garden Newsletter
These weekly garden notes are
written by Kim Willis, unless another author is noted, and the opinions
expressed in these notes are her opinions and do not represent any other
individual, group or organizations opinions.
Hi Gardeners
Catalpa flowers |
The only
thing good about this weather is that I don’t have to water the garden. I was watering last week; we didn’t get any
good rain until yesterday. Yesterday we
got about an inch. It feels like we got
a lot more rain over the past week because it’s been so humid. Now I just need to go around and check
containers to see that they don’t have too much water in them. Even though some containers technically have
drainage, heavy rain can overwhelm the system, and container drainage holes
often clog. Plants die quickly in
waterlogged soil. Check your containers
and either tilt them carefully to drain water off or punch some additional holes
near the bottom.
The catalpa
trees in my yard are snowing, throwing their blossoms down like popcorn on a
theater floor. They do look beautiful
when they are blooming but they are messy trees. People have been stopping to ask me what they
are, and I offer them seedlings pulled up from my flower beds, I can almost
always find one. I warn them they are
messy trees, not only the flowers fall and turn into a brown slimy mess on the
lawn but little stems break off all the time in the wind. The seed pods that form after the flowers split
open turn into twisted sticks that rain down on the yard all fall and well into
the next spring.
The pods look
like bean pods, but the seeds inside are more like milkweed seeds, flat with a
tuft of fluff that disperses them in the wind.
Viola! catalpas everywhere. The
trees are fast growing and sprout back from the roots if cut. There is some southern charm to the big
heart shaped leaves and the flowers are frothy, lacy beauties that smell good
too. Plant them away from the front lawn
and you’ll probably like them.
Double flower on tomato. |
Other things
that are blooming now in my garden are the daylilies, gaillardia, rudbeckias,
hollyhocks, lavender and beebalm. I have
large buds on the dinnerplate dahlias and the oriental lilies, early for both
of them. I have an old refrigerator
painted green and filled with soil that I plant salad greens in by the back
door. Last year there was a tomato plant
added and this year a volunteer plant has popped up and it grew very
quickly. It is flowering and the flowers
are double, something I have never seen before on a tomato. I am wondering if it will produce fruit and
what kind.
Tomato spraying
Speaking of
tomatoes, late blight has popped up on potatoes in Wisconsin and on tomatoes in
a few southern states. MSU has a yellow
alert out for late blight, which means conditions are very good for late blight
to pop up and that commercial potato and tomato farmers should begin spraying
fungicides once a week. As a gardener
you may want to start using a fungicide on your tomatoes and potatoes. A product containing daconil and labeled for
home vegetable gardens is probably your best bet. Follow the label directions precisely. Organic fungicides and remedies are on the
market and in articles, but for late blight no organic product has ever shown good
protection. They may help with some
other tomato fungal diseases.
Other tomato
fungal problems are going to start popping up now. Many gardens already have early blight and
septoria leaf spot. Remove diseased
leaves immediately and scout your plants daily.
Your best plan for a good tomato crop is preventative spraying with a
good fungicide. Since tomatoes produce
new leaves continuously you can help the plant even if it is already
infected. Remove the infected leaves and
the spray will help protect newly sprouted leaves. However this will not work if the plant gets
late blight- once it gets it its gone.
Side dress corn
If you haven’t
done so already it’s time to sidedress ( add fertilizer) to your sweet
corn. Use a slow release granular garden
fertilizer between the rows just before a rain or good watering. Use one with a
high first number, ( the nitrogen) such
as 10-10-10 or higher. Blood meal is
used by some organic farmers although you can find good organic fertilizers on
the market now. Try to keep the fertilizer off the corn stems,
about 2-3 inches from the stalks. Spread
the fertilizer at the rate recommended on the bag.
Corn is a heavy user of nitrogen and will
start to yellow and slow down in growth if nitrogen is lacking. It uses the
most nitrogen just before and during the tasseling( pollination) stages. Heavy rains tend to deplete nitrogen so this
year side dressing is important. You
want your corn to have deep green sturdy looking leaves and stems.
At the Market
Farm markets
should be offering green beans, early summer squash, early raspberries, and
many types of herbs along with the items mentioned last week, salad greens, radishes, beets, green
onions, peas, and cherries .
Strawberries are probably done. You may find cherry and some other small
tomatoes and young cukes. New potatoes will start coming on the market
soon. Blueberries are probably 2 weeks
away along with sweet corn and the main tomato harvest.
Why there are fewer Japanese beetles
this year
Many people
are remarking on the near absence of Japanese beetles this year but a report
from Ohio State University says it mainly has to do with the drought last
year. When Japanese beetle eggs hatch
into grubs in July and August they need moist soil to do well. Drought last year means fewer nasty beetles
this year. But what will this year’s wet
weather do for next year’s crop of beetles?
It’s good
that there are fewer grubs in the lawn, you won’t need to apply grub control
and that’s good news for bees. Most grub
control products now contain imidacloprid or another one of the pesticides
called neonicotinoids. Research
continues to show that these products disrupt bee behavior, and kill bee larvae
even in very miniscule amounts. Most neonicotinoids
are now banned in Europe for this and other reasons.
I read
something an MSU Turf specialist said – he wasn’t worried about bees being
affected by neonicotinoids because bees only feed on flowering plants with
nectar, which lawn grass doesn’t have.
How many lawns out there have clover, dandelions and many other types of
flowering plants that bees like growing in them? What about flower beds in lawns?, since neonicotinoids
don’t harm plants, people aren’t always careful about where the pesticide lands. If
you must have a lawn please accept the fact that it may have bugs and grubs and
don’t treat it with pesticides. More
lawn chemicals are used in the US than chemicals used on farm crops and they
are a major contributor to water pollution and to harming beneficial insects
and birds.
Cherries and birds
I posed this
question on the Lapeer MG Facebook page and got some responses that confirm
what I thought- there are fewer birds this year. I have been picking lots of cherries,
although they are small, and that is very unusual, the birds generally get them
first. And the mulberries are falling
off the tree instead of being eaten.
Other people are saying the same thing.
And it seems it isn’t just in Michigan, the blueberry harvest in Florida
was supposedly better than usual because there was little bird damage.
Now I like
getting cherries, but I am a little concerned about the bird situation. My feeders aren’t needing to be filled nearly
as often as this time last year. Even
the grape jelly and hummingbird feeders are not emptying as fast. I searched a bit on line and found birders
talking about fewer birds, lots of people reporting dead birds too. Some speculation is that the drought killed a
lot of young birds last year and the cold, late spring hindered and killed a
lot of birds flying north this spring.
Some think the birds are actually going farther north this year. (Other scenarios include government
experiments, aliens and all kinds of diseases.)
If you have
noticed fewer birds this year or lots of dead birds shoot me a line. I am going to do some more research, I do see
that the Christmas bird count reported large decreases in many common birds. For example there was a 23% decrease in American
Goldfinches and I know I have seen much fewer of them and hardly need to fill
my thistle feeder more than every other week.
Cedar waxwings were down 66%, Blue Jays 25%, even house sparrows were
down 12%.
There were
fewer than 10 Bobwhites counted this year and no tree swallows or Eastern
meadowlarks in Michigan. I saw tree
swallows early in the season though, and I thought they were going to nest in a
bluebird box, but I haven’t seen them in some time, and my barn swallows were
also here briefly and then haven’t been back. I used to see several pairs of orioles at my
feeder , now I think there is only one pair left in the area, it’s hard to tell
them apart but the jelly isn’t being eaten very well. Wrens however are in abundance here.
Moths and bats
Switching to
other things that fly, some interesting research on moths has come out this month,
from several places. At night when you
think your garden is sleeping a deadly war rages between bats and their
favorite food, moths,( no a bat likes moths better than mosquitoes, more
meat). Bats use sonar radio waves-echolocation-
to locate their prey and it seems that many species of moths have developed
sonar jamming techniques; they emit high frequency sound waves to disrupt bat
sonar.
Several
species of large, night flying moths have this ability. And not only did they develop this as they
evolved alongside bats, they also found other uses for their sounds. These moths are some of the few insects that
can hear, they have ears that detect high frequency noise, and they can use
that noise and hearing to communicate with other moths. Since a moths life really revolves around
reproduction, most of the whispered conversation between moths has to do with
seduction. They whisper because bats can
hear their sounds. They only converse
between each other when they are close to each other and then very softly.
One type of
moth however found a new use for the hearing- talking adaptation. The Asian Corn Borer moth mimics a bats
hunting calls, which causes all the female moths in the vicinity to freeze to
avoid bat detection. That makes it easy
for the male moth to mate them.
Research on
moths was done at University of Tokyo, University of Strathclyde, and Florida Museum's McGuire Center for
Lepidoptera and Biodiversity and reported in several publications.
The Michigan Lily
Michigan Lily |
Some 10 years
ago a Master Gardener gave me 3 bulbs of a native wildflower, Lilium canadense
ssp. Michiganense. They are commonly
called Michigan lily and are found throughout the eastern states. These plants are a bit tricky to grow in the
garden, I have two plants left and after all these years no additional plants
have popped up. Some years they do well,
sometimes they don’t even bloom. They
must be kept weeded and the stems are fragile and easily damaged when you are
pulling weeds around them. I feel lucky
that I have kept two plants alive for such a long time.
Michigan lily
is already listed as endangered in some states and may soon be listed here. The
plants are delicate and slow to reproduce and Michigan’s overly abundant deer
herd is rapidly removing them from many places. They are found in moist
meadows, at the edges of woodlands and sometimes in roadside ditches. They
prefer moist, rich soil and sunny to partly sunny conditions. You rarely find large clumps of the Michigan
lilies, they seem to exist in small groups of 2-3 plants or singly and the
slightest environmental change can make them disappear. They were never really common, and finding
one in the wild now is a real challenge.
The Michigan
lily has long narrow leaves that are whorled around a delicate stem and are
concentrated near the base of the plant. Most Michigan lilies produce a single
flower at the top of the plant on a long stretch of leafless stem. Plants
sometimes branch at the tip to produce two or three flowers.
Michigan Lily |
The Michigan
lily flowers are orange on the outside, with a yellow and orange inside flecked
with purple to brown spots. The flower petals are curved backward until they
almost touch the outside base and they dangle facing downward with orange
stamens clearly visible. The flowers are about 1½ to 3 inches in size and plants
range from 24-40 inches tall. The
flowers are pollinated by hummingbirds and long tongued moths such as sphinx
and hummingbird moths and larger butterflies such as the Spicebush Swallowtail
and the Monarch.
Michigan
lilies reproduce very slowly from seed, taking several years to bloom. The
seedpods are small dark 3 sided capsules filled with flat seeds that have papery
wings. The seeds are wind dispersed. ( I have yet to see a seed capsule in the
garden.) The plants have a small scaled yellow bulb and they are said to produce
rhizomes underground that eventually can produce new bulblets and then new plants,
although I have seen no evidence of that.
The Canada
lily is much more yellow in color and the flower petals do not curve backward
except for a bit at the tip. The Canada lily is a little larger and more robust
plant but they too are endangered. Michigan lilies are also like the cultivated
Turks cap lilies, but those have larger flowers and plants, the center of the
flower generally has a green throat and the bulbs are white instead of the pale
yellow of the Michigan lily. The anthers
of the Michigan Lily are a ½ inch or less in size and Turks cap lilies have
anthers larger than ½ inch. Michigan
lilies are also mistaken for tiger lilies; those have a different leaf, bulbils
in the leaf axils and are larger with petals that don’t curve backward as far
as the Michiganese.
Keep an eye on the sky today- severe weather is possible,
especially this evening.
Kim
Garden as though you will live forever. William Kent
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