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August 15th Garden Update: What the Heck Is That?

08/16/10

Permalink 08:57:24 pm, by admin Email , 347 words   English (US)
Categories: ...and Takes On, America, Gadgets (Worms and Gardening)

August 15th Garden Update: What the Heck Is That?

So it's been four weeks since my last garden update.

The same coworker took care of my plants while we were in Florida and did a good job. However, before we left, the cosmos, marigolds, and poppies up and died. I staked my pepper plants before I left, which helped them when we had some strong storms.

I also realized that my biggest pepper plants were getting just a fraction more of light each day, so I rearranged things to move the smaller plants. They shot up in size. Next year, the peppers will all go on the brightest side of the deck and the herbs will all go on the other side.

Before we get to the mostly good, let's go over the "What the Heck Is That?" portion of our garden tour.

The hitchhiker plant became covered overnight in some whitish covering. It looked like bird poop with black lines in it. Seen from the underside of the leaves, they looked almost like seeds or eggs. I did find what appears to be a spider, as well.



What the Heck Is That?

About a third of the leaves were covered. Since it looked ugly (as in these-things-will-hatch-and-destroy-your-garden-in-minutes ugly), I whacked them all off and trashed them.

The basil is mostly doing fine, as is the sesame.



Basil



Sesame Leaves

The dill is happily seeding along.



Dill

The peppers are doing OK. Most appear to be doing fine, but there's a tiny whitish spot near the stem of several. If I take them off the plant when they're firm but not red, they seem fine. If I leave them to ripen, they rot.

The peppers are really spicy. We had one with a samgyeopsal dinner several nights ago and Good Man yelled, "Ah! A-bomb!"



Peppers



Long Greens

The mint is flowering and I really need to whack it down.



Mint

The basils are out of control. I have got to make a huge batch of pesto and freeze it, because they're all flowering and the leaves are going to taste bitter soon.



Sweet Basil



Thai Basil

6 comments

Comment from: david [Visitor]
If you ever get bugs, I use homemade organic pesticide. Mix 8 oz of rubbing alcohol, tsp of dish washing soap and 8 oz of water and put in a sprayer. Mix it well and spray. Those sesame leaf and Korean peppers look so good. Have you tried any?
08/17/10 @ 12:55
Comment from: admin [Member] Email
We've been eating the sesame leaves all summer--they seem to be getting stronger in tasste as the season goes on. I LOVE growing those things. I'd always buy a pack at the store, it'd have way too many leaves, and half or three-quarters of the pack would go bad. It's much easier to just go pluck some as we need them.

We did try some of the long green hybrids (which are not the ones in the photo--I need to fix that) and they were REALLY spicy!
08/17/10 @ 16:25
Comment from: david [Visitor]
If you have a boundy crop of sesame leaves, you can always preserve them.
08/18/10 @ 05:49
Comment from: admin [Member] Email
David, I'll probably do that perilla kimchi thing they do in Korea, closer to October.
08/18/10 @ 21:34
Comment from: Jonathan in Florida [Visitor]
Have you tried using guenyip leaves as a lettuce substitute in a sandwich? It's weird at first, but the tangy sharpness of the perilla goes surprisingly well w/ turkey on wheat. I haven't tried it, but I bet perilla would go well w/ tuna salad as well...
08/23/10 @ 09:50
Comment from: admin [Member] Email
Jonathan, I've been using them Korean-style only, but that's a good idea!
08/23/10 @ 11:42

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An American educator moves moved to Korea, presumably to teach English. Instead she discovers discovered that learning Korean one taekwondo class at a time is was a more captivating activity.

Somewhere along the way, she met a Good Man, fell in love, and ended up back in the States. Still doing taekwondo, still learning Korean...

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