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- Aug 25, 2011
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Expanded the community garden this year for melons and squash. We've had such critter problems this year! I and a friend put up a fence of 90 foot length or so, banging t-posts into hard desert soil with the aid of water to soften the ground. Though an old gal, I'm still able to swing a sledge. Then we put up chicken wire. Then realized Gambel's quails can walk straight through it, a little like ghosts. Put up bird netting over the chicken wire, problem solved. For about one day before mice appeared. The mice quit eating most garden plants because they ate about a quarter jar of peanut butter per night from the traps. A neighbor said "use cheese and a rubber band" to us (what he did in Vietnam), so we did, and it was magic. Finally started killing mice. By this point, bird netting I'd draped over my remaining tomatoes they hadn't taken down to sticks was scrunching up the plants so it took me a good 45 minutes to disentangle them and re-net them against surviving mice. Based on an hourly wage of $25/hour, I figure it'll take a while for a tomato to not cost me $5 each.
My potatoes are entirely successful, though. I simply took little yellow potatoes I'd gotten for free at a food bank place, let them sprout, planted, and I must've hit the perfect day/temp, for they went wild. Flowers already. I have peppers in too, three kinds of melons, an onion from seed bred for high desert, which is what we are, and a light colored bush bean (not quite wax beans. not quite green beans). Radishes aren't big but are painfully hot already--really have to limit that to fall/winter garden from now on. 90F tomorrow and we won't likely see under that until July 4, when the afternoons get rainy.
My potatoes are entirely successful, though. I simply took little yellow potatoes I'd gotten for free at a food bank place, let them sprout, planted, and I must've hit the perfect day/temp, for they went wild. Flowers already. I have peppers in too, three kinds of melons, an onion from seed bred for high desert, which is what we are, and a light colored bush bean (not quite wax beans. not quite green beans). Radishes aren't big but are painfully hot already--really have to limit that to fall/winter garden from now on. 90F tomorrow and we won't likely see under that until July 4, when the afternoons get rainy.