Tuesday, November 22, 2016

Dig It Urban Gardens Nursery - I Dig It!


The remains of a member of the Blue-Man
group who refused to eat organic veggies.

  I am really digging it at Dig It Urban Gardens Nursery!  This is a nursery in a class by itself.  I was agog the minute I left my vehicle.  The entire north side of the nursery is a beautiful lush edible landscape, on the OUTSIDE of the fence.  The nursery storefront has a gorgeous street-art style mural painted on it.  My photos don't really do it justice.

Once inside the Dig It store I found myself looking all around and just repeating "WOW!".  One area had awesome vivariums and terrariums loaded with plants.  As I stared into one of the vivariums I suddenly saw two bulging eyes staring right back at me - a tiny green and yellow frog!



Another corner of the store had the biggest display of air-plants that I have ever seen!
  Dig It carries over 40 varieties of these crazy soil-less plants.

Another view of the uber cool Dig It storefront.

An amazing selection of organically grown plants starts!

Fabulous selection of pots!



Dig It has more butterflies than any garden center in the Valley.  Its no wonder why - they sell a huge variety of milkweed including one I've never heard of - Sodom Apple.  They also have on display butterfly cages that you can fill with milkweed plants and butterfly caterpillars, then wait to see the chrysalis form and the butterflies emerge! The large leafed plant in the butterfly cage below is the Sodom Apple Milkweed.

"Butterfly Cage" is actually a chameleon screened cage with
the bottom cut out, a great idea!

  Since opening in October 2015 Dig It has held a number of classes
including classes on herb gardening, composting, summer gardening
in the desert, butterfly gardening, creating a vivarium,
growing and caring for aloes, container gardening, and rose gardening,
To keep up on what is happening next at Dig It, stay tuned to their FB Page.

You can even shop in their greenhouse, but be careful not to disturb the young plants starts and seed start trays - not everything is for sale yet.  Ask before you grab :-)


More beautiful street art, featuring our endangered honey-bees!

Dig It's generous edible landscaping, lining the street outside their garden center.

If you haven't been to Dig It Urban Gardens Nursery you are missing out on a real treat.  I could spend hours here, there is so much to see.  Dig It is truly a community-based nursery, filling the void created when Baker's Nursery closed.  Be sure to shop local this holiday season, and head out to Dig It, at 3015 N 16th St. Phoenix Az  (602) 812-7476

To see more about Dig It and its owners Tim Bishop and Ryan Jerrell
(self-described plant nerds)
watch this great interview by McKenzie Steuber-





Friday, November 11, 2016

The Urban Farm Tree Tour



  Last Friday I attended The Urban Farm Tree Tour to hear the Valley's guru of desert urban farming, Greg Peterson, discuss the process he has gone though in planning and planting his own Urban Farm in central Phoenix. Over the years Greg has inspired many desert dwellers to be bold and dare try to grow fruit trees in our arid unforgiving heat, and with great success!

The tour is just part of the Urban Farm's Fruit Tree Program, and is in it's 17th year!  The program offers classes, online and in person, to help you in planning your orchard layout and in selecting the trees that will best thrive in our climate.
Local media was there interviewing Greg Peterson about the
Urban Farm's Fruit Tree Program, helping to spread the gospel of
good sustainable urban farming!
Greg pointed out a number of things I wish I had known BEFORE I planted my fruit trees.  First is to plant fruit trees with a short ripe period (like peach and plum) close to where you hang out in your yard so you can easily spot the ripened fruit before the birds do.  Fruit trees like citrus and apples which hold their ripe fruit much longer can go towards the back recesses of your yard.

Another thing I never knew was that its good to thin the fruit on your trees.  Greg's method is to just shake the tree :-).  Thinning the fruit allows the remaining fruit to fully mature, and grow a bit larger, that way you don't end up with an over-stressed tree full of half-grown fruit.

Greg also pointed out that if you are low on space, you can successfully plant 3 trees in one hole.  You will want to do some research on which trees are compatible, consider varied ripening seasons, and do plenty of pruning to not let one tree dominate.
I love that Greg saved and re-purposed the dead grapefruit tree
that had originally supported a single grape vine, using it now to support
one side of a now sprawling grape arbor.
The bare root fruit trees will be available at The Urban Farm's pop-up nurseries through January, February, and March, right at the time you need to plant them.  I'm running out of room in my yard so I had to restrain myself and only buy 3 trees - a Pakistani Mulberry, a Bearrs Lime, and a Tango Mandarin.  If you are ready to order or just want to check out the selection, go here. 

Another tidbit of info before you order - if you are an orange lover and want to extend your harvest, consider planting a Trovita Orange, they ripen in February and March!
The next hands-on class is Fruit Tree Pruning on Saturday Dec. 10th from 9am to 11am at The Urban Farm.  To attend sign up here.



Special thanks to Greg Peterson and his crew at The Urban Farm for an awesome tour and for helping us desert rats grow fruit in the valley of the sun :-)

Wednesday, November 2, 2016

Hand Pollinating Passionfruit


My Passion Fruit (Passiflora edulis) vine's first bloom!  I'm not sure its necessary
but we went ahead and hand pollinated it per the instructions
in the video farther down below.


The flower was closed in the next day or so.



A week or so later we spotted the fruit!  Since I've had trouble with birds,
squirrels and insects attacking my figs and pomegranates I went a bit overboard
and protected it with a drawstring organza bag.




Monday, October 17, 2016

AZRFG Fall Plant Sale 2016


  Last Saturday was the Arizona Rare Fruit Growers Fall Plant Sale, held at Mesa Community College's Rose Garden - a perfect venue for selling tropical plants!  There was plenty of shade and the garden seemed to have its own little micro-climate.


There was quite a variety of dragon fruit plants for sale, and experienced growers on hand to give great (and in my case - much needed!) gardening advice.


Plenty of happy customers searching through a huge variety of rare and tropical plants.  I should have taken notes but was busy gawking at plants I had never seen up close before - Okinowan spinach, starfruit, banana plants, pineapple, jujube, panache tiger stripe fig, shangri la mulberry, white mulberry, jaboticaba, coffee tree, cinnamon tree, sugar apple, and an enormous variety of pomegranate trees.


They even had moringa trees, seen on right side of the above photo.


This young gardener had his hands full tending to his new trees and soil amendments!



Jake Mace was there with his new best friend - his selfie stick!  Jake has started broadcasting live, catch him at Jake Mace Live Stream on YouTube.


Happy customers leaving with trees from Shamus O'Leary's Tropical Fruit Trees.  

If you missed out on this opportunity to buy from Shamus, you will have one more chance this coming weekend at Jay Barringer's Food Forest Exploraganza and Workshop 
Saturday Oct. 22nd, 9am - 11am, in east Mesa at 41 S 83rd Pl, Mesa, AZ 85208  Also available will be Jay's Orchard Gold Mix,
Shamus's compost/lava sand mix,  Shamus's Foliar Feed, Azomite, and

Mycorrhizae. 



Kudos to the Arizona Rare Fruit Growers for putting together a magnificent plant sale and having so many helpful and knowledgeable members on hand to assist buyers!  This is a great group to learn from, so consider joining and attending meetings.  Meetings are held on the 2nd Thursday of every month at MCC from 7:30 PM - 10:30 PM.

Friday, October 7, 2016

Flower Street Urban Garden Tour


Flower Street Urban Garden's planter wall on 44th street overflowing with 
vibrant sweet potato vines.  These vines grew during the hottest part of the
summer in Phoenix on a west-facing block wall!

I have always wondered what laid behind the beautiful planter covered block wall on 44th Street near Thomas in Phoenix, so I jumped at the opportunity when I heard they (Flower Street Urban Gardens) were giving tours on Saturday.  The tour started in the front yard with Alex Billingsley  (the proprietor) explaining the thought that went behind the positioning of the gorgeous redwood raised beds.  He had waited for winter solstice and marked off where the house's shadow ended, and set up the raised beds just beyond that.  That way, even during the shortest days of winter, the garden beds would get the maximum amount of sunlight possible.

I always learn something useful when I go on a garden tour, but on this particular tour I learned A LOT! Alex was just chock full of useful information.

First was to beware when filling / amending  your fall garden beds with store-bought "organic" compost or mulch.  Watch out for ones that include "bio-solids" - another word for sewage-sludge!  Ewwwww!!!  Human waste actually isn't the worst part of sewage-sludge, what is really bad are all the toxins from auto repair shops, salons, prescription drugs, etc. that get washed into the sewers and then become concentrated in the sludge.
Two brands to steer clear of are Kellogs and Miracle-Gro.  For details see Sludge News.  A local company you can trust is Western Organics based right here in Phoenix selling under the brand names Garden Time, Nature's Way, OMNI, Organo and GRO-WELL Soils. When sorting through other brands, look for any warning to wear gloves while handling, which means they added sewage-sludge.  Any product with the OMRI (Organic Materials Review Institute) seal of approval on it is guaranteed to not contain sewage-sludge. 

The second nugget of info from Alex was regarding the use of bricks or cinder-block in constructing garden beds.  Some may contain "fly-ash" a byproduct from the coal production industry, containing heavy metals which over time may leach into your garden soil.  The EPA claims the amount is "negligible", but our EPA isn't as trustworthy as in years past.  The EPA has sadly and dangerously transitioned from being a regulator of industry into a partner of industry.  So buyer beware if you are buying bricks for your garden beds!

These vertical beds are on a south facing block wall
and are still going strong after a long hot Phoenix summer!
Back to the garden tour - I must admit that I had always been skeptical of vertical gardens doing well here in the Sonoran Desert.  My thinking was that the hot summer sun would heat up the block wall, and the heat radiating from the wall would bake and kill the soil and plants in the wall mounted bed.  But Alex explained that the vertical garden beds with their incorporated drip irrigation lines, actually cool the wall, and after seeing the lush growth in Alex's beds at the end of a long hot summer, I'm sold.

Flower Street Urban Gardens offers even more than their signature vertical garden beds.  They also build beautiful sturdy redwood raised beds (as seen in a few photos above) and offer garden planning, installation, planting, irrigation, and upkeep!

Being in a wheelchair, I just LOVE their vertical garden on wheels!
I could get my face and hands right in there
with the plants, bugs, blooms, and bees :-)
 

 Also at the tour was Synergy Steel, with great looking steel trellises, steel planter boxes, and cute little chicken coops.  I almost bought a coop and I don't even have chickens! 





Friday, September 30, 2016

Skeletonizers - just in time for Halloween!

Aaaaacckkkk!!!  My beautiful grapevines are being attacked by skeletonizers!  Its a big creepy word, so I assumed that I was searching for a big creepy bug -  something hairy, with fangs and claws, big bulging eyes, and maybe even some blood-sucking tentacles...  So what do I find as I brave the damp dark underbelly of my grape arbor in search of said creature?  A teeny-tiny, itty-bitty, teensy-weensy caterpillar!

To show how tiny this caterpillar is, I photographed it next to a fork.
It would be nearly impossible to search for these in your garden!

Western Grapeleaf Skeletonizer - Scientific name: Harrisina brillians
Photo from The World of Insects


How could this cute little critter and his many pals wreak that much havoc? Here is how - pale yellow or whitish capsule-shaped eggs are laid in clusters on the underside of grape leaves. After hatching, the larvae (see above photo) line up like armies and feed side-by-side on the leaf underside! From what I've heard over the years from other gardeners is that it only takes a matter of days before these little terrors destroy all of the vines!  So today I brought out the big guns - my Bacillus Thuringiensis (BT for short) and my 1 gallon pump sprayer.  It only takes 4 teaspoons of BT to one gallon of water.  We'll be sure to thoroughly spray the undersides and tops of ALL of the grape leaves, early in the morning or in the early evening.  You don't want to spray when its sunny out, the water drops act as a magnifying glass and burn the leaves.  BT is a naturally occurring bacterium that is safe to use in the garden.  It becomes harmful to the insects only after they ingest it.  They will stop eating leaves right away, then die in a few days.  For the next month we'll be spraying weekly, wherever we see signs of skeletonizers
or cut-worms and tomato worms.  So far we've seen signs of pest damage on our tree collards, purple hyacinth bean, okra, tomatoes, pumpkin vines, and the grape vines.

Found this morning just chomping away
on my poor grape leaves!
So BEWARE!  It's a scary time of year out in the ol' pumpkin-patch - be on the lookout for creepy crawly skeletonizers, cut-worms, tomato hornworms and ghoulish green monster-sized grasshoppers (which you will have to catch by hand).

Not pictured is my hard-working, bug-killing brother, looking like a ghost-buster out in the arbor with mask, gloves, goggles, and tank strapped to his back!  I will have the pleasure of watching this spectacle once a week, all the way up to Halloween ;-) .  Oh the things a sister enjoys! What can I say?




Tuesday, September 20, 2016

Goodbye Wild Sunflowers!

And hello tree collards, garlic chives, lavender, aloe, yerba mansa, and more!

 

 BEFORE

AFTER



Lesser Goldfinch giving me the stink-eye for pulling out his wild sunflowers!   



Baby Praying Mantis were everywhere!

 So we saved all the sunflower branches and put them under
the fruit trees to disperse the little bitty praying mantis' all
throughout the yard.


The wild sunflowers served as shade all summer for my tree collards and garlic chives!

The yerba mansa was secretly taking over the garden bed
hidden by the towering sunflowers.



They also gave shelter to my busy little peanut-planting squirrels!
Everywhere we turn there are peanut plants popping up.
I'm so proud of my little squirrel-farmers!


A squirrel-farmer's day is never done!
 
The stalks on these wild sunflowers are huge!  Garlic chive blossoms
 in foreground show scale.


I missed out on seeing the greek oregano flower, these
are the remaining seed buds.


Quite a few baby lizards scurried out of the
garden bed once the chopping started.


The bees were so busy working in the garlic chive flowers,
I don't think they even noticed all the plant carnage
going on, they just worked around us :-)


The hummingbirds will miss the thin flower branches
to perch on with their tiny feet.





All photos taken by Peggy Thomas, in cooperation with the plants,
squirrels, birds, lizards and bugs in my yard here in Mesa, AZ.