Especially since this year is the first for us that we've had a garden in Chicago, I've appreciated tremendously the opportunity to get advice from a number of you more experienced green-thumbs here. Having learned some things through (bitter) experience, others through the experiences of generous LTHers, I do feel like I'll be able next year to do a better job in some regards but, of course, the wild cards that Mother Nature pulls from up her sleeve will surely continue to make the gardening experience as challenging and sometimes frustrating as it is satisfying and rewarding.
For us this year, we have had considerable success with almost all of our plantings. Specifically:
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tomatoes: blossom end rot affected especially the plum tomatoes and the squirrels have cut further into the crop, but I think it was good that we planted lots of individual plants of several different varieties. Though much has been lost, we still have had a steady, if limited, flow of good ripe tomatoes from garden to kitchen.
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eggplants: great success with a couple of varieties.
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zucchini: staggered planting has paid off in that the first couple of potted plants, which flourished early on and produced mightily, have since been completely killed off by bugs (also, there was some kind of crusty yellow rot on the roots; also bugs or something else?); other plants which were in the soil at widely separated spots in the garden have all come into their own in staggered fashion, in part according to the changing measures of sun available in those different spots. Production is now starting to wind down, as the wee-evils (I think) have attacked all but the smallest of the remaining plants.
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peppers: one bell pepper plant has done well and provided a limited but hardly meagre number of tasty fruits. Our Hungarian peppers, jalapeños and serranos have all thriven. Early brown rot on some of the jalapeños stopped quickly and only a handful of peppers were affected.
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celery, fennel: these have both done well within the limitations of their potting.
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various herbs: basil has grown in massive profusion; considerable success has also been had with parsley, rosemary, tarragon, lavander, thyme, sage (two varieties), marjoram, oregano, chives and garlic chives. Only two have disappointed: dill and cilantro. I suspect these -- and especially the cilantro -- should have been given much less water, for they seemed to grow too quickly and go to seed without producing many good leaves (and this in obscene contrast to the thriving but totally uncared for wild cilantro that grew in the yard of our currently empty neighbour's house).
One thing I've found interesting is that my zucchini, when fried in the normal way, don't brown as well as store bought ones always do; but they also don't absorb much oil. On the other hand, my large eggplants (which aren't really that large but larger than the tiny ones we're also growing), fry up more quickly and with markedly less oil absorption than is the usual case with store bought fruits. Has anyone else had any such surprises?
Since one central goal for me this year was to produce all the -- from a European perspective -- exotica that is needed to produce
'la boumiano' (link), I'm very happy. And what a joy to have all those herbs available whenever we want them.
Antonius
Alle Nerven exzitiert von dem gewürzten Wein -- Anwandlung von Todesahndungen -- Doppeltgänger --
- aus dem Tagebuch E.T.A. Hoffmanns, 6. Januar 1804.
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Na sir is na seachain an cath.