White radish ahoy!

Yay! The radish is growing!

I had to take a peek at the white radish plants to see how they were faring growing in the recycled PET bottles. I was a bit concerned that the narrow area would hinder the plants’ growth.

Well, I’m happy to say that I was rewarded with the sight of a growing radish – still small, no doubt, but at least it’s developing.

Since it appears to be moving along smoothly, I’ll leave this lot in their recycled pots and will start another crop that I’ll grow in a bigger container – maybe a recycled styrofoam box. If those grow bigger than the first crop in the bottle-pots, I’ll attempt a third crop in something bigger to push my theory further. Baby steps…

© 2012 curiousgardener.com All rights reserved.


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The pretty caterpillar

The caterpillar when initially discovered. This was the third leaf it had attacked.

I usually campaign against caterpillars because they tend to destroy plants I like. Well, this caterpillar did indeed consume part of one of my favourite red caladiums, but what it had in its favour was that I thought it was a really pretty colour – and that I’ve only seen one of them before.

I’m not an expert on butterflies, moths and caterpillars, so I can’t identify this caterpillar. But, based on the patterns and the little “tail”, I suspect it’s related to the Hawk moth. We usually find its green kin on our regular caladiums.

The caterpillar in profile on the heliconia plant.

Since my heart was too soft to directly kill such a pretty specimen, I transferred the caterpillar to the heliconia patch. Yes, that may have sentenced the caterpillar to death by removing it from its chosen food source, but who knows, it may have been able to go into early pupa-hood if it wasn’t able to find anything else to eat. Going by its size, it was more than half-grown. If I had more of the red caladiums, I may even have allowed it to keep feeding on the plant. Too bad it picked the one healthy plant growing in our garden – caterpillar versus caladium: plant wins.

© 2012 curiousgardener.com All rights reserved.


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The Kalanchoe war

The little nodules forming along the lower edge of the leaf will soon develop into plantlets. For some reason it reminds me of the rim of a Mexican hat!

This started out as one of those situations where we saw a plant at a friend’s house that was so cute that we had to have it. The draw of the plant was the tiny baby plants that were growing along the outer edges of the succulent leaves. Of course, we didn’t know the name of the plant; it was simply known as so-and-so’s plant. Finally, though, we learned that it was known as the Mother of Thousands, or kalanchoe (pronounced “ka-len ko-ee”) daigremontiana.

Under our fumbling care, that first plant died, and was replaced by a new plant from another friend whose plant was living up to the plant’s name and producing lots of little plantlets. We were happy to have the healthy juvenile plant, and put it with our semi-shaded plants on the porch floor.

One day, though, we noticed that the leaves were being eaten. There were arcs eaten in from the edges, and neat, round holes and depressions in the leaves. I thought beetles were responsible, and sprayed the leaves with the necessary repellant. It didn’t work, and so I went through a few different pesticides before we finally discovered the cause of the holes…

One of the many culprits eating up the kalanchoe plant.

Snails.

Baby snails, to be more precise. Like the man-eater from the song of the same title, they only came out at night, which is why it was so difficult to identify them.

I suspect a very clever snail laid eggs in or near the pot when it was on the edge of the porch close to the garden.

The little snails were very adept at hiding. Some could be seen on the surface of the soil, enjoying the shade during the day; the smallest ones also clung to the inside sides of the pot just below the surface of the soil. They could be seen when the soil was a little dry and pulled away from the sides of the pot. But were they spotted on the plant itself during daylight hours? No.

One of the kalanchoe leaves dropped off, but it had some plantlets forming. I placed it in another flower pot, and the plantlets kept developing, sustained by the parent leaf. Right now, each of the plantlets has a few roots trailing to the soil below. Now that’s what I call plant survival!

I went a little overboard to get rid of the snails. The first thing I did was place the pot in the middle of the driveway on a scorching hot afternoon. The second thing was to mix up a salt water solution and completely drench the soil with it. This is a little cruel, but since snails can be killed with a sprinkling of salt, and I wanted to try to get rid of any baby snails hiding in the soil, I had to be a little drastic.

The problem with this was that the plant had a bit of a shock with the heat and salt water treatment. However, after a couple of days of heavy watering to wash out the salt, and a couple of weeks back in the shade, it looked happier once more.

Was the war won? Not quite. The leaves are looking a little eaten again, so I’m going to try to lure the snails out with some snail bait and hope that does them in once and for all. Failing that, well, there are a few baby plants growing in a different location that is currently pest-free. And if we do lose the war, I know my friend still has more kalanchoe babies to foster out.

© 2012 curiousgardener.com All rights reserved.


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Giving ginger a boost

Ginger rhizome harvested in January 2011 – 11 months old.

When I started growing culinary ginger two or so years ago, I planted one control plant in a large flower pot to see how well it would grow. Along the way, though, I read that leaving the ginger plants untouched for long periods of time would allow them to grow larger rhizomes. When I compared our first ginger harvest to the extensive knots of old ginger rhizomes sold at the market, I schooled myself to be patient, and have not harvested any more ginger for over a year – except to rescue the plants from our overenthusiastic gardeners who cut everything down…

The ginger plant in the pot has gone through a few cycles of growing and then going dormant. As with the rest of our other ginger plants, it seemed set to keep growing in a line – new growing shoots would come up after the previous one – until it hit the sides of the pot and went dormant again. It stayed dormant for so long that I was tempted to dig it up. However, it happened that I had some excess organic compost when I was doing some gardening in the vicinity of the potted ginger, and I emptied it into the pot just to be rid of it. What do you know – in about a week, a couple of new shoots began to grow out, and then more and more green sprouts began to appear…

I know that the ginger rhizome has been growing horizontally up to the sides of the pot, so these new sprouts give me an idea of the “lay of the land” below the surface. How exciting!

The positions of these new sprouts show me that the rhizome has been getting somewhat adventurous. You can see the original line of growth leading from the largest sprouts towards the lower left corner. But, what are those other sprouts doing up at the ten and eleven o’clock positions? Be still, my beating heart! We just may have a gnarly old ginger rhizome growing in this pot! Be assured that when this plant goes into its next dormant state, we will be harvesting it. I’m thrilled that my absent gesture of adding compost here has triggered this growth. Tune in again in a couple of months for the next ginger update!

© 2012 curiousgardener.com All rights reserved.


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