Blast them caterpillars!

One week ago, the Early Russian sunflower was reaching happily for the sky.

When I started growing sunflowers about a year ago, one of my biggest problems was when caterpillars ate so many of the leaves that the plants couldn’t sustain themselves, and eventually died prematurely.

I didn’t have a problem with caterpillars with my earlier attempts this year, and so I “conveniently” forgot about them.

Do you see the two hairy caterpillars on the edge of the leaf they'd stripped? :(

Checking on my lovely Early Russian sunflower plant today, I was horrified to see several leaves eaten away, with others in the process of being eaten. The culprit was once again my nemesis, the hairy caterpillar horde.

There were small ones, medium ones, and tiny ones that if they were toys, would have had me cooing over how cute they were. Unfortunately for them, I whipped out the insecticide and went a little berserk with it.

The Early Russian plant with leaves in various stages of being eaten by the hairy caterpillar horde

Thankfully, the plant is well established at about 2 metres high, and it still has a number of nice, big (if slightly holey) leaves to sustain it. I’ve got my hopes pinned on this giant sunflower plant to fulfill its destiny to be BIG. It’s already so impressive that the neighbour has hinted for seeds… :D Of course, anything can still happen to the plant, but I’m optimistic that I’ll soon be able to share pictures of my first giant sunflower with you.

© 2011 curiousgardener.com All rights reserved.


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This can’t be a Kong!

My disappointing Kong sunflower

Well, this seems to be a week of disappointments where my sunflowers are concerned.

The Kong sunflower plant that seemed to be growing so promisingly has started flowering – at just over half a metre tall! This, coming from a plant I had hoped would grow to more than 3 metres high.

sigh.

I can’t help but wonder if our odd weather has anything to do with this. It’s alternatively scorchingly hot and extremely rainy. Perhaps the plant got confused. After all, some plants like coriander bolt, or start flowering, when they encounter a period of hot weather (flowering for these plants means the life cycle is nearing the end). Maybe something like that triggered my Kong sunflower plant into blooming early. Or is it behaving normally and will still be able to keep growing taller? Has anyone else grown this sunflower variety and can give me some hope?

Another thing that intrigues me is that the flower is bi-coloured. What’s up with that? Is my plant truly confused or did my seed supplier get some seeds mixed up? The Kong flower is supposed to be yellow!

Well, at least the flower is pretty. :|

© 2011 curiousgardener.com All rights reserved.


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When kangkong plants bear fruits

When my kangkong plants started flowering in March this year, I finally made the mental connection of where we get the seeds to grow the plants from. Since then, I’ve been observing the plants to see what happened next.

The little spinach fruit, about 1cm in diameter.

After the flower blooms and drops off, a small fruit starts growing. It keeps growing for about a month before it starts drying up.

After about a month, the fruit dries up.

The dried fruit doesn’t seem to drop off easily. There are several of them left on the plants, and they’ve been hanging there for a few weeks already.

The harvested kangkong pods and seeds.

Because I couldn’t wait, I plucked a few of the turnip-shaped pods and peeled them open. The skin covering them was quite papery and tough. Each pod contained between 3 to 5 seeds in individual segments.

New spinach plants growing from freshly harvested seeds.

Naturally, since I had seeds in hand, literally, I tossed them into a pot. To my joy, several started sprouting after just a few days! I did learn then that you shouldn’t surface sow them. However, I’m satisfied now that I’ve followed the full life cycle from seed to leaf to fruit and back to seed. 8)

© 2011 curiousgardener.com All rights reserved.


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Not such a skyscraper after all

Meet my not-such-a-skyscraper Skyscraper sunflower

My Skyscraper sunflower has failed to live up to its name and potential. One of the giant sunflower breeds, this is supposed to grow more than 3 metres tall. Right now, it’s “just” 1.8 metres tall.

I don’t think this is a multi-flowering plant, so I’ll assume that it has reached its peak – more or less. After all, it appears to still be growing taller as the flower opens. When the bud started opening, it was about 1.7 metres high. When I took the attached picture, it was about 10cm higher. Who knows, maybe it’ll grow another 10 or 20cm before it’s done?

The flower is pretty, though – nice bright yellow petals surrounding a yellow centre. It gets props for being the prettiest sunflower grown here so far!

© 2011 curiousgardener.com All rights reserved.


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