Ducks ALIVE in 2025!

heirloomgal

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These
Just went out for photos. You can see that Most of the pods are dry, but not all, and the youngest vine still has green pods on it, surprisingly. Also, I have spinach that grew and went to seed. @heirloomgal , any comments/suggestions are appreciated!:hugsView attachment 75743

These look ready to harvest! It's funny you mention paper bags, because that's what I use to collect all my pea pods end of season. I suggested paper envelope because it seems a more common household item, but yes paper bags are even better. Roomy, stands upright and let's the pods dry to perfection. Congratulations on a great pea harvest! A nice perk of saving your own pea seeds is I find they tend to yield much higher the following year, and even more so after that. It's surprising how much more they'll yield being planted back in the same garden. And the vines make an excellent fertility amendment. Sometimes I'll hold the dry vines over a garden bed and crumple everything in my hands so all the dry little leaf bits fall below. Nitrogen!
 

ducks4you

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OMGosh! I have such a collection of flower seeds--I'll have to look.
I am Hoping the use my spade to loosen up the south of the garage vegetable bed, And the big garden bed And the strips next to the tomato fencing for the tomatoes awaiting, then give it a 2nd till. I want to Pack the garage vegetable bed with nasturtiums and other flowers, I will only need a single strip to walk and harvest okra, which will be planted right next to the garage wall, along with ornamental corn. The rest of the bed will have caged peppers and a mass of other plants, since the harvest will be later--no need to be walking next to the peppers, only to have a couple of soaker hoses in place, and not an everyday thing, as with the tomatoes going in soon. I am thinking of laying down a cardboard strip to walk to the south of the okra/ornamental corn for harvesting. I have a good selection of cardboard to use.
Regarding the new flower bed, let me look at my flower seeds that I have bought and give you a list.
I am lifting the rest of my mass of black iris today that have overgrown their spot along the front sidewalk. Most of them are going into an ALDI bag for youngest DD's beds, but I would like to put several of those And the 5 or so yellow iris that were already growing there, but I dug them out to clear the blackberry canes.
By digging out and amending an ~3 ft deep and ~7 ft l ong new bed, with a brick border, which practically screamed at me, "flower bed," I will save myself the 21 sq ft mowing and make a straight line from the border of the south of the garage vegetable bed, if that makes any sense.
I know that height can be an issue. NO hollyhocks here! The iris grow about 2 1/2 ft tall, but then die back.
I would like flowers to grow and compete with each other.
I have snapdragon seeds. I have read recently that snapdragons are invasive. Do you have any specific suggestions.
Thanks for the pea advice!
I just learned this year that Alaska peas are smooth, and sugar snap peas are wrinkled.
Again, I hope to grow some Alaska peas this Fall, but not all of them. Looking again at my photos and I think I have more than 200 Alaska peas, and, sitting in my cabinet they will be out of the way and their drying will go on undisturbed.
I assume that I handle the spinach seeds the same way as the peas?
 

heirloomgal

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OMGosh! I have such a collection of flower seeds--I'll have to look.
I am Hoping the use my spade to loosen up the south of the garage vegetable bed, And the big garden bed And the strips next to the tomato fencing for the tomatoes awaiting, then give it a 2nd till. I want to Pack the garage vegetable bed with nasturtiums and other flowers, I will only need a single strip to walk and harvest okra, which will be planted right next to the garage wall, along with ornamental corn. The rest of the bed will have caged peppers and a mass of other plants, since the harvest will be later--no need to be walking next to the peppers, only to have a couple of soaker hoses in place, and not an everyday thing, as with the tomatoes going in soon. I am thinking of laying down a cardboard strip to walk to the south of the okra/ornamental corn for harvesting. I have a good selection of cardboard to use.
Regarding the new flower bed, let me look at my flower seeds that I have bought and give you a list.
I am lifting the rest of my mass of black iris today that have overgrown their spot along the front sidewalk. Most of them are going into an ALDI bag for youngest DD's beds, but I would like to put several of those And the 5 or so yellow iris that were already growing there, but I dug them out to clear the blackberry canes.
By digging out and amending an ~3 ft deep and ~7 ft l ong new bed, with a brick border, which practically screamed at me, "flower bed," I will save myself the 21 sq ft mowing and make a straight line from the border of the south of the garage vegetable bed, if that makes any sense.
I know that height can be an issue. NO hollyhocks here! The iris grow about 2 1/2 ft tall, but then die back.
I would like flowers to grow and compete with each other.
I have snapdragon seeds. I have read recently that snapdragons are invasive. Do you have any specific suggestions.
Thanks for the pea advice!
I just learned this year that Alaska peas are smooth, and sugar snap peas are wrinkled.
Again, I hope to grow some Alaska peas this Fall, but not all of them. Looking again at my photos and I think I have more than 200 Alaska peas, and, sitting in my cabinet they will be out of the way and their drying will go on undisturbed.
I assume that I handle the spinach seeds the same way as the peas?
Black iris - sounds gorgeous! I've never heard of snapdragons being invasive? Then again, our winters are quite different so they may well be in your location. General rule with peas, smooth seeds are more starchy and the wrinkled more sweet tasting, and smooth peas are more cold hardy. I have honestly never collected spinach seed ducks so I'm not knowledgeable, but I do know that the plants are males & females. I think you need both to make seed, so I'm guessing you had a couple plants! 💞

We're in the same boat with new garden beds! I wouldn't have dared ask DH for another with all I have, but not that we're tilling up 1/2 the front yard - which has suddenly become very large not that we're missing so many enormous trees - he suggested today a new bed instead of reseeding the whole expanse with grass seed. I really like the combo of vegetables & flowers together in the same bed, which is what I will likely do. Okra flowers are very ornamental!.....
 
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