Arizona's Bee Bliss Garden at 1200 Feet

Welcome to my organic gardens, where the birds sing and the bees are happy.

Thursday, March 31, 2011

wild flowers in bloom







Posted by Donetta at 9:16 PM 1 comment:
Labels: flowers
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"Yesterday's failures are today's seeds
that must be diligently planted to be
able to abundantly harvest
tomorrow's successes."
- Author Unknown

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Planting by the moon

Mar 26 Last Quarter
April 3 Waning Crescent
April 11New Moon
April 17First Quarter
April 24 Full Moon

Seasons of 2011: SPRING EQUINOX March 20, 7:21 P.M. EDT SUMMER SOLSTICE June 21, 1:16 P.M. EDT FALL EQUINOX September 23, 5:05 A.M. EDT WINTER SOLSTICE December 22, 12:30 A.M. EST

2011 Spring garden

cucumbers
summer squash (found in compost)
summer squash seed
acorn squash 2 hills
butternut squash
chives
savory
onion
one leek from last year
broccoli rabb
2 bell peppers
wild or self sewn tomato one cherry one yellow pear
Carrots from fall still not matured
dill
chamomile
borage
One or two spinach to seed
3 strawberries left from fall
fennel
parsley
radish to seed

lots of wild flowers
nasturtium

birding

  • Cornell University ornithology (birds)


Moon Planting Rule
New Moon To Full Moon: Sow, Transplant, bud and graft.
Full Moon To New Moon: Plow, Cultivate, weed and reap.
New Moon To First Quarter: Good for Planting above-ground crops with outside seeds,
flowering annuals.
First Quarter To Full Moon: Good for planting above ground crops with inside seeds.
Full Moon To Last Quarter: Good for planting root crops, bulbs, biennials, and perennials.
Last Quarter To New Moon: Do Not Plant

2010 fall/winter food garden

basil self seeded died
bok choy 11/6 fail
beet 11/6 fail due to too much shade
broccoli Oct. flourished
cabbage Chinese 11/6 yet to see
cabbage heed 11/6 three growing
carrots 3 types 10/25 too much shade?
cauliflower 11/6 three growing
cucumber Japanese burp-less 9/15 failed
Lettuce 3 types 10/15 and 11/6 flourished
corn salad 11/6 little here and there
peas 2 types shelling 9/25, 10/15 eaten by ?
snap peas 9/25,10/15 eaten by?
summer savory 11/6 flourished
rosemary 1009 flourishing
Nasturtiums 11/5 thriving
borage self seeded from last year thriving
catnip 11/6 ?
celery 11/6 ?
chives 11/6 flourishing
cumin 11/6 ?
kale 11/6 failed
luffa 11/6 ?
green onions scallions Tokyo tall whites 11/6 good
parsley Sept and Oct (remember to soak overnight) fantastic crop
Radish 3 types 10/10, 10/25 so so
spinach 11/6 over powered by rabb
strawberries Sept three left pot is no good
Swiss chard 11/6 failed
tomato self seeded ? thriving
sage Oct. thriving
Hyssop (anis) ?
Orchid tree seeds

Yet to plant
turnip
parsnip
The best remedy for those who are afraid, lonely, or unhappy is to go outside, somewhere where they can be quite and alone with heaven, nature and God. Because only then does one feel that all is as it should be...... Anne Frank
Click for Mesa, Arizona Forecast

Never stop learning

Planting by the Moon Mesa AZ Weather/moon phase and misc info

Helpful sites

inoculant for peas and beans Nodulator® Liquid - Peas & Lentils

re Meneralize the Earth

Study this and learn ways to help your soil

Arizona Master Garden Manuel

HERE
Arizona Beginner Gardener book

Great Resorces

California Master Gardeners Series Arizona Cooperative Services
P Allen Smith Great Garden Help

My Blog List

  • Mary Janes Farm
    A Year at the Farm In Photos
    11 years ago

Fruit for the wish list

Lady Banks Yellow or Mexican Red flame vine
for west facing arbor
Lady banks White
for south face



PLUM TREE
that does well here
is a SANTA ANNA
self pollinating
Anna Apple does best here
Navel Orange on wish list plant large slow growers
Lemon? eureka is an all year fruiting type
Pomegranate Planted spring 2010
Boysenberry
Blueberry is a bush variety The most commonly grown blueberry varieties are Highbush (Vaccinium corymbosum), which are hardy to zones 3 through 8. Other commonly grown types are Southern Highbush (V. corymbosum x V. darrowi) which are hybrids adapted to the warmer regions as they require less chilling time to flower and fruit,
Grapes hardiness zone 7)

'Mars' – Mars is a blue, seedless table grape with labrusca flavor similar to Concord grapes. Compact clusters of mid-sized berries are ready to harvest mid-season or sometime in late August. It's a slipskin, which means the outer skin is easy to remove from the pulp. It is highly disease resistant, but may require a certain amount of spraying. Very vigorous.

'Sunbelt' - This is a selection of Concord that is recommended for warm climate gardens because of its ability to ripen evenly in hot weather. Plus it is highly resistant to fungal diseases such as powdery mildew and downy mildew and mildly resistant to black rot and anthracnose. Large, blue, seeded berries in small clusters are ready for harvest mid-season.

'Reliance' – 'Reliance' is a pink, seedless table grape with medium to small berries in medium to large clusters. It is very hardy with moderate resistance to fungal diseases. Very flavorful. It's an early to mid season variety so it might work in areas where summers are short.

Strawberries

'Allstar' - June bearing * exceptionally disease resistant * classic strawberry shape * frost resistant * firm consistency * vigorous grower * extra juicy and sweet * very hardy

'Ozark Beauty' - ever-bearing * heavy early summer and fall crops with sporadic fruits throughout summer * especially productive in cool climates * great for containers * large berries * sweet * heaviest bearer of the ever-bearing varieties

'Cardinal' - June Bearing * recommended for warm climate gardens * disease resistant * extra large, very sweet berries

USDA ZONE 9a-10a AZ ZONE 5


click here to

Locate your zone Plant descriptions

About Me

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Donetta
I am a friend of God, Making a home as a devoted Wife of 34+ yrs. Thriving as a grateful former homeschooling Mother of two Wonderful Internationally Adopted Special Needs kids.I love seeing the lives of people become full. As an artist I dabble in color where it sits best on the canvas of my life. It is choice. Life as a matter of respect and passion for all things living. CVID diagnosed for five years now.
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The foolish man Seeks happiness In the distance; The wise man Grows it Under his feet. James Oppenheim

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