DSC06058

The eggplant isn’t the only one to be producing blossoms a little late.  Remember I mentioned that we were nearly despairing of seeing a Costoluto Genovese ripen, and that I suspected these Italian heirlooms despised our hot & humid Southern summer?

Well, we’ve now had about a dozen of them.  They were not as spectacular as advertised — or perhaps not as spectacular as I’d been building them up to be in my imagination, all through the long, hot months.  They were also much smaller than I’d envisioned, which would have been fine if there were lots and lots of them.  To make some spaghetti sauce from these tomatoes alone, I’d have had to grow about 40 plants — of just Costoluto Genovese.

Although I must admit, I still love their scalloped, girly shape.  I took some lovely photos of them, used as the base for a platter of Caprese Salad, and I’ll probably share that during the dull winter months when me and all my gardening pals are obsessing over the garden catalogs.  Just to remind us all to buy extra basil seed… and if you’re in a more northerly clime, maybe to try out the Costoluto Genovese where it might feel more at home.

More proof, if any were needed, that this plant would do well in more chilly temps, in the above photo.  All of my Costoluto plants have started putting out masses of new blooms… now, when it’s impossible they would ripen before first frost.

I do plan to take the advice I found earlier this summer over at a blog called Your Small Kitchen Garden and pull all the green tomatoes when it starts getting cold, bring them inside and see if they will ripen for me.  Daniel contends that the much advertised “vine-ripened” taste is basically a fat marketing lie, and I enjoyed reading his article — even if, when there was still sun, I continued to ripen my tomatoes to red alert level outside, on the plants.  (And I’m still doing so, even if our night temperatures have plunged into the 60s.)

Part of that stubborn resistance, I suspect, is my underlying philosophy of gardening rearing its head.  Or what I’ve got to substitute for one so far.  Anyway, I’m too inexperienced to have a fully developed philosophy yet.  But what I do have is a short list of How Gardening Works For Me that goes something like this:

1) Observe the way it happens in the natural world without my input.

2) Get all joyful and mystical and spend hours in blissful, enlightened contemplation as a result of Number 1.

3) Come back to earth briefly and copy Nature’s processes as closely as I can as I do the “work.”

4) Interject myself as little as possible — so there’s less “work” and so I don’t waste time reinventing the trowel, which seems to me an insulting way to treat Mother Nature.  Also, so I’ll have more time for Numbers 1 and 2 on this list.

5) If my garden needs serious intervention to make something happen that should be automatic (i.e., attracting pollinators), go back to 1 and repeat.

Yeah, that sounds about right.

(By the way, in case you haven’t guessed, this is Yellow in my series of unofficial responses to Capturing Beauty‘s Rainbow challenge.  There was a lot to choose from.  Yellow is actually a really common flower color in the Victory garden.  Vegetables and herbs often bloom yellow.  It must be a succesful evolutionary strategy.  Just a little information garnered from following #1 on my list above.)

DSC04110

I’ve been very frustrated with my writing progress lately.  I feel I need to find my feet again, get back to a disciplined schedule, work diligently in the direction of my goals and dreams.   A desire to return to a small, doable, steady, daily habit of writing is part of the motivation behind this weblog.

I could do worse than to take a lesson from the cucumbers.

This is a portrait of a tenacious tendril of Lemon Cucumber.  Way back in May when I planted these seeds, I determined that I would not trellis this variety, as this classic American heirloom produces small, pale yellow, oval fruit.  (“Rather like a tennis ball,” one gardening catalog put it, and I thought, “Hey, what about like a lemon?”  Ahem.)  Anyway, the little lemons don’t need to hang vertically to develop their best shape, unlike many varieties of cuke — and who wants the extra work of building a trellis that isn’t even needed?

My decision to let them roam free had some unintended consequences.  These vines are over 10 feet long now, and instead of snaking gracefully between the eggplant and tomato rows, as I anticipated, they first artfully draped themselves over the basil plants and strayed into my walking path and then, when redirected, decided to storm the tomato cages.  And they never appeared to move.  They did it millimeter by millimeter, one moment at a time.

First, a long, straight tendril grows outward from the vine, reaching, reaching.  If it finds nothing, it shrivels up on the vine to give place to a more successful shoot.  But if the newborn tendril touches a support — in fact, if it touches anything at all, if it merely brushes against a seemingly solid object when the breeze blows (like my skirt, for instance), it will begin to curl sinuously.  The next time the vine sways near the object of its desire, it will grab on with the end of its new loop or hook-like curl, if such a feat is at all possible.  It doesn’t even need to get a very strong hold.  Just an initial contact.  And then it will start reeling itself in, spiraling for as long as it takes, coiling that long tendril until the vine is firmly anchored.

Whenever the tendril has found a way to climb, it will not let go, even if that means crushing a hapless tomato leaf in its spring-like vise.  And in this way, the vine will get wherever it wants to go.

Related Posts with Thumbnails

Tags

wonder(5) winter(6) weather patterns of autumn(5) vines(5) vine(6) victory garden(31) the Victory Garden(11) The Four(5) sunlight(8) sunflower(5) spring(9) South Carolina Botanical garden(13) snow(6) seed saving(6) seeds(7) seed leaves(5) seasonal changes(6) saving seed(8) pollen(6) photography(4) perspective(5) paying attention(4) patience(5) parsley(4) organic gardening(36) organic garden(12) okra(6) National Breast Cancer Awareness Month(6) nasturtium(9) mystery(4) Mother Nature(4) Morning Glory Grandpa Ott(6) morning glory(9) morning glories(4) Love(8) Louisiana Purple-podded Pole Bean(4) living in the moment(5) lettuce seedlings(4) Leo Chapo(4) kitchen garden(29) joy(10) Ipomoea batatas 'Black Heart'(4) Ipomoea batatas(4) Ichiban eggplant(4) hummingbird(5) heritage(5) Herbs(5) heirloom vegetable(6) heirloom tomatoes(4) heirloom tomato(5) heirloom seed(5) heirloom okra(4) heirloom morning glory(7) heavy rain(4) heart(4) harvest(4) half-runner beans(11) growing heirloom vegetables(7) growing heirloom tomatoes(9) gratitude(14) gardening through the seasons(5) gardening for hummingbirds(4) garden(8) Foliage(5) Focus 2010(16) focus(7) Flowers(6) flowering vines(5) flowering vine(7) flower(4) Fife Creek Cowhorn okra(4) family heirloom seed(4) family heirloom(4) eggplant(4) easy to grow(5) drought(4) cucumber(4) crookneck squash(5) Cracoviensis(4) Costoluto Genovese(4) cosmos(5) compost pile(4) Christina Martin(5) Cherokee Purple(7) changing seasons(4) cardinal climber vine(17) cardinal climber(12) Capturing Beauty's Rainbow Challenge(18) cabbage transplants(5) bumblebee(7) breast cancer awareness(4) breast cancer(4) blossom(7) bee(9) Beauty(90) basil(5) awareness(4) autumn in the garden(6) autumn color(5) autumn(4)
© 2013 The Enchanted Earth Suffusion WordPress theme by Sayontan Sinha
Rss Feed Tweeter button Facebook button Reddit button Delicious button Digg button Stumbleupon button