While I was away in Birmingham last week, my garden went absolutely wild. I returned to a trellis covered in bean and gourd vines, runaway tomatoes, and delightfully chaotic cantaloupe. I spent today snapping the tomatoes into supports, applying semi-weekly fertilizer, re-stocking the beer supply in the slug traps, and generally assessing everything. I also put tin foil around the base of all of the vines, a long-overdue protection against vine borers.
I've already spotted tell-tale holes in two vines, and I hope that the vine borers haven't infested everything. The pests destroyed most of my squash vines last year, and they're notoriously hard to fight. Once the flying, adult insect lays its eggs on the vine, the larva hatches and bores into the vine itself, depriving the plant of water until it dies. There is virtually no treatment after the vine has been infected except to slice open the stem, remove the borer, and bury the stem, hoping that it will re-root. I let it go too far last year before realizing and trying to correct the problem, and the majority of my squash plants died. I read this year that wrapping the first
couple of inches of the vines in tin foil will prevent the larva from boring into the vine; I should have wrapped them in late May or early June, so now I can only wait and see which ones have already been affected. Thanks to the tin foil, my garden now looks like it's ready for an alien invasion.
Another delightful surprise was the furry rodent trapped in the bird netting that I had draped over the blueberry bush. Thankfully I didn't have to get rid of it myself, but evidently the birds aren't the only ones responsible for the lack of ripe blueberries every year.
I'm tickled that everything has done so well in my absence, especially after my reduced expectations after the lack of sunlight became apparent. I do have a few more things to contend with: my fig tree leaves are yellowing, there are weird spots on the potato leaves, and my squash and zucchini plants are flowering, but not producing much. Nevertheless, I'm excited to see how things progress!