Deluxe Spray Bottle

Spray Bottle

I needed a spray bottle for the garden a few months ago, so I headed out to the store expecting to come back with the traditional trigger spray model for about €2.  While the store sold what I was after, I ended up buying what you see above for about €15.  It’s a bit on the flimsy side, and can be a challenge to get all the pieces screwed together without leaks, but mostly I’m pretty happy with it.

I suppose now I should go on to talk about how they didn’t have these when I was a kid.  In the same way a few years ago toy stores started selling water squirt guns unlike what had been around before, this spray bottle is made the same way.  Instead of depending on trigger action to spray the water out, you pump the handle to build up pressure in the bottle.  You can then use this pressure to spray the contents of the bottle via the wand.

I guess my bottle holds about four or five liters (larger versions are available), and if I’m trying to spray as quickly as possible the bottle can be emptied in about three or four minutes.  If the nozzle is set on more of a spray rather than mist, it has a range of about three meters, making it possible to spray small trees or in far corners of the garden.  Spraying an entire bottle of liquid takes about six or seven pumps of the handle.

Since I collect rainwater as my only source of water, I don’t have the luxury of a hose under pressure I can use for cleaning or other purposes.  This spray bottle is the only thing like it I have, and for many things it works pretty well.  For example, I used it to clean and disinfect the inside of my greenhouse and to clean the algae deposits between the glass layers.  It wasn’t perfect, but it worked pretty well cleaning the places I couldn’t clean with just a bucket alone.  I guess I wouldn’t necessarily want to clean a car with it, or anything else that really needs a high volume of water, but it’s well suited for smaller cleaning jobs.

Five Liters of Fish

Fish-Mix

Fish mix, or fish emulsion, is a type of organic fertilizer.  There are a number of other fertilizers on the market like kelp mix and others, which are probably very similar in nature and quality as fish mix.

In several previous posts I mentioned using fertilizer in your garden is generally not a good idea.  The only time you should use fertilizer is if you know for some reason you have a specific problem that needs to be addressed, for example you have had your soil tested.  It happens often that someone asks me about a problem in their garden, that in the end turns out to be because they used fresh manure or too much fertilizer.

Often gardeners wind up using fertilizer in their gardens because they buy and use it once.  For example, they are growing tomatoes and come across a box of tomato fertilizer on the shelf of the garden center.  After this, they have no idea if the fertilizer helped or not, but figure they should just keep using it because after all it can’t hurt, right?  It’s really easy after a few years of adding fertilizer because you are afraid not to, to find yourself with too much fertilizer in your garden that you can’t easily get rid of.

It’s not the purpose of this post to recommend that you go out and use fish mix!  If your garden doesn’t need it, it won’t help in any way and it’s best avoided.  I generally take the view that it’s best to avoid all unnecessary inputs into your garden.

In the last few weeks I’ve been using fish mix in my garden, because I did a soil test a few months ago that showed my soil was low on nitrogen and I noticed several plants were showing signs of nitrogen deficiency.  I view this as a temporary measure until I have a chance to use other methods to improve my nitrogen levels.

Not Too Strong

One of the nice things about this kind of fertilizer is it’s not too strong.  It’s very unlikely to burn the roots of your plants or cause much other damage, as long as you use moderation and common sense.  As most of you are familiar with, chemical fertilizer often comes with an NPK rating like 10-5-10, that tells you what the composition of the fertilizer is.  In the case of fish mix, it has an NPK rating of about 1-1-1.

Because it’s not too strong, it’s reasonably well suited to just being used at will.  It’s not very critical what time of the year you apply it, and as long as you don’t use it more than about once a week you probably won’t over-fertilize your plants.  Again, with common sense, in all it’s a pretty foolproof fertilizer.

Stronger fertilizers typically have to be applied according to specific label instructions, at specific times of the year.

Foliar Feeding

It’s most commonly applied to the garden with a spray bottle, after being diluted significantly with water.  In this way, you can walk around the garden and spray some on those plants you want to fertilize.  You can also use an ordinary watering can instead of a spray bottle.  I normally use a ratio of a few tablespoons fish mix per liter of water.

Many plants can absorb food through their leaves, for example tomatoes and related plants, garlic and onions.  Other plants as well.  Plants that do this can absorb fish mix through their leaves very quickly, often within minutes, and it can be a very effective way to fertilize them,

Caveats

It’s suitable for outdoor use only!

This product is liquefied fish, and nothing else.  Probably not the nicest parts of the fish at that.  It stinks, and it’s very difficult to get the smell off your hands or clothing.  You will have the attention of your cats when you are done working in the garden.

This product attracts flies.

Don’t use it too close to harvest, because it can give your fruits and vegetables a fishy taste.

It’s kind of expensive.  For 5 liters I paid about €35.  Although 5 liters will probably last more than a year, maybe even two years, and I have a big garden.

Black Sea Man Tomato

What do you do when you can’t think of anything else to post about?  Make a post about an heirloom tomato!

This is my first full sized tomato to get ripe.  This is a really nice Russian tomato.  It’s mahogany red/brown with green shoulders on top:

Black Sea Man Tomato

Towards the bottom the color changes to a lighter pink/brown:

Black Sea Man Tomato

In the middle brown, red and green:

Black Sea Man Tomato

The taste is really nice and fresh.  It’s a little on the sweet side.

This is a determinate type tomato, meaning it gives it’s entire harvest within a short period of time.  I have planted several of these in the middle of my other greenhouse tomatoes, with the intention of shortly pulling them out and giving the other plants more space.

Beans and Tomatoes

Beans and Tomatoes

Here are my first few tomatoes and beans of the season.

The three brown tomatoes are brown berry.  The yellow one is Blondkopfchen.  The tiny red one is Matt’s Wild Cherry.  All were grown in my greenhouse except Matt’s Wild Cherry, which is from my roof.

The beans are Dog bean.  It’s a bush variety, which are usually a little earlier than pole beans.  The Dog bean is a multi-purpose bean, good green as well as dried.   This post has a picture of what the beans look like dry, and they are similar to kidney beans.  Several other bloggers grew this bean before, or are growing it now:  Rebsie, Ian and Gintoino.  I’ve given the seeds to some other people too, so maybe they will post about it when they grow it too.  The Dog bean is probably from Croatia, from the Dalmatian coast.  This bean was selectively bread, then renamed, from a bean originally called the Dalmation bean and there was probably a misunderstanding over what the name really meant.

Update 7 July:

We had the dog beans for dinner last night, and they were really good!  In part I’m sure because they were very fresh.  The flavor was a very intense and delicious.  The texture was also really nice, crispy and chewy.  I don’t think we’ve tasted the green beans of this variety before.

Bolting Lettuce

Bolting Lettuce

I think bolting lettuce looks funny.  This is a romaine (or cos) variety, and you can see the flower stalk alone is about twice the size of the head of lettuce itself.  I’m growing this on my roof this year to save seeds.

While I’ve grown lettuce off and on for several years, last year was the first I tried to save seeds from it.  I failed, and the reason was I didn’t expect the plants to get so large and I used a container that was too small.  When you see this nice head of lettuce that you can hold in your hands, you don’t expect the flower stalk to get nearly as tall as you are!

The speed in which the flower stalk appeared was also a bit surprising.  This one took about 2 days to develop, whereas the rest of the head of lettuce was months in the coming.

I’m also letting some lettuce go to seed in the garden, but this one I’m growing on my roof so I can watch it more carefully and also because the seeds have dandelion like parachutes, and I want to be prepared to get them in time in case this is an issue.

Lettuce in the home garden has been getting a lot more attention lately.  My friend Lieven has been breeding lettuce for the last few years, and the Seed Savers Exchange is also offering an ever increasing variety.  Its really pretty easy to grow, and if you are prepared for the size not difficult to save seeds from either.