thefourthvine: Two people fucking, rearview: sex is the universal fandom. (Default)
Keep Hoping Machine Running ([personal profile] thefourthvine) wrote2010-06-16 10:29 pm
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Green Terror Update

The last time I posted about my garden, all of you were all doom and gloom and WOE BETIDE YOU, NAÏVE GARDENER about my zucchini plants. And you were absolutely right. They are very productive.

But not one of you said anything about the green beans, and I'm not sure I'll ever be able to trust you again. Because, okay. I went out there one day a week and a half ago and saw a baby bean on my green bean plants. Exciting! I grabbed the camera to take a picture (shut UP, it was my own very first baby bean that I grew all myself from a SEED), and I did, and then I looked slightly up and it was like one of those horror movie moments, where the camera pans back and you realize OH MY GOD THEY'RE EVERYWHERE IT'S TOO LATE TO RUN.

They were, in fact, everywhere. Not baby beans, but full-grown beans. My green bean plants, grown by me from seeds selected by the earthling, have turned into a green bean factory. They produce a pound or two of green beans every two to three days, and if I should miss three days in a row of picking, they get very, very ugly. Even with diligent (or as diligent as possible; I screwed up the spacing there, too, so it's very hard to get anywhere near the green beans now, especially with the Lurking Squashy Threat I'll get into later) picking, I miss them, and come back to find a giant bean lurking somewhere. And, true fact: I can search through all the plants, pick all the beans I can find, and come back half an hour later and get another handful of beans. Either they're wily or they're scary productive. I'm guessing both.

(Having a garden, by the way, is like leveling up on a CSA; you'd better have a lot of recipes for the things you plant, my friend, because otherwise you will never want to see them ever again. You would not believe the things I have done with green beans lately. Or, okay, you would - it isn't like I cured the common cold with them, or built a scale model of the Empire State Building, but, still. I have a lot of new recipes, is what I'm saying.)

I'm almost afraid to tell you about the other garden development, because - look. I did not know any better, okay? I am innocent in this. The earthling wanted a pumpkin kit. I got one. I planted ONE pumpkin plant. And there were all these warnings on the kit about how it was not a toy and not to be used unsupervised, but there was no warning anywhere about the seed's unfulfilled dreams of starring in a SciFi original movie called The Electric Pumpkin Apocalypse.

Unfortunately, that movie is now taking place in our backyard. I am expecting Misha Collins and David Hewlett to show up in suspiciously clean lab coats at any moment, because - okay. About two weeks ago, Best Beloved and I were surveying the pumpkin plant - only a little fearfully, because we did not know then what we know now - and noticed that it had overrun the little brick borders of the garden plot and started to creep across the part that's still lawn.

"Think it'll make the walkway by the end of the summer?" I asked Best Beloved.

"Maybe," she said, surveying the six feet or so it still had to cover. "Maybe."

It's on the walkway now. In the other direction, it is almost over the fence to the neighbor's yard, and god only knows what they have over there that it could eat to grow stronger. Worse, okay, I planted this garden in the place that used to have a fishpond, right? Well, the previous owners had a sort of waterfall thing in the pond. For which they had to run electricity out to the back wall. The pumpkin plant is now intimately entwined with the electric outlet and the wiring. Very. Intimately. There are little green tendrils prying into the covered box.

Obviously, the major concern is that our pumpkin plant has already acquired superpowers. (I guess the bright side is that we may not need candles to light up our jack-o-lanterns on Halloween.)

Really, the zucchini-tomato mass, while still terrifying, is starting to look tame in comparison. Because, okay, yes, it is covered in baby green tomatoes, and I am frantically harvesting zucchini as soon as I find them, often sustaining moderate injuries to do so (screw shark armor; they need to make squash armor), but at least those plants are in a raised bed. They are contained. The pumpkin (and the green beans, for that matter) can go anywhere.

There are suspicious noises from the backyard at night, now. Thumps and slithers. I - I am very scared.

This may be how the world ends, people.




The earthling contemplates the pumpkin plant. Compare the size of the two-year-old to the size of the pumpkin leaves. Also note that this is after Best Beloved, at no small hazard to her person, hacked off half the plant.



The future site of the zucchini-tomato mass, on 4/10. Yes, I am well aware that I bungled the spacing, here. I am learning. Also, so far, living.



The zucchini-tomato mass, two months after planting. You see that little happy tag indicating what the plants are, in the picture above? Yeah, it's gone. The zucchini ate it. Which is a pity, because now I'd really like to know. Also note the trellises, helplessly adrift on the mass of greenery.
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[personal profile] sothcweden 2010-06-17 08:13 pm (UTC)(link)
*wheezes with laughter* I'm starting to think you could inject humor into a piece about paint drying.
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[personal profile] saraht 2010-06-19 03:36 pm (UTC)(link)
Didn't you ever watch It's the Great Pumpkin, Charlie Brown? That depiction of a pumpkin patch was no exaggeration!!!
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[personal profile] afrikate 2010-06-19 04:42 pm (UTC)(link)
Fun fact: In Lesotho, one of the HIV prevention posters/billboards/etc we had up said "don't be a pumpkin." (There were pictures too.) In the local culture, women are compared to cabbage (they stay in one place when they grow) and men are compared to pumpkins. Your garden is exhibit a of the pumpkin phenomenon. Anyway, the goal is to get everyone to stay in their own garden, which is difficult because as the Minister of Health said, "Women in Lesotho are pumpkins too!"

Vegetable gardens are good for sex ed everywhere. :)
threerings: (icecube-ak)

[personal profile] threerings 2010-06-19 04:56 pm (UTC)(link)
And here I am thrilled that I have one little jalapeno and one start of one baby tomato. What are you feeding these things? The blood of infants?

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[personal profile] threerings 2010-06-19 04:58 pm (UTC)(link)
Oh, and I planted green beans one year and the total production of several plants were three beans. We had three bean salad.
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[personal profile] seperis 2010-06-27 09:25 pm (UTC)(link)
I forgot to mention this; when I was a kid, we lived in the country and unfortunately, this came with enough land for a truly ambitious garden. I still remember, vividly, the Summer of Green Bean Casserole (With Cheese) every night forever (and I do mean forever) and squash like the world was ending and the Unexpected Pumpkin We Drove a Lawnmower Over (so apparently that plant wasn't squash but hiding giant pumpkins in some kind of timespace fold not visible until the riding lawnmower is suddenly weirdly angled in the air).

We had a forest of dill plants. Every year. Could not get rid of them. They grew up in these five foot tall forests from my grandmother's canning days. People speak of bamboo never going away; dill is worse. It tricks you. It vanishes for a year while you are making a garden, then the next year, you have to schedule explroations for your squash in Dill Forest.

[identity profile] dramaturgca.livejournal.com 2010-06-17 05:44 am (UTC)(link)
Have you considered that you may have accidentally purchased a pumpkin coach kit?

(Might you, perchance, be going to the aquarium next Thurday afternoon?)

[identity profile] thefourthvine.livejournal.com 2010-06-17 06:25 am (UTC)(link)
I would like to believe that. I really would, because my current theory is along the lines of VAMPIRE PUMPKINS or maybe they aren't really pumpkins and this the first step of the alien takeover or, you know, things of that ilk.

With a pumpkin coach, my biggest problem would be finding a coachman's uniform to fit my sister's cat. (He eats at, um, several houses. He is a very large cat. You could make two good-sized cats out of him, in fact.)

I have no idea! By next week we could be deeply traumatized by our VERY FIRST DAY OF MOVING ON OH NOES. But maybe! Are you going?

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[identity profile] laughingacademy.livejournal.com 2010-06-17 05:48 am (UTC)(link)
"I am expecting Misha Collins and David Hewlett to show up in suspiciously clean lab coats at any moment"

I'm tempted to say it would be worth it, and the plot isn't any goofier than what they've actually appeared in. (Did you see Stonehenge Apocalypse?)

[identity profile] thefourthvine.livejournal.com 2010-06-17 06:26 am (UTC)(link)
I didn't see it, but [livejournal.com profile] malnpudl provided me with a summary that made me laugh helplessly, and also kind of shorted out my brain a little.

I tell you what, though: if Misha Collins and David Hewlett do show up to wrangle my pumpkins, I am going to be opening a fannish auction immediately. ("We have a guest room with a view of the garden WHERE MISHA COLLINS AND DAVID HEWLETT are currently engaging in unrealistic sciency babble! What am I offered?")

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[personal profile] luminosity 2010-06-17 05:51 am (UTC)(link)
Ah, brings back so many memories! My husband and I sharecropped with another couple when we went back to school. We had two deep-bed gardens--one was 8x12' and the other was 4x12'. We grew tomatoes, zucchinis, sweet corn, green beans, broccoli and watermelons. We fed 12 families with the produce from those two beds, not the least of which were the green beans (think Triffids) and the watermelons. We planted four watermelon vines, considering how much we all loved them, right? Those four vines took up the entire half-acre backyard and tried to tear the back fence down to get into our neighbors' yards. We stopped counting at 400 melons.

I spent the summer learning how to can everything, how to make six different types of pickles, zucchini salad, zucchini chips, zucchini bread. Yes, it was an exciting time! We had a volunteer that came up like a zombie out of the (dormant) compost heap in the late spring. It turned out to be a cantaloupe vine. AWESOME! Our only failure was broccoli, and I remember looking at my friend Terry and mouthing "Thank God" when they didn't all produce.

[identity profile] thefourthvine.livejournal.com 2010-06-17 06:28 am (UTC)(link)
Oh god. I planted two watermelons, but I planted them a little late, so I was thinking I wouldn't get any actual melons. You mean there's the possibility of MORE horror?

Also, canning. Hmmm. Maybe I should learn how to do that.

[identity profile] azewewish.livejournal.com 2010-06-17 05:57 am (UTC)(link)
I hope that when the SciFi (or SyFy or whatever spelling they're using this week) channel casts you & Best Beloved for their movie about The Pumpkin Patch That Ate The West Coast that they cast two hot chicks. And that hopefully there's an explosion or two. (But just make sure that whoever is playing you guys wears armor, because pumpkin insides are messy. And stringy. And filled with seeds that could poke your eyes out.)

[identity profile] thefourthvine.livejournal.com 2010-06-17 02:06 pm (UTC)(link)
Knowing the rose-by-any-other-name channel, they'll cast us with two hot guys. But explosions seem like a guarantee, unless it's too expensive.

And, seriously, why is there not gardening armor? I WOULD BUY SOME.
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[personal profile] minim_calibre 2010-06-17 06:18 am (UTC)(link)
You are your own cheap horror movie! It's awesome!

Have you roasted the green beans?

[identity profile] thefourthvine.livejournal.com 2010-06-17 02:17 pm (UTC)(link)
Oh my god no! It never occurred to me to roast them, even though my general vegetable default is to roast. Any suggestions for recipes?

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[identity profile] opheliastorn.livejournal.com 2010-06-17 06:20 am (UTC)(link)
Ah, so much garden envy :( We need glasshouses down here to get that sort of growth!

[identity profile] thefourthvine.livejournal.com 2010-06-17 02:21 pm (UTC)(link)
But - you're in New Zealand, right? It always looks very green in photos! I just sort of assumed it was gardening heaven. (And, yes, I realize this is probably the same sort of stupid foreigner thing as saying, "Oh, you're from New Zealand? Do you know my friend Bob?" I just - I had beliefs about NZ!)

I would not want to have to have a glasshouse, but at least with those, you have a chance to contain your squash.

[identity profile] cpt-untouchable.livejournal.com 2010-06-17 06:35 am (UTC)(link)
Okay, VERY IMPORTANT QUESTION: have you fed the plants blood?

If Yes: do you hear a baritone calling you 'Seymour'?

[identity profile] thefourthvine.livejournal.com 2010-06-17 02:23 pm (UTC)(link)
I was about to say no, no blood, and then I realized maybe I HAVE. Because the thing is, squash have these long pointy thorny bits, and there's no way to prune them or harvest them without bleeding a little.

...I am even more scared now.

best solution:

[identity profile] rattlecatcher.livejournal.com 2010-06-17 06:51 am (UTC)(link)
Sell the house, move to Canada, change your names.

Hopefully by the time the pumpkins, beans and zucchini get to the border, a cold snap will have set in and you and most of the Canadians will survive. We won't, of course, and I hope you'll feel guilty. But really, it's too late for blame or non-violence, just run. Now.

Re: best solution:

[identity profile] thefourthvine.livejournal.com 2010-06-17 02:25 pm (UTC)(link)
I don't think Canada grants asylum to fleeing gardeners. But it SHOULD.

Also, probably it would have been an idea not to share a continent with me during my attempts at gardening. I realize you couldn't know! But I didn't, either. *eyes garden warily*

[identity profile] sheldrake.livejournal.com 2010-06-17 07:44 am (UTC)(link)
A local pub put some pumpkin seeds through my door. I daren't even open the packet.

[identity profile] thefourthvine.livejournal.com 2010-06-17 02:26 pm (UTC)(link)
I would advise you to burn the packet, and also maybe the pub.

(Seriously, pumpkin seeds? Why? I wouldn't have thought they were a very British thing.)

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[identity profile] viridian.livejournal.com 2010-06-17 07:44 am (UTC)(link)
Hi! You seem interesting & we have several LJ friends in common. Mind if I friend you?

[identity profile] thefourthvine.livejournal.com 2010-06-17 02:27 pm (UTC)(link)
Thank you! I am delighted to be friended. Hi!
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[identity profile] http://users.livejournal.com/_bounce_/ 2010-06-17 08:04 am (UTC)(link)
I'd forgotten about the beans. We were drowned in them this year.

[identity profile] thefourthvine.livejournal.com 2010-06-17 02:28 pm (UTC)(link)
Why don't the seed packets come with WARNINGS? It's amazing how completely you can end up buried in beans.

[identity profile] jenlev.livejournal.com 2010-06-17 10:37 am (UTC)(link)
Heh heh he. OK, I'm only laughing because although I don't have a garden in my condo....I've had them in the past. And seriously, they can quite take over.

I know this is a strange thing to say, but I'm of the belief that there's no such thing as too much zucchini. Or tomatoes. But the electric kool-aid-pumpkin-machine sounds scary to say the least.

[identity profile] thefourthvine.livejournal.com 2010-06-17 02:38 pm (UTC)(link)
So far, we haven't had too many zucchini. And it's hard for me to imagine too many tomatoes - this family basically runs on tomatoes. So I tentatively agree with you.

And there can be no question about the scariness of the pumpkin, of course.

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[identity profile] snailbones.livejournal.com 2010-06-17 11:15 am (UTC)(link)


Ah well, at least if you go very quiet we'll have a good idea of what ate you happened.

[identity profile] thefourthvine.livejournal.com 2010-06-17 02:40 pm (UTC)(link)
This is a large part of the reason why I am documenting this! (The rest of the reason is so that I can serve as a warning to others. It is my primary function.)

[identity profile] soapdemon.livejournal.com 2010-06-17 11:28 am (UTC)(link)
There is an actual factual cookbook called "Too Many Tomatoes, Squash, Beans, and Other Good Things: A Cookbook for When Your Garden Explodes." (ISBN:9780060968571)
It was always on our kitchen bookshelf and I never understood how you could have too many tomatoes...until I did, and wept with the knowledge.

[identity profile] thefourthvine.livejournal.com 2010-06-17 02:43 pm (UTC)(link)
I am seriously tempted to buy that book, I tell you what.

Also, I am assuming we will not have Too Many Tomato problems this year, because we are very enthusiastic tomato-eaters, but I did plant eleven plants because I thought most of them would die. None of them has died yet.

Hmmm.

[identity profile] delurker.livejournal.com 2010-06-17 11:54 am (UTC)(link)
One of my coworkers told me that zucchini can ripen by moonlight. Make of that what you will.

Also, I am consumed with garden envy! All my vegetables are grown in pots, and my carrots... well. I think the whole crop put together came to about an eighth of a standard carrot? If I'm generous? Alas!

Current experiment: cauliflower. So far it doesn't seem to be doing anything, but I think it's sulking because I put it in with the chilli plant (actually a success!). In my defence, I was told that the chilli plant would die off in winter, which... well. The chilli plant apparently missed that memo, and I don't feel inclined to pass it on since I like my chillis. So the cauliflower did not wind up being the sole inhabitant, and I think it is sulking.

[identity profile] thefourthvine.livejournal.com 2010-06-17 02:45 pm (UTC)(link)
Ooo, pots! Do you use self-watering containers? I have been hearing, or rather reading, good things about them.

And I have not made any attempt to grow cauliflower. Carrots I do plan to grow, but they will have to wait a bit, as it's really too hot and sunny for them here during the summer.

Also, my chili plant is languishing. If only you lived on the same continent as we do, we could crop share.

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[identity profile] vickita.livejournal.com 2010-06-17 11:56 am (UTC)(link)
Clearly you need to set yourself up with your own little roadside produce stand. That's what my dad did, back in his gardening days. We're talking here about a man whose "garden" was half an acre on my uncle's farm, just for fun. OMG, he would supply his entire little town with produce; the only problem was that *they* all had gardens, too.

[identity profile] thefourthvine.livejournal.com 2010-06-17 02:47 pm (UTC)(link)
Probably a roadside produce stand is illegal in my area. I'd have to buy space at the farmer's market, and I don't think it will get THAT bad.

I mean hope. I hope it won't get that bad.

Also, wow, I am impressed with your father. Just my tiny plot is enough to scare the pants off me.

(Anonymous) 2010-06-17 11:57 am (UTC)(link)
Whatever you do, don't plant anything from the mint family. Talk about an unkillable zombie plant!

Also, I recommend making dilly beans. If you like dill, that is.

[identity profile] thefourthvine.livejournal.com 2010-06-17 02:48 pm (UTC)(link)
Um. Too late, with respect to the mint, as I planted some last week. (My brother-in-law has planted TWO mint plants, on the grounds that they use a lot of mint. And they do. Still. Should I worry about them?)

I love dill! But I have no idea what dilly beans are. Perhaps google can enlighten me.

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[identity profile] hannahrorlove.livejournal.com 2010-06-17 12:45 pm (UTC)(link)
I'd say it's about time you invested in some good shears and perhaps a call to the Forest Service. You do prune, right?

...and after a careful rereading of the post, I see that you do, in which case safari jungle-style hacking with machetes might be a decent idea.

And as long as I'm editing this comment, food banks accept donations of fresh produce. So you can harness your powers for good, not evil.
Edited 2010-06-17 14:31 (UTC)

[identity profile] thefourthvine.livejournal.com 2010-06-17 03:00 pm (UTC)(link)
I don't think Best Beloved will let me buy a machete, since I am somewhat famously clumsy. (She already vetoed the flamethrower, on grounds of risk to life and limb.) But, yeah, the pruning shears aren't doing the job, even though we use them every day.

I've looked up the food bank thing, and the closest one to me that accepts garden produce is actually fairly far-off. Still. It may end up being worth the drive. *eyes garden*

[identity profile] lynnmonster.livejournal.com 2010-06-17 12:49 pm (UTC)(link)
I am so jealous of your Green Menace! No CSA for me this year, alas, so I have to go *buy* produce.

Anyway, my 2 favorite green bean recipes are "Sicilian Salad," which I shamelessly stole from the Italian place up the street (cold salad of green beans (cooked in stock for added flavor), olives, tomatoes, bell pepper, red onion, and S&P, dressed with a bit of olive oil & lemon juice) and Italian green beans (sliced half-moon onions & red pepper flakes sauteed in olive oil, with crushed tomatoes, green beans, and salt added & simmered till the beans are tender).

[identity profile] thefourthvine.livejournal.com 2010-06-17 08:17 pm (UTC)(link)
Mmmmmm. But, oh, why no CSA? We ended up giving up ours last year because we had to go to the farmers' market every week anyway for fruits and tomatoes, since no CSA could keep the earthling in those. But I still miss it. *sympathies*

And, mmmm. I make Italian green beans already, but Sicilian Salad is new to me. And tasty sounding.

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