THIS summer, the view out to our balcony now looks like this:
Let's have a little tour, okay?
On the left we have the herb table.
Next to the herbs grow the beans.
They too appear to have ambitions of taking over the world, starting next Tuesday. We had to keep lashing on more and more poles to the balcony for them to climb, and now they have truly run out of space and are climbing each other. I think our upstairs neighbours will shortly be very surprised.
Next come the stunt tomatoes.
I call them my stunt tomatoes because they are both stunted, and yet performing feats of tomato production that defy the odds. Compare these to...
...the zombie tomato in the corner:
I do not understand this plant. It is a survivor from last year that kept producing tomatoes all through winter while we were waiting for it to hurry up and die already so we could reuse the pot. We didn't water it for a full six months, yet it did not die.
Its extra year of growth time means it has become bigger and scarier than any tomato plant I have ever seen. I can't reach the top of it even on tiptoes. Again I am forced to wonder what it will do now it has run out of balcony. It also has an unusual growth pattern of spurting up 30 or 40 cm overnight, accompanied by a corresponding die-off of leaves around the bottom. You can see that the leaves are now dead up to around the halfway mark, although the dry brown sticks down are still indomitably sprouting tomatoes.
So all in all I am ridiculously happy with our balcony garden this year. Not only is it pretty and shady (and allergy-inducing), but it is feeding us. We pick the tomatoes and beans every second day, and the container below shows an average haul:
This might be laughable to anyone with a garden or a large family, but it is more than enough for the two of us, and more than my balcony has ever produced in the past.
And now if you'll excuse me, I need to go and quarantine my coriander.
Cilantro, is the word you're looking for.
ReplyDeleteImpressive tomatoes. I grew some for the first time last summer and we got, oh, maybe 15 total! The zombie plant is scary though.
Wow! That has me completely inspired to have a container garden when it gets warm.
ReplyDeleteWow, so cool!
ReplyDeleteHave you seen the Little Shop of Horrors? I think your scary tomato plant might be headed there :)
Regular tomato plants like to be pinched off... so they put more energy toward fruit...
ReplyDeleteWe call a spice coriander, but it isn't usually grown in gardens -- I supect Cath is right, it is probably what we cal cilantro -- we use it in salsa and other stuff. Don't feel bad about it not going well, it seems to only have one season in it --
Nice garden! Cilantro and coriander are the same plant, just one is used for seeds. Cilantro always goes to seed very quickly. Very regular watering and cool weather help slow it down.
ReplyDeleteThat's right: cilantro. I think you guys use different names for seed vs leaves, but we call both coriander. (Well, coriander is the leaves, but the seeds are called coriander seeds.)
ReplyDeleteCongratulations on the garden!
ReplyDeleteYou should keep the pot you had the coriander/cilantro in, although it might be dead, it will rise again (ha ha!). Our coriander is seeding at the moment and given a few months it'll be back.
I would have, Grace, but it was seriously infested with aphids and caterpillars. I decided it was better off somewhere else. Like the bin.
ReplyDeleteClearly you need this:
ReplyDeletehttp://icanhascheezburger.com/2009/01/06/funny-pictures-helps-ur-plants-grow/
That is a very impressive balcony garden!
ReplyDeleteVery impressive! I think I might have to try growing something now too!
ReplyDelete