I had a big double row of zinnias growing on the last row of the garden before the sugar cane. For months it gave us beautiful technicolor blooms. Tricia has been picking bouquets and putting them in a vase in the kitchen. It was my first trial in planting flowers in the vegetable garden. Last year I planted zinnias right outside the garden in the holes of some cinder blocks that line the ditch that borders the garden. They did nicely and at the end of the season, I saved the flower heads for seed. I really didn't know how well they would germinate, but Good Golly, Miss Molly, I think every last seed grew. I think I'll plant them again next year.
Well, last week, in one of the earliest freezes I can remember, temperatures dipped into the mid 20's and zapped the zinnias. In a stunning before and after shot, you can compare the photo above with the same flowers a day after the deep freeze hit. From delightful to dull in a very short time.
But the flowers weren't the only thing that the freeze claimed. It also obliterated our okra. We have harvested loads and loads of okra this year. We ate it very often and have some frozen for gumbos, too. It produced for months and was still producing until the north wind freeze dried it. Here is a photo of the last two plants left standing before I chopped them down.
We often talk about planting seeds in the garden. Once a plant runs its course, what do you do. I want to talk about that briefly. In the past I would just uproot the dead or dying plants and toss them in the compost pile. That's not a bad thing to do, but there is a better alternative. Over the years I started to leave the root system intact.
Okra grows into a large plant. Some of the okra plants were approaching three inches across at the base of the plant! Instead of pulling the plant up, I use a cheap but effective pruning saw I bought for next to nothing at Harbor Freight. I saw the plant top off right above ground level. Once I'm done, you can't even tell a plant was even there.
So what does that gain me? A lot. The roots will quickly rot and the decomposed organic matter will amend the garden soil. It opens up passageways for rain water and air flow. The tunnels that the roots opened will help earthworms as they move throughout the soil and finally the roots will feed soil microbes. Overall, it is a win-win to leave the roots in the soil.
The okra plants themselves are another story. Some of them were ten feet tall. After I chopped them down, I piled them in the back of the garden. I'll cover them with piles of wood chips mixed with some cow poop and allow them to decompose for a year or so.
Once things in the garden were vibrant with a multitude of colors from bright zinnias to the green okra. Now, everything is dull and drab and dead. Not for long, though. The sugar snap peas are growing and are beginning to trellis. Soon they'll be blooming and there will be more color in the garden.
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