The status of the garden, with King
Jul. 18th, 2008 08:10 pmThings proceed on the tomato front. A few of the plants are 5-6" tall, and I planted them in the patio garden.
Some tomato plants:

Some more tomato plants:

The patio garden. You can see the tomato plants hanging out the bottom of the planter. They will grow upside-down, which will prevent the sorts of diseases and injuries that result from contact with the ground:

The oregano plant, which has exploded:

King livened up the evening by eating something--by all indications, a major wad of tissue--then walking around the rooms making gulping motions like he was having trouble swallowing. Ran outside as soon as I opened the door and started chomping grass, I assumed to make himself throw up. Phoned the emergency vet office--the woman who answered the phone wouldn't tell me how to make a dog throw up, but advised me to bring him in for a shot. I considered this, but King didn't seem too distressed, so I imposed upon Mickey's vet instead. She confirmed my thought that a piece of tissue had likely gotten caught in his throat, and to just let him eat and drink water to force it down. This worked. All seems well, though I was concerned that the big idiot would hork grass all over the floor.
I was disappointed to learn from Mickey's vet that she has left the local practice. She had a long commute, and there were other reasons, apparently. I thanked her for the way she looked after Mickey, and told her that I would let her know how things worked out.
I am very disappointed. I like the other vets in the practice, but she was very compassionate and helpful during a very rough time.
Some tomato plants:
Some more tomato plants:
The patio garden. You can see the tomato plants hanging out the bottom of the planter. They will grow upside-down, which will prevent the sorts of diseases and injuries that result from contact with the ground:
The oregano plant, which has exploded:
King livened up the evening by eating something--by all indications, a major wad of tissue--then walking around the rooms making gulping motions like he was having trouble swallowing. Ran outside as soon as I opened the door and started chomping grass, I assumed to make himself throw up. Phoned the emergency vet office--the woman who answered the phone wouldn't tell me how to make a dog throw up, but advised me to bring him in for a shot. I considered this, but King didn't seem too distressed, so I imposed upon Mickey's vet instead. She confirmed my thought that a piece of tissue had likely gotten caught in his throat, and to just let him eat and drink water to force it down. This worked. All seems well, though I was concerned that the big idiot would hork grass all over the floor.
I was disappointed to learn from Mickey's vet that she has left the local practice. She had a long commute, and there were other reasons, apparently. I thanked her for the way she looked after Mickey, and told her that I would let her know how things worked out.
I am very disappointed. I like the other vets in the practice, but she was very compassionate and helpful during a very rough time.
no subject
Date: 2008-07-19 01:38 am (UTC)I hope all is well with King.
Adrianne
no subject
Date: 2008-07-19 01:43 am (UTC)The planter weighs a ton--there's water in the base to stabilize it--and even if I could move it, I would have no place inside to put it.
no subject
Date: 2008-07-19 01:56 am (UTC)Average dates the last frost - 30 March to 30 April
Average dates the first frost - 30 September to 30 October
It occurs to me that it would be fairly simple to wrap the planter with an electric blanket in case of threat of frost. I wouldn't need to keep it too warm.
no subject
Date: 2008-07-19 12:38 pm (UTC)Adrianne
no subject
Date: 2008-07-19 03:05 am (UTC)Also hay or straw makes for good insulation to keep things from frosting.
no subject
Date: 2008-07-19 03:11 am (UTC)As luck would have it, I have an entire bale of bedding straw in my garage. I used to use it to fill King's house when he was an outside dog. Now I could probably wrap the patio garden with a sheet of plastic and fill the compartment with straw.
I *will* have tomatoes in October!
no subject
Date: 2008-07-19 03:19 am (UTC)We found that packing hay/straw up around the plants helped in the kind of light frosts we got in San Antonio--the tips of the plants might turn brown, but down below the ground heat kept the lower plants and the fruits safe.
no subject
Date: 2008-07-19 05:01 am (UTC)The electric blanket might still be the way to go.
Tomatoes
Date: 2008-07-20 06:33 pm (UTC)Cynthia
Re: Tomatoes
Date: 2008-07-20 06:49 pm (UTC)Do they taste as good?