July 3, 2012 - Silver Queen Down!

 Corn's down!


Hilled and tromped, corn's up....kinda.


Down again.  I give up.  Maybe the wind won't be blowing tomorrow.


36 comments:

  1. Oh no! Your poor corn. I hope it makes it. The corn out in our fields is shriveling from lack of rain. Either way, it's tough to see it go down.

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    1. The wind finally stopped, and not expecting any tomorrow. I'll try to get it hilled up again in the morning. The roots aren't exposed, so it should be OK. I might have to tie it up to something though.

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  2. Hi Annie, I am so sorry about your corn. Hoping you get less windy weather. Nancy

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    1. Nancy, the wind did its damage, then it stopped as quickly as it started.

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  3. It looks great when it's upright and laying down. It's green and healthy, let's just hope for less wind. :-)

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    1. 1st. Man, the wind here is my nemesis! Just nothing I can do about it, except hope it doesn't do too much damage.

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    1. Cloud, I think it's salvageable. At least the older corn plants mostly withstood the force of the wind.

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    2. The other day I accidently pushed one of the cherokee eagles over with the watering but Its since recovered after I mounded a bunch of dirt around its base. Strange how they choose to grow. You place the seed deep enough so you would assume it would have a nice secure root. Instead it tries to grow roots above the surface in much the same manner as a 50 year old Maple!

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    3. BTW, your rabbits do not attempt eating the corn plants in your woods?

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    4. Cloud, there aren't any rabbits around here. We had a 10-year-old pet rabbit that a feral cat killed last October, and now we just have Annie and Otto, who actually will eat just about anything. Fortunately, a dachshund's 3-inch long legs don't allow them to reach high enough to eat the corn ;-)

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    5. BTW, Cloud, did you get the PDFs I sent you last night? If so, were you able to open them?

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  5. Oh, no! That Silver Queen is too good for this to happen. I bought a dozen (got 13) ears at the Farmer's Market Saturday and we cooked them on the grill last night. Food of the gods! Hope that wind dies down.

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    1. Dianefaith, I just have that one small square of the Silver Queen. My Honey Select is still standing.

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  6. Our asparagus is going horizontal. Maybe for tall crops, they have to be sort of caged to start, on a grid or something. Sigh. You don't want to be fighting that corn all the time, do you? How do big farmers deal?

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    1. Stefaneener, the taller corn took the wind storm pretty well, I noticed a couple of them leaning, but not like the small plot. I'll do some more hilling up in the morning, maybe tie them together with a long rope, LOL! They grow lots of corn around here, I think it bounces back pretty well. I had just watered when the wind came up so strong, so the ground was really soft.

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  7. We have terrible wind here also. My sunflowers tried to fall over early in the spring so I took the green stakes that you pound into the ground and pounded some in at the corners of the area. I strung rope around the edges to hold up the sunflowers and it worked. Next year I am going to use the stakes and put them on the edges every six inches to a foot and string rope across the growing area so that the flowers and corn can grow up in between the ropes so they have support in the wind.

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    1. Peggi, last year I pounded large staples into the fence and ran cotton clothesline through them and around the sunflowers to keep them from blowing over. At least the fence didn't blow down! I think I'm going to have to devise some type of fence or rope around that corn to hold it upright.

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  8. Oh man, I hope your corn survives that wind! It looks so healthy too. Always something with the weather! I've been thinking how before gardening, I didn't really care what the weather was doing. Now I think about it all the time, lol!

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    1. Nutmeg, I've always gardened, so I've always fussed when the wind blows too hard, it's too hot, it freezes, it rains too much, it's too dry. Always something!

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  9. Oh how sad. I hope my corn stays upright when I'm gone.

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  10. Those should right themselves, but you could use those small green bamboo poles and anchor the stalks to those. For a plot your size it is a quick and super easy fix that will work well.

    Here is a post from my blog last year where I did this, also on silver queen.
    http://georgiahomegarden.blogspot.com/2011/09/how-to-fix-and-support-blown-over-corn.html

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    1. Kris, I think they'll right themselves. I might have to go stomp a bit more on their roots today.

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  11. Even being wind-blown they still look pretty healthy! Hopefully their roots will get stronger before your next big breeze blows through. :)

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    1. Dewdrop, thank you for following my blog! I can always count on a few hard wind storms every growing season. I'm pretty used to them, but that doesn't mean I like it!

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  12. AH! I hate when that happens. Looks like they may need a prop to hold 'em up. Hope the roots weren't damaged.

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    1. Loretta, so far they're still green and not showing any wilt.

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  13. Maybe if you lasso the whole bunch and tie them up to a post? At least that would prevent more damage from being on the ground. That's what I had to do with my peas because they refused to use the perfectly good trellis I made them. ;)

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  14. oh no!! What's up with all the wind this year. We are getting blown away here too...yet again. Corn is pretty strong so I hope yours bounces back :)

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  15. Hope your corn will recover from the wind and you'll have good harvest

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  16. The post was sorta funny to me despite the hassle you had. Just a three liner...it's down, it's up, it's down...good like a short joke.
    So, I was thinking about the ideas above and thought about how florists use tape criss crossing the top of a vase. If you can put stakes around the outside, then tie (whatever twiney thing you have) at about 3 feet or higher, it'll be like a grid to catch them in. I'd have to draw it out but maybe you get the idea.

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  17. Here's hoping they stay upright now that the wind has died down. My artichokes are laying down on the job. I think I will construct a simple fence support around them next year to keep them vertical as well.

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  18. I hope it's all right, doesn't look like you had to worry about the pollen being blown away just yet so that's a bonus!

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  19. Hope it straightens out! Staking it an option?

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  20. To all who were concerned, the corn stalks righted themselves so now they are almost straight again. Two of them might need a bit of help, the rest look just fine.

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