The Survivor |
I can't tell you what I did.
Whether it was "right" or "wrong," I do not know. It just
happened. I chanced upon this "gift of gardening" while clearing out
the very last portion of last summer's garden about a month ago. The section of
the garden where pepper plants, both sweet bell peppers and hot varieties like
the time-tested Jalapeño, are planted here. I always tear these out late
because they keep producing right through fall and the first part of the
coldest winter months.
Mother Nature usually delivers the "coup de grâce"
or death blow to the entire garden at some point. It's usually after winter
temperatures drop into a sustained freeze level. I live in a cold area of
Northern California. The weather can deliver a whopper of a freeze every winter
and often does. Several times. The tomato plants that I had not removed yet are
normally finished off by a good freeze, and that includes the mighty pepper
plants. Peppers love heat. They normally cannot stand cold winter temperatures,
but some do perform better than others.
Imagine my surprise when I found this guy. It was located in
last year's pepper bed, which contained about 25 different pepper plants. There
was nothing special about this guy. It is your normal, ordinary Jalapeño pepper
plant. It produced about the same number of spicy peppers that the two other
Jalapeno plants did. However, unlike the other two, this one was not brown,
barren, twig-like, or dead. For some strange reason it survived. No other
garden plant did. Every single other plant in my expansive gardens kicked the
bucket over the winter. Which is a normal development for most plants in a
summer vegetable garden. But not this one.
New Growth Emerging |
Color me amazed. This is the first time I've encountered
anything quite like this. But I did not let it stop me in that day's quest of
tearing out the old garden to make way for the new one that will soon be
planted. I nearly pulled this survivor out of the ground and tossed it into the
large and expanding pile of dead pepper plants and various weeds. But I was
struck by an epiphany. I've never encountered anything like this before. Why
should I take action to kill a solid garden producer that obviously isn't quite
done producing yet?
It would still be forced to survive a brutal haircut. Which
it did receive. All of those long vines with new green growth were pruned away
and tossed on the growing refuse pile. Those vines had grown into other plants
that were dead. Plus, I had to remove the tomato cage support. So, if this
mighty garden survivor was going to see another growing season, it would be
forced to survive some fairly brutal treatment. It received a solid haircut,
just like you see pictured above.
2023 Pepper Garden Survivor is Front and Far Left |
I did make sure to show it a little bit of love this past
weekend. As I chopped, mowed and chopped down even more spring weeds with a
furious purpose, I dragged the garden hose over to the survivor. It received a
slow drip of nourishing water, plus a sprinkling of garden fertilizer sprinkled
at the base. It has reacted with a pleasing spurt of green growth over every
section and branch that was not pruned away.
The Survivor may have survived the first onslaught of summer
garden prep. But the abuse isn't over yet. It still may not make it. It will be
required to survive the absolute injustice of whirling blades from the Mantis
Rototiller that I put to work in the garden area every spring. I will make
every effort to spare The Survivor from those churning blades that cut up the
soil, but who knows how it will react.
Rat Exterminator on Patrol |
What kind of production can I expect from The Survivor? I'm
not sure. I've never encountered this type of good luck charm before. But,
provided it survives, I will keep my eye on its progress. Hopefully, it will
provide a bounty of peppers. Just as it did last summer. Time will tell.
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