My peppers continue to grow, yay! The bell pepper flopped over two days ago under what I assume was a combination of its own weight and persistent rain, so I tied it to a stake. Today I gave the jalapeƱo a proper stake as well, to replace the popsicle stick it was rapidly outgrowing. It has been pouring off and on all day, for a total of at least an inch of rain -- we've had flood warnings in effect since noon (but specifically for parts of Ithaca that aren't my neighborhood) -- so I am pretty sure the plants are glad to have the support.




(no subject)
Date: 2013-07-02 02:51 am (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2013-07-02 03:11 am (UTC)Ithaca has pretty good drainage overall. There used to be nasty floods where water would overflow its natural channels and rush down the hills in sheets, knocking over trees as it went, but at some point (I suspect a Depression-era public works project) the creeks were very carefully channelled into concrete trenches dug for the 500-year flood. And people are serious about side-of-the-road ditches and culverts and things. Land right on the side of a stream can still cave in, of course, but these days the main flooding issue is the very flat parts of the valley floor, particularly the ones with a lot of blacktop and no artificial drainage channels to replace the natural ones that were paved over.
I live just one block from Fall Creek down in the lake valley, but there's about ten feet of elevation difference in normal times and there just isn't enough watershed length to build a serious rise in the water levels -- I have never seen the creeks more than three feet higher than normal, even after several days of rain like today's.
*thinks good drainage thoughts for Springfield*