Weeding, which is a sisyphean task, starts with "controlling the borders:" going around the property to remove incoming and outgoing weed nuisances. These include such torturers as garlic mustard, Asian honeysuckle, bindweed, porcelain berry vines, seeding sedges, and the usual cast of nuisance weeds. They are all talented at spreading, seeding, and growing with more rapidity than the "real" plant lovelies I am trying to grow.
Mini-nurseries---small troughs of kohlrabi, beet, chard, and cabbage seeds started in homemade compost and leaf mold---are growing in their beds awaiting their eventual transplanting. May 19th I bought summer vegetable plants (tomatoes, peppers and eggplant) with a retirement gift card to Behnke's Nursery---thank you Steve and Christine!
Then there are my "cageless pets:" garter snakes, a new litter of rabbits, the fox family and endless birds---dropping in for visits or staying as permanent residents. It's my 11th year in this garden, and it is my Giant Backyard Pleasure Ground.
Five weeks late, May 24th, I began to put the "tropical" vegetables from Behnke's Nursery into the ground. Seeds for cucumbers, summer squash, and bitter melon next were planted around May 26-27, along with supports, mulch, compost, and the wonderful flat soaker hoses I bought last September. Three big projects remain for my edibles: putting in the okra beds, transplanting all of the cabbage, kohlrabi, beets and chard seedlings, and bird- and deer-proofing the thornless blackberry hedges.
And then, there is weeding.
Enjoy the pictures---especially the last one!
Calycanthus floridus: the blooms smell like freshly-baked bread.
Calycanthus floridus: the blooms smell like freshly-baked bread.
The plastic forks pointing outward are supposed to keep the rabbits from nibbling the seedlings. I hope it works!
Straw protects tomato plants from being splashed with fungus-laden soil when it rains. But they all get fungus infections anyway.
Cabbage seedlings ready to transplant. This variety is about the size of a softball, and is sweet and crunchy.
7 comments:
Things have certainly burgeoned since I last saw your garden, just over a week ago.
Wow! I'm quite jealous of your gardening skills. My thumb is true to my name: Brown
Even though I have zero gardening talents, this is fascinating to me due to your excellent writing and photography skills. You should subtitle it "Sex in the Garden" and watch the readership soar.
You have so many wonderful talents yourself---especially your writing! "Color Me Happy" is a wonderful addition to positive self-help literature. It has been a privilege to be your friend since 1971!!
What lovely fresh and tasty veggies you will enjoy later and what beautiful flowers will greet you every morning to make you doubly happy that you have retired! Isn't the natural world amazing and exciting!x
I love seeing worms in the garden - shows how good your soil is!
I have a number of garden spaces around my yard. One of them is a garden filled with really nice (and large) Hostas. Or at least it used to be until the darned rabbits decided to feast on all of my Hostas. Argh!
I also have a garden space that is designed to attract butterflies and bees. Among other things, it has a few swamp milkweed plants in it. What a lovely, hardy plant that is (it had better be, given how I tend to have a bit of a black thumb, LOL!)!
Looks like you have a fabulous garden! Look forward to reading more of your posts!
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