Just a quick update to document that one Roma tomato and one hot pepper have sprouted! I’m sure they’ll come quickly now.
Hoping to plant my lettuce, spinach, radishes, and onions outside this coming weekend!
Just a quick update to document that one Roma tomato and one hot pepper have sprouted! I’m sure they’ll come quickly now.
Hoping to plant my lettuce, spinach, radishes, and onions outside this coming weekend!
Today I cleared the asparagus patch of last year’s stalks and dead grass. The sun can now reach the ground to warm it up faster. I’m looking forward to those first tasty spears. Yum!
We will need to quickly build an arbor above the asparagus patch for the older grape vines growing there. The vines always get tangled up in the asparagus as they wind around the new plants each year. They’ve been wild for many years and we need to get them pruned and trained.
I hauled five wheelbarrow loads of compost to the garden before tiring. Ryan continued the job until our oldest compost bin was empty. He moved the least decomposed materials to the 3rd bin leaving us one more bin to bring to the garden. Almost ready for tilling already!
Per the advice of a family friend, I started our tomato and pepper seeds tonight. She says the first day of spring is a good guideline for starting those slow-growing vegetables like tomatoes, peppers, celery, parsley, and eggplant, and similarly slow flowers like marigolds. I planted the following seeds:
Continued observations:
I had to laugh that I’m a little behind last year, but I did get some time to make my vegetable planting list and take a seed inventory. Here’s what we’ll be growing this year:
Sunny edge of woods, to save garden space:
Fruit, perennial:
Herbs:
Did you notice NO zucchini!? I made an executive decision that for the small amount we actually eat, it’s not worth the valuable garden space.
I may give cauliflower a try. I have some old seeds. If they don’t germinate, so be it.
With the surprising 64-degree weather, I took a walk around the yard today with the dogs to see how things fared the winter months. Here are some observations:
Joy.
This morning was the first walk with Benji and Bishop where the road was entirely free of ice! Hopefully that’s the end of it for the season, because it’s not fun walking two strong dogs on icy pavement. Yikes!
Just a quick log entry to document that yes, I was late getting to the fruit tree pruning AGAIN.
Two evenings of work cleaned up the seven trees, and they should be ready for spring!
I took the dogs on their usual walk this morning. It was so foggy we could hardly see the road in front of us! About 15 minutes in, I noticed that the leashes looked very frayed… little strings were sticking out all over. I thought it odd that I hadn’t noticed that before!
A few minutes later I saw strings all over my own jacket, and then realized there was frost all over my shoulders! I looked at the dogs and saw it starting on them too! I got to watch frost grow while we walked. What a bizarre thing.
Tried to snap some shots of this rare experience with my phone – wish I had a better camera along! All the frost melted as soon as we entered the garage.
Later in the day I learned others were affected by this crazy weather too. I’ll try to remember it as the day we were touched by Jack Frost and not this…
