Funny how you need to have muscles in order to get muscles.
About half the deep box in front of the greenhouse is full. I filled it with woodchips last fall and am now topping it off with compost.
This will be my kitchen herb garden. Perennials oregano, marjoram, thyme, sage, parsley. I'll let...
Not sure yet how that will work. I'm thinking of potato towers.
On a related note, the Kenebec are sad but blooming, while the grocery store potatoes are all but dead
I remember those days! Packing cement block, pvc and 2x4's in a Ford Ecort! Later I used my Dad's SUV and drove home from Lowes all hunched down because there was stuff sticking out the drivers side window as well as in the middle.
Good thing the trip was short.
Green beans I planted last week are up. I'm seeing a few beets. Those beets that survive will be encouraged to go to seed for my first year of adaptation.
Cantaloupe/honeydew/whatever melons are up--they all washed downhill during the rain and ended up in a big clump. That's ok, I'll maybe get...
100+ degrees for weeks on end, no water from May to September, sometimes October, and the plants still thrived. Something to consider. We water far more than most plants actually need.
This may sound odd, but if you have the space set aside a section that you water half as much, if at all. From the moment the seeds go in the ground. I usually gave seeds in my dry garden plenty of water when I planted them, then nothing. Thrive or die. This was in an area with 12 inches of...
Still alive.
The mulch is below the graft and only partial.
The soil is heavy clay, saturated by rain. About ten feet away the "water level" is less than six inches below the surface.
None of the other trees (peaches, apricots, cherries, almonds, apples, plums and pears, mostly seedlings)...
I think my cherry tree is drowning from all the rain we've had. I'm not sure how to help it. I'm pretty sure that transplanting it now would kill it anyway.
Not garden precisely, but I gathered up dry grass and piled it in the broody coop. When I get a chance I'll put live grass in there, so it looks like a comfy place to nest. The broody and her chicks will go in the coop tonight, while the other broody will go in the broody box.
Not much to do in...