Gardening
Related: About this forumSo I just planted my garden tonight
I know you're all laughing...I'm in Edmonton, Alberta, so zone 3, plus we had a very late spring this year even for us. Plus, my dad JUST built me my raised beds and filled them with dirt yesterday, so today I planted. It was about a week late even for here (although my mom never planted before May long weekend which for us was last weekend). I'm so excited! I haven't had a real garden in years...when I was with my ex we never had a proper yard, and I did all the yardwork and just when I would finally get a garden in, we would move. Then I split with my ex and haven't had a yard of my own for 4 years...until this year! Although it IS a super tiny yard...but it's MINE.
Anyway, I have 3 4'x4' beds (12 inches deep). I'm doing square foot gardening...sort of. One box has 16 squares but the other 2 only have 4 squares because of what I wanted to grow. I didn't start any seedlings because I wasn't sure if my dad was going to build me the raised beds or not (he JUST retired 2 weeks ago) so I only could plant things that would grow in a short amount of time in our cold climate. One whole box is carrots, LOL, since we all love carrots so much and they are SO expensive at the farmer's market (and the grocery store ones taste like crap). 3 kinds - a super early heirloom kind, and your typical scarlet nantes, and purple carrots!
I'm also attempting onions for the first time ever. I'm excited about seeing bees and wasps this spring already, because in the past I've had numerous zucchini and cucumber disasters due to no pollination. I'm attempting zucchini again, and I bought a hybrid super early cucumber that doesn't require pollination - I chose this one due to previous disasters. It seems a little late to start from seed, but last year I had 2 cucumber plants from the greenhouse - I was container gardening - and I started a couple from seed, and the only cucumbers I saw were from the seeded ones, so I think it's better to do that (it's certainly cheaper!)
I have several types of lettuce, and watercress (can't find it in stores, and have some recipes with it). Oh, and beets...last year I tried container beets and it didn't work out at all...they were stunted. So, crossing my fingers it works this year (bought an earlier type too). I'm trying swiss chard for the first time ever. My youngest daughter is crazy about radishes, so we planted those too.
I also have some container plants too - I'm starting a herb garden and so far have a zillion kinds...and the obligatory tomato and pepper plants. I also planted some scarlet runner beans in my front flower bed. One item I won't be planting this year is potatoes. I did the potato sack thing last year and had 3 beautiful plants in 3 sacks. Huge plants...they all flowered too. And all I ended up with was a bowlful of small potatoes. I can't find any good seed potatoes that are early (everywhere is sold out because I was late to shop...because I didn't know I was going to have a garden for sure...) so no potatoes this year.
I'll take pictures tomorrow. My dad did a nice job of the boxes. Sorry this was so long, I'm very excited and I have no one IRL to share my excitement with. No one around here gardens, it seems.
applegrove
(122,991 posts)Be forewarned.
laundry_queen
(8,646 posts)Usually it's pea sized and not too much. Now that I've jinxed everything....LOL...we'll get softballs like '87. But seriously, if it hails big, it means there's a big storm and if there's one thing I love more than gardening it's storm chasing (or at least, watching the storms that chase me...I don't actually go out to see them, I tend to attract them). I have tons of pictures of wall clouds and tornado-warned storms (no funnel cloud pictures yet, every time I have seen one, I don't have a camera, d'oh!) I heart storms.
applegrove
(122,991 posts)there was a lightening storm outside she would open all the doors so she could see and hear it all.
laundry_queen
(8,646 posts)right up until the point the clouds explode. Here's one of my favorites:
[URL=https://imageshack.com/i/mredmstorm072j][IMG][/IMG][/URL]
applegrove
(122,991 posts)like the West.
OffWithTheirHeads
(10,337 posts)as the pollen stops working at about 92 degrees. Pool season is in full swing though. I'll pop a beer for you from the pool float.
laundry_queen
(8,646 posts)We were all excited about topping out at 75 degrees yesterday...first time this spring we've been that hot. Then today, the mosquitos came out. Boo...hiss...I spent as much time swatting them as I did planting my garden.
JimDandy
(7,318 posts)Thanks.
JimDandy
(7,318 posts)laundry_queen
(8,646 posts)But it wasn't too hard this year. My dad did the heavy lifting, and my kids helped me plant! It was actually a lot more relaxing than usual, now that my kids are old enough to help out. Even the youngest planted her radishes perfectly.
One year, I dug up a huge part of the lawn on my own, mixed in compost, manure and peat moss to break up the clay-based soil and did it all by hand with a shovel and a hoe. THAT was back breaking work. We moved the following year.
littlemissmartypants
(25,277 posts)today. Carrots! Yummy.
Love, Peace and Shelter. Lmsp