End of May report

It’s been a cold wet spring. The garden is doing okay, but lagging a bit from last year I think.

Vegetable garden

Garlic outside fence and flower row inside fence with daisies and allium, plus lots of seeds and dahlias not visible yet
Horseradish about to flower, twelve winter squash plants in three sisters row, comfrey at end of row
Broccoli (de cicco and aspa-broc) and cabbage, under row cover for flea beetle
Kale, fava beans mulched in shredded leaves, and last year’s green onions
Broccoli rabe, beets and turnips (too tiny to see), last year’s parsnips allowed to go to seed

There’s more growing in the vegetable garden but it’s too small to be very photogenic: carrots, parsnips, cabbage, summer squash, cucumber, peas, and asparagus.

Fruit yard

Fruit yard innovation – fence posts along raised beds allowing for rotation of chicken run fencing so they can have fresh greens to scratch up
Gooseberry rescued from weeds in its own raised bed
Bumblebee pollinating blueberry
Raspberry plants in second year
Strawberry plants in second year and an artichoke from Lesley S.
Grapevines just beginning to leaf out, radically pruned last fall

Front Yard

Reinforced bird feeder with goldfinch. Probably knocked over by bear last night, which is the same day of last year’s bear visitation!
Front garden – finally trimmed all dead stalks so it looks pretty neat at this point. Chives, tansy, oregano, artemisia, etc.
Hardy Kiwi vine leafing out and hummingbirds are here.
Herb garden with artichoke. Not much growth yet. One rosemary survived last winter indoors and I bought a new one from Chuck.

Hoophouse

Raised beds in hoophouse. Been eating these greens for awhile. Claytonia, mache, mixed greens, spinach, radish. Will be replaced with peppers and eggplants in the summer.

Thirty-nine tomato seedlings waiting for planting! Plus fennel, cukes, more cabbage, tomatillos, more winter squash, corn, pole beans and dye flowers.

Community Garden

No pictures, but lots of onion family planted there.

  • Red, yellow, and white baby onion plants
  • Seeds: leek, cippollini, shallot

2 thoughts on “End of May report

  1. How many member gardeners are working your most amazing gardens?
    I’m one gardener and I know how many hours are in a day! And a week!!
    It’s heavenly. I must work harder.
    Thank You for sharing

    1. Mostly me with some big help from my husband. I’m retired so I have lots of time to garden. It is a lot of work though!

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