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Our early peas beginning to bloom is a bright spot in our gardening. Planted in early March, the around seventy day varieties are about on schedule. Our peas are a landrace mix of the Champion of England and Maxigolt varieties. With some sixty ish degree days coming up, I'm hoping for lots of very sweet peas. Our asparagus patches continue to produce. Our raised bed of asparagus has dropped off in production, something it does each year. Bonnie's Asparagus Patch has picked up the slack, with both patches still yielding about a pound of asparagus each day. I'll need to stop picking soon and weed and fertilize the patches. With temperatures predicted to reach the high 80's today, I turned on our air conditioner this morning for the first time this season. It took forever for it to drop our house temperature a single degree, so I guess it's time to have our HVAC folks in to service the AC and our furnace.
I don't hunt, but I also don't report poachers killing deer out of season. We have way too many deer in our area, damaging crops and causing lots of damage to vehicles. Poachers who kill and field dress their kill are probably trying to feed their family. (We live in a rural, semi-poor area.) Yesterday was a mowing day. I only got our lawn done, but still have the field next to us to do. And the grape tomatoes I seeded a week ago are up and came off the soil heating mat. My saved Red Pearl seed germinated far better than some new hybrid Honey Bunch seed. New Toy/Tool
I used the garden kneeler last night to weed around our recently planted dill. Today, I used it when
I transplanted geraniums and snapdragons around our narrow raised beds of garlic and peas. So far, I like its construction and comfort. Way Behind I'm running way behind our usual garden start. Frequent rain has prevented tilling and planting both our main raised bed and our large East Garden plot. We may get a break in the weather this week that will permit such efforts. Then it's just a matter of if my aging body can still do the work!
We got another nice harvest of asparagus spears today. Interestingly to me, our raised bed has slowed down on its production, but Bonnie's Asparagus Patch has come on strong. I got the other side of our double trellis around our tall peas done. I only used top and bottom clothesline supports for the nylon string trellis netting. When the peas play out and we switch to cucumbers in the bed, I’ll add a third wire to support the greater weight of the long cucumbers.
Our copy of the 2025 Seed Savers The Exchange Yearbook arrived in today's mail. It has a pretty cover, but I'm not sure how much use it will be to members at this late date. When I Googled why the catalog was so late, I got "The Seed Savers Exchange catalog was late in 2025 due to staffing issues, according to a Reddit thread discussing the matter." Having noticed a few before, I got out this afternoon and grabbed some shots of baby apples on our trees. Sadly, there weren't many of them. I hope to spray the trees with Fruit Tree Spray tomorrow.
While I had a trowel and fertilizer water out, I transplanted three dill plants into our herb bed. I often plant dill at the ends of our rows of brassicas. I still have some dill transplants left, so they may get used that way if things ever dry out enough to work the soil and plant. I reversed course yesterday and dropped off more asparagus bundles at our local food bank. To avoid dealing with the folks there, I dropped off the asparagus early before they had begun work. Doing another good deed, I sent donations to our PBS and NPR providers. Donald Trump’s incredible attacks on public broadcasting motivated my donations. Instead of donating online, I enclosed checks in letters which also contained a packet of zinnia seed for each. I've done this before with Greg Petrowich (WFYI) and Fred Martino (WSIU), and they both have seemed to get a kick out of it. Our extended weather forecast shows conditions drying and warming over the next week or so. Maybe I'll actually get to start tilling our garden plots. I really didn't do any gardening today, but I did take a look at things under our plant lights. The pots of butternut squash I started on Wednesday were all up today. Well, I did dump rain water out of the trays of plants under our cold frame today. An inch or so of rain had accumulated in the trays, risking damaging the roots of the plants. I mowed our lawn yesterday. I'm glad I did as it's rainy today. And the rains are predicted to persist through Monday. With the rain ruling out most outside work, I turned to starting and uppotting stuff indoors. Some Honey Bunch grape tomato seed I’d ordered arrived in the mail. I’d not planned to grow grape tomatoes this year. But my lovely wife, Annie, has been on a binge eating them of late. The Honey Bunch hybrid variety produces lots of grape tomatoes. I also started some Red Pearl open pollinated grape tomatoes. They produce fewer tomatoes, but have superior flavor. While planting the grape tomato seed, I saw that we had communal pots of vinca, parsley, and petunias that needed to be moved to larger quarters. They went into four and sixpack inserts. Some Cora Cascade vinca are eventually destined for hanging basket pots, while some Pacifica will end up along the edges of our main raised garden bed. The Celebrity petunias will also serve as row end markers in the main bed.
If you check out the recipe, you should know that I made just a half portion of it. I also cooked it a bit longer than the recipe suggested, as I used mostly "fencepost" spears of asparagus. One outdoor job I did between rain showers this morning was to finish trimming the dead vines out of our older Wandering Jew plant. It, with a newer plant, got hung from our back porch. The butternut seed I started on Wednesday has begun to germinate. Those pots were joined over a soil heating mat set to 70°F by the grape tomato seeds I started today. When I brought in the squash seed, I also brought in our melon seeds. It's time to get them going. When this rain finally plays out, I need to spray our apple trees with Fruit Tree Spray.
We've had a Wandering Jew plant in one kitchen window for well over a decade. Our first plant was a gift from one of our daughters, Samantha. Since the plants only stay pretty for about a year, I take cuttings each January for replacement plants. With the wind today, I decided to let the plants sit in their trays instead of hanging them where the wind would punish them. Our first hummingbirds showed up at our feeder April 22. They hung around our feeder for a couple of days before presumably heading further north. We didn't see any more until yesterday when a whole bunch of very tiny hummingbirds showed up at our feeder. But they too appear to have headed off. While I'd wanted to transplant some dill into our herb bed and geraniums at the corners of our narrow beds of garlic and early peas, the wind convinced me to hold off a day or two. Instead, I did some weeding in the three beds. The pea plants were pretty much blown over suggesting that I get their double trellis up soon. Next to the peas, several spinach plants have emerged, although you have to look closely to see them. And our garlic mostly looks healthy other than a few elephant garlic starts.
To speed up drying of the soil in our main raised bed, I sprayed it yesterday with a vinegar/Epsom Salt mixture. It's an organic weed killer that shouldn't persist in the soil for too long. The mix will burn down top growth, but doesn't effectively kill weed roots. Since I'm aiming to till this bed, burning off the top growth is just what I need.
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