It flooded and washed away once, and it's raining again (and the town near us already flooded, so I'm not holding out too much hope).
I'm really hoping that it stays this time though - we put out everything except my two cherry tomatoes, my jalapeno pepper, my purple potatoes, and my sister's herbs. There's at least 30 plants out there, and we don't have the money to buy them all again.
I am growing a pumpkin in the greenhouse, not because it needs the protection from the weather but because of the possums who think pumpkin is the most delicious thing ever. When I tried to grow it out in the garden, they would eat some of it and try to take the rest up their tree, but they can't, so we'd find half-pumpkins at the foot of the tree. Even worse, they have clever little hands, so when we used netting, they would move the netting around until they could get to the pumpkins and eat what they could reach through the netting.
This is the most floral portion of the year until the asters erupt. Was too rainy today to patrol, but iris could be going tomorrow. Tree peony is in full bloom.
Three attempts. First lost to frost (damn). Second lost to frost (damn). Third time's a charm, but the housing committee planned some renovation of the gardening area, so had to move the plants (sort of damn).
Weather has been interesting, but the plants are growing, so that's a plus as far as I'm concerned!
Such a wet and cold spring, everything is a bit behind - I ended up just planting in pots on my deck this round, nasturtiums, three kinds of cherry tomato and lemon cukes with a trellis plus some herbs, powdery mildew is going to be troublesome this year I think. We will prevail somehow!
Good! Gardening more than a very very little is a new thing for me, so I spent all of spring umming and aahing and consequently I think I'm now a little late starting but everything seems pretty warm and comfy with life because of it. Established plants from previous people are fighting off the pests that descended as soon as spring hit properly, new plug plants have all settled in well, and I have a bunch of happy seedlings popping up inside. It's raining frequently but only for short spells with decent but not super heavy falls, so I'm not even really needing to water anything outside which is nice.
Touch wood but I expect that the A+ gardening going well experience will falter soon, because, well, beginning gardener here! But so far it's pretty darn good.
I was away for two weeks and just got back and my garden looks great (if a little overgrown/weedy in places). I had a neighbour pop by to water pots and raised beds, but I think we had a good mix of sunshine and rain (I'm in the Midlands, UK). I might post some pictures later once I've tidied up a bit!
I just got to put my balcony garden in this weekend! I had thought I might have to move house, and possibly not have a balcony, so couldn't put anything in all spring. It all looks okay right now - I've figured out that the reason so much died last year was that two of my big cement planters don't drain properly, so hopefully this season will be better.
The weather will start fighting me very soon, though. My balcony has literally no shade after about 11am, and gets the direct afternoon sun - pretty much everything I put on it gets scorched over summer. I've planted miniature hibiscus this year, in the hope they'll be leafy enough to partly shade the herbs, but it remains to be seen if they like being in pots.
South-west UK here. I'm renting and this is my second year here. My landlords have never lived in the house and just want me to prune things when necessary but the previous owners of the house were keen gardeners and have only moved up the road so I feel kind of responsible for looking after the garden they spent ten years creating!
My own planting last year was limited to pots on the patio but now I've seen the garden through a whole year, I've put in some summer flowering bulbs where there are gaps.
It is very much a spring garden. We had a lot of sun in April followed by a lot of rain in May so everything is now going mad. There is a flowering clematis taking over the side wall and the lane the other side, and a wisteria blossoming over the shed. A rose has forced its way through a mass of honeysuckle (which isn't flowering) and is producing roses about eight feet above the ground. The bay tree is growing as I look at it and the rosemary has flowered and fallen over sideways. I think I am supposed to just let everything flower and then do rather a lot of cutting back. I would like to plant something edible but I am feeling a bit overwhelmed by what there is there already and last year slugs ate all my peas and beans and even rocket so I am rather gloomy about its prospects.
It is developing. I don't have an actual garden, but lots of window boxes. Some of the plants in them last through the winter and some don't, so I plant seeds harvested from the ones that I know will die at the first frost and buy a few new plants each year as well. Also, I experiment with a couple new seeds now and then.
So, how are things at the moment?
All three geraniums made it through the winter, two are blooming and one only has small buds. It has scarlet flowers and is quite a treat when it blooms, so I'm hoping the little buds make it.
I have three miniature rose bushes that also made it through the winter, two were new last year and one is a couple years old and getting rather large for a potted rose. The smaller two are blooming and the larger one is just getting buds. I am fighting some sort of mildew on them. I may have defeated the aphids - or the spiders did - but there are tiny white specks that will turn into bugs soon enough if I don't get rid of them. I've been using soapy water on the leaves. They are even making an attempt on the geraniums, which are usually immune to everything.
I have one purple campanula that is flourishing, covered with flowers that a certain large bumblebee appears to adore.
My strawberry plants, which all came from one plant several years ago, made it through the winter, then more than half slowly turned brown and withered away. I don't know what happened, they were already budding. I have two left that seem healthy and they have the tiny beginnings of strawberries on them.
I took the bold step of buying a tomato plant a couple weeks ago. It is re-potted and on the side of the flat that gets strong afternoon sun. I know this is a bit of a stretch for a window box, but many, many years ago, I succeeded in growing a 'crop' on a window sill, so perhaps this will work.
There are more, but I'm going on too long, I think. Thank you for asking!
Things are coming along slowly here in northern New England. We've had some extremes of temperature, but that's just Spring I guess. I've got seedlings of lunchbox peppers, jalapenos, basil, nasturtium, and three varieties of tomato. One of today's tasks is putting cages around them all so the deer don't chomp them. I have seeds in for kale, hubbard squash, carrots, and perilla. The asparagus patch has been providing good harvest for a couple of weeks, oregano is coming back quite well, and chives very much too well - I'm overdue in wrangling that patch.
I've got some tomato plants and pepper plants out and they're doing well. I also put some container flower gardens in the front yard and some "mounding" flowers in the front yard. They are struggling a bit, because they face the full sun half the day and I need to get into the habit of watering them every day.
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Date: 2017-05-21 12:23 am (UTC)I'm really hoping that it stays this time though - we put out everything except my two cherry tomatoes, my jalapeno pepper, my purple potatoes, and my sister's herbs. There's at least 30 plants out there, and we don't have the money to buy them all again.
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Date: 2017-05-21 12:44 am (UTC)(no subject)
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Date: 2017-05-21 02:03 am (UTC)(no subject)
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Date: 2017-05-21 02:13 am (UTC)Lots of green leaves.
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Date: 2017-05-21 02:21 am (UTC)Weather has been interesting, but the plants are growing, so that's a plus as far as I'm concerned!
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Date: 2017-05-21 04:08 am (UTC)(no subject)
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Date: 2017-05-21 06:54 am (UTC)Touch wood but I expect that the A+ gardening going well experience will falter soon, because, well, beginning gardener here! But so far it's pretty darn good.
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Date: 2017-05-21 07:16 am (UTC)(no subject)
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Date: 2017-05-21 08:03 am (UTC)The weather will start fighting me very soon, though. My balcony has literally no shade after about 11am, and gets the direct afternoon sun - pretty much everything I put on it gets scorched over summer. I've planted miniature hibiscus this year, in the hope they'll be leafy enough to partly shade the herbs, but it remains to be seen if they like being in pots.
(no subject)
From:(no subject)
Date: 2017-05-21 12:01 pm (UTC)My own planting last year was limited to pots on the patio but now I've seen the garden through a whole year, I've put in some summer flowering bulbs where there are gaps.
It is very much a spring garden. We had a lot of sun in April followed by a lot of rain in May so everything is now going mad. There is a flowering clematis taking over the side wall and the lane the other side, and a wisteria blossoming over the shed. A rose has forced its way through a mass of honeysuckle (which isn't flowering) and is producing roses about eight feet above the ground. The bay tree is growing as I look at it and the rosemary has flowered and fallen over sideways. I think I am supposed to just let everything flower and then do rather a lot of cutting back. I would like to plant something edible but I am feeling a bit overwhelmed by what there is there already and last year slugs ate all my peas and beans and even rocket so I am rather gloomy about its prospects.
(no subject)
From:(no subject)
Date: 2017-05-21 01:43 pm (UTC)So, how are things at the moment?
All three geraniums made it through the winter, two are blooming and one only has small buds. It has scarlet flowers and is quite a treat when it blooms, so I'm hoping the little buds make it.
I have three miniature rose bushes that also made it through the winter, two were new last year and one is a couple years old and getting rather large for a potted rose. The smaller two are blooming and the larger one is just getting buds. I am fighting some sort of mildew on them. I may have defeated the aphids - or the spiders did - but there are tiny white specks that will turn into bugs soon enough if I don't get rid of them. I've been using soapy water on the leaves. They are even making an attempt on the geraniums, which are usually immune to everything.
I have one purple campanula that is flourishing, covered with flowers that a certain large bumblebee appears to adore.
My strawberry plants, which all came from one plant several years ago, made it through the winter, then more than half slowly turned brown and withered away. I don't know what happened, they were already budding. I have two left that seem healthy and they have the tiny beginnings of strawberries on them.
I took the bold step of buying a tomato plant a couple weeks ago. It is re-potted and on the side of the flat that gets strong afternoon sun. I know this is a bit of a stretch for a window box, but many, many years ago, I succeeded in growing a 'crop' on a window sill, so perhaps this will work.
There are more, but I'm going on too long, I think. Thank you for asking!
(no subject)
From:(no subject)
Date: 2017-05-21 03:34 pm (UTC)(no subject)
From:(no subject)
Date: 2017-05-22 11:39 am (UTC)Also, we harvested radishes and rocket. Peppery goodness!
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Date: 2017-05-22 09:21 pm (UTC)(no subject)
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Date: 2017-05-23 03:22 pm (UTC)(no subject)
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Date: 2017-05-26 05:54 pm (UTC)And baby summer squash!
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