I got a ton of planting done on Good Friday. All of the flowers I
bought a few weeks ago are now in the ground. Now I wish I had bought
another flat of geraniums. But I doubt they would still have them at
Costco if I went back. I'll just have to look at Home Depot or Lowe's or
even Walmart.
Then on Saturday I planted the entire vegetable garden. It took me about
five hours to do. But, that included shade breaks and a few calls to
family and friends about Easter. All of this planting business started
weeks ago when I bought the garden soil and tilled it into the existing
soil after weeding and getting the leaves out of the beds. Then I had to
study up on crop rotation and plot out the garden based on last year
and what was planted where. I procrastinated about that for a while
until I finally sat down with pen and paper and sketched it all out. So
from left to right (if you are facing the playground from the driveway)
this is what's planted this year: two types of lavender, oregano, a
lavender rhododendron, ever-bearing strawberries, peas, lima beans,
green beans, a butterfly bush, thyme, Italian flat leaf parsley,
rosemary, lemon balm, four types of tomatoes, cinnamon basil, corn,
green beans, yellow squash, zucchini, a very sad looking azalea, and
cucumbers. The squash and zucchini are both seeds that I planted
directly into the soil.
|
cucumbers |
|
dill, corn, squash, and beans |
I've been watering the soil twice a day so I
hope the seeds germinate and grow. I usually grow everything indoors
first so this is my first time planting something directly in the soil. I
am also not sure which plants are lima beans and which ones are
climbing green beans. I guess I'll find out when they start to bear
fruit.
|
tomatoes and basil |
|
lemon balm, rosemary, parsley, and thyme |
|
bush beans |
|
lima beans |
|
peas |
|
strawberries |
I still have some seedlings waiting for transplant including mini and
regular sunflowers, sweet basil, and chamomile. I think I might plant
the mini sunflowers in a pot and put it next to the preschool entrance.
There's an extra pot I found the other day. Of course I found it after I
was finished planting all of the flowers in pots and in the ground. So I
didn't have even one geranium, viola, or petunia to plant in it. I
could also plant the chamomile in the pot also. I think it would like
the softer potting soil and I would like to be able to move it if I need
to.
|
oregano and two types of lavender |
Speaking of pots to fill. I have three window boxes that I bought last
week and plan to fill and put on the balcony on the street side of the
railing. Next time I get paid I will hit up the plant nursery for some
'thrill, spill, and fill.' I think the hardest part will be to pick the
thrill plant/s. I was thinking red geraniums because they're the color
of the Methodist Church so to speak.
Also, geraniums are hearty and can handle the direct sunlight and if I
don't get to watering them every day. Then I was think I would fill the
pots with maybe a few decorative ferns or small grasses. And the spill
can be ivy or vinca. Actually, that also makes me think of impatiens.
They would make good thrill and fill and are hearty as well. I guess
I'll hold off and see what comes out for sale after all of the violas
and pansies are completely gone from the stores. I'll need to grab some
marigolds for the summer anyway. So I might as well get everything in
one trip if I can swing it.
So far the garden is in stasis. That means I can focus on other
projects around the grounds like pruning the saplings from the crepe
myrtles, taming the vines along the driveway (while avoiding the poison
ivy I saw there the other day), and getting the rest of the weeds out
of the far off garden. There's always something that needs to be done.
I'm not complaining though. I think I've finally hit my stride this
year and I think the garden really reflects that.
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