Sitting in our home office this morning I noticed movement far out in the back yard.
Spring has been beautiful here - rainy and lush. Some hot days in the mix, but mostly, it's been pleasant. The only problem I'm encountering is because of so much rain, I can't finish getting my garden put in. Greg reminds me it's still early, but somehow I feel behind. Ah well, I don't control the weather, and even though it's 60 degrees outside today, and perfect for planting, the heavy rain last night has undoubtedly saturated the ground again. A commitment tomorrow means Thursday afternoon/evening and Friday are my best opportunities to plant more seeds before it rains again. Hopefully, the soil will dry out enough to plant, but still be soft enough to easily remove weeds that are proliferating out there.
Meanwhile, I've given over the asparagus patch to fern for the rest of the spring and summer. It was a pitiful harvest, but I'm going to try some suggestions I've found online and in comments some of you have left to see if this patch can produce some healthier looking spears next year. I do wonder if it's just growing old...
Strawberry picking started this week. It seems early, but I'm excited that the patch is producing nicely after thinning it out last autumn.
Some of the strawberries get taken out daily by critters, but I still pick enough that for the previous two springs, and again this spring, I've decided I preferred sharing over netting the plants - and unnetting, and re-netting every other day or so until the plants finish producing.
The sour cherries are starting to ripen, and itty bitty peaches are appearing, so it's time to get serious about clearing out the frozen fruit again. In spite of giving away fresh strawberries, eating them to our hearts' content, and baking for others, there is still plenty to freeze. Add sour cherries and peaches, and we can never seem to manage to use up all the frozen fruit I freeze before the next fruit season is upon us. That said, I haven't bought frozen fruit for a few years now, so there is that! Even though I am not a big fruit eater, thinking we'll possibly live long enough to have to move from here someday, I imagine I will miss the easy, and essentially free, fruit.
While I wait for the garden soil to dry out, I'm making plans for what else to plant.
I'm not going to buy and transplant so many tomato plants this year, or even peppers, but green beans, cucumbers, zucchini and yellow squash are on the docket, and I'm imaging growing some fun pumpkins and a few flowers again. Maybe even watermelon. Though, I'm not sure the garden is big enough for more than one or two vining plants (that need ground space). And while last autumn I told myself I wanted to till up some more earth to enlarge the garden, I'm not so sure about that at this point. For now, it's pleasant to imagine summer's harvest, knowing I'll accept whatever limitations (or even failures) present themselves. Whatever grows that we can eat and share - it's all good.
To close, the irises have faded since the weekend, and I'm so glad I snapped some pictures: