The carrots and
rutabaga are planted! I realized on the
19th that the month of May was getting away from me. Between the pandemic lockdown and neither of
us having worked/ had a consistent schedule for far too long, my sense of time has
been quite scrambled. I zipped outside
that afternoon and sowed carrot seed (Jaune Obtus du Doubs, Atomic Red, Cosmic
Purple, Scarlet Nantes, and Koral) in one of the raised beds. Beside it, I planted some Laurentian rutabaga
seeds. They are among this summer’s
growing experiments; I have never grown rutabaga before.
The sky was
dotted with a few white, puffy clouds and the sun was beaming down while I
planted. Once I covered the carrots with burlap (it helps with germination), I
came inside to check my email. Within a
half hour, the sky turned dark, thunder and lightning rumbled through, and it started to pour. It
rained for a while, cleared off, and then started again the following
morning. It has more or less been
raining since.
The grass squishes beneath our feet and the garden plots are so saturated, they have puddles in them. By this point in May, we usually have potatoes planted, at least one garden plot weeded, the pea trellises up and the peas sown. It has been too wet so far to get the tilling and weeding done on time.
The grass squishes beneath our feet and the garden plots are so saturated, they have puddles in them. By this point in May, we usually have potatoes planted, at least one garden plot weeded, the pea trellises up and the peas sown. It has been too wet so far to get the tilling and weeding done on time.
In the “bathtub”
and in some of the containers behind the house, I transplanted some of the
Lacinato kale, Dazzling Blue kale, Five Colour Silverbeet Swiss Chard, Corcade
lettuce, and Crisp Mint (a romaine type) lettuce that had been started in milk
jug greenhouses. They are loving the
cool, wet weather.
Most of the winter squash I started indoors on the 16th under lights has germinated. I’ll thin them out on the weekend and hope for hot, sunny days starting next week!
Most of the winter squash I started indoors on the 16th under lights has germinated. I’ll thin them out on the weekend and hope for hot, sunny days starting next week!
Cole is the
earliest variety of tomato I’m growing this year. Two of the Cole transplants have already put
out flowers.
The asparagus
crowns we planted last Spring didn’t make it through the winter. I suspect they would have preferred to have
been planted in-ground instead of in a raised bed. R bought more (green and purple varieties)
and planted them this past week out of town on his father’s land.