digitS'
Garden Master
No, I'm not doing that. I said a few years ago that I have had 40 seasons of gardening, man and boy. I guess that's about right if I count the family gardens back home, on the farm. When we moved off the farm, I had my own garden .
I can remember as a young married guy, with a kid and new jobs -- allowing a few years pass without a garden. Moving a household here and there can also sure interfere with a gardener's preferred activities.
We seem all to have faced fairly serious weather problems the last few years. Here, it turned into Junuary instead of the warm month that I'd hoped for. This was after a record cold April and a May that was well into the bottom 10% for warmth. The worse hailstorm I've ever seen about a week ago, frequent rain and hail yesterday with wind gusts above 25mph and an afternoon high aaallll the way up to 54F has put quite a cap on the first half of this month!
Others are dealing with different conditions but if you'd take a walk thru my large veggie garden, where all the warm-season plants are - you'd say like I did, "Where's the green?!" It's 99.9% dirt with mere wisps of plants poking up often at tortured, windblown angles.
Oh, there's promise. After 40 years of looking at spring conditions in the garden - I can recognize promise. Besides, as a gardener, I've learned to thrive on promise. Almost as much as the harvest, the promise sustains me.
My salad garden, which is much what the other "little veggie garden" amounts to - has been more than just a promise. Green leaves of cool-season crops can grow thru a spring where the temperature has risen above 75 on a total of three (count them, 3) days. I'm real pleased how the potatoes look !
So, what keeps me from giving up? One thing is that diversity of crops? And, I have to admit, it really helps for me to have a diversity of conditions since I have gardens 3 locations, 4 if you count the little patch of ground in the backyard.
Also, I'm a bit competitive! Yeah, with gardens in so many places - I've got lots of neighbors! Whaaatt ?
How about you? Even if this hasn't been a difficult start to the gardening year - don't kid me!! If you have gardened any length of time at all, you have faced gardening problems that were darn near impossible.
Nah, I'm not giving up !
Steve
I can remember as a young married guy, with a kid and new jobs -- allowing a few years pass without a garden. Moving a household here and there can also sure interfere with a gardener's preferred activities.
We seem all to have faced fairly serious weather problems the last few years. Here, it turned into Junuary instead of the warm month that I'd hoped for. This was after a record cold April and a May that was well into the bottom 10% for warmth. The worse hailstorm I've ever seen about a week ago, frequent rain and hail yesterday with wind gusts above 25mph and an afternoon high aaallll the way up to 54F has put quite a cap on the first half of this month!
Others are dealing with different conditions but if you'd take a walk thru my large veggie garden, where all the warm-season plants are - you'd say like I did, "Where's the green?!" It's 99.9% dirt with mere wisps of plants poking up often at tortured, windblown angles.
Oh, there's promise. After 40 years of looking at spring conditions in the garden - I can recognize promise. Besides, as a gardener, I've learned to thrive on promise. Almost as much as the harvest, the promise sustains me.
My salad garden, which is much what the other "little veggie garden" amounts to - has been more than just a promise. Green leaves of cool-season crops can grow thru a spring where the temperature has risen above 75 on a total of three (count them, 3) days. I'm real pleased how the potatoes look !
So, what keeps me from giving up? One thing is that diversity of crops? And, I have to admit, it really helps for me to have a diversity of conditions since I have gardens 3 locations, 4 if you count the little patch of ground in the backyard.
Also, I'm a bit competitive! Yeah, with gardens in so many places - I've got lots of neighbors! Whaaatt ?
How about you? Even if this hasn't been a difficult start to the gardening year - don't kid me!! If you have gardened any length of time at all, you have faced gardening problems that were darn near impossible.
Nah, I'm not giving up !
Steve