Gardening looks much different for me this year.
It's not simply the "every year looks different in the garden" kind of different.
This is gardening in a different place.
I've gone from hundreds of feet of raised beds, established strawberry and asparagus beds, fruit trees and berry bushes, as well as established native wild flowers and other perennials, to a 60-foot long, 5-foot wide in-ground garden bed and 20-some mineral tubs for my vegetable gardens. I also have a few smaller containers and flower pots for vegetables, flowers and herbs.
I can't grow quite the abundance that I used to, but we'll manage.
So this is what my gardening looks like this year.
A portion of the in-ground garden mulched with hay provided by a neighbor. Right now it contains seedlings of kale, collards, lettuce, peas and radishes.Rabbits started nibbling my peas, so I wrapped row cover around the trellis to thwart them. Cutworms and unexpected cold have threatened the seedlings, but eventually we'll get veggies.
I'm feeling impatient, though. I want to pull some radishes! However, I have made my first harvest. A couple of days ago I thinned kale and kept most of the thinnings as infant kale. Some of them were cooked with several kinds of wild greens.
The first harvest of the season, though, were garlic mustard, dandelions, nettles and cleavers from around the property.
The other part of my gardening adventure this year looks like this:
Three tubs and one bucket contain five broccoli plants. It started as six, but a cutworm (which I could not find) took one out. Some tubs also contain an abundance of mini bok choy seedlings, and I have some tiny Chinese cabbage seedlings ready to plant in one of the tubs. For some reason I'm craving bok choy and Chinese cabbage. These will become stir fries and kimchi, as well as salad ingredients. A little lettuce is in a couple of tubs, and I planted radishes and carrots in two more.
I wouldn't have considered carrots in a container, but I read an article about vegetables that will grow in containers and it listed carrots as one. Nothing to lose.
As usual, gardening is an adventure and experiment, as well as a learning experience. Only more so this year. I'm hoping for good results and a decent harvest. Nothing is guaranteed, though, especially with the changing climate.
Hopefulness has to be an ingrained trait of those of us who garden. We're never guaranteed that our seeds will sprout, much less grow into healthy, productive plants. So I keep planting.
Keep on planting.



