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What's growing on, Beehaw? (Garden Chat)

Today marks the beginning of the second full week of Spring in the northern hemisphere, even if some of us are stuck in second winter. Share your garden goals, projects, challenges, and successes for this growing season; share your tips, tricks, and garden hacks, or anything else you'd like. Let's all help each other grow something beautiful together!

If folks are into it, I'd like to make this a weekly thread for everyone to share updates and assistance as the year progresses. Please let me know if that's something you'd all like.

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  • I'm getting ready to head over to my local library to help out with their new gardener workshop this morning. After that it's a quick meeting with the library's program coordinator and their Master Gardener Volunteer to work on plans for updating their garden layout for this year - they were accepted into a monarch conservation program recently and received funds to expand their sensory garden as well as their vegetable garden for the local food bank.

    After that it's back home to process all the willow cuttings waiting for me. I helped an older neighbor trim their willow wall yesterday and they let me take all that material for our nursery. Hopefully I can rope one of my plant nerd friends into helping me out, because there's so much to get through.

  • Just planted some tomatoes in the back yard. It’s shady back there but I’m still hoping. The neighbors removed a maple tree over the winter which I’m hoping might allow somewhat more sun in. We’ll see if it’s enough. If they don’t make fruit I will still enjoy their rambling growth and leaves.

    I also planted two oaks in my local park last weekend. Unfortunately, one was already vandalized but the other is doing OK. I didn’t water it right away and by the time I did it was looking quite wilted, but has made a full recovery after some irrigation.

    Plan to plant some more oaks in the park this coming weekend. Still scoping out where I can get some free mulch and stakes.

    • They'll also still be a solid way to support hummingbird sphinx moths and parasitoid wasps if they don't fruit, but I'm still hoping you get some food out of it.

  • I planted some spring bulbs last autumn, but it looks like I didn't plant them deep enough as a lot seem to have fallen over. Others.are fine though, so will see what survives.

  • I moved to a new house last year. (Belgium, doesn't follow the weather of the zoning system well) We are in the process of stripping it down to the bones, just got a new roof, have to dig out the floor down 35 cm to pour a cement slab, etc...

    Suffice to say I don't have the time for a garden this year even though we have a lovely 1500m^2 plot with around 60 trees that haven't been upkept for years.

    I would love to know some super easy low upkeep plants to help the soil in our future garden bed areas (one used to be a big compose pile, so the soil there seems pretty good already).

    I was thinking some potatoes in the method of loosening the soil, throwing a ton of seed potatoes and maybe onions over it, and covering it with a bunch of dead grass cuttings that we have.

    Then maybe some bush beans too. If it is a wet year like the winter it has been, they should grow very well.

    • Hey congratulations! And yeah, USDA zones and similar categorization schemes are just part of the picture and deal more with overwinter lows and plant hardiness than anything else - you may find that one of the Köppen systems helps you to better envision your climate particulars.

      Potatoes and onions are pretty easy in my experience, having done what your plan is. I've also found radishes and beets to be fairly low maintenance as well as being useful for breaking up compacted soils (and tasty to boot).

  • Last year's collard greens survived the winter and have continued thriving, so getting to start the season with a harvest is nice. Other than that, carrot seedlings are getting started, two grape saplings are rooting nicely, though they won't likely bloom for a few years, and some herbs are beginning in the seeding stage for now.

39 comments