Virtually every attempt at planting seeds on this parcel of
land has failed. I am trying again this year by planting earlier than ancient tradition has called for (plant corn when the leaves of the oak tree are the size of a mouses ear).
I have also planted some of the grain with water-retaining crystals.
Mulching in a previous year did NOT work.
I used a dibble to punch holes in the sod, dropped the seeds and possibly the crystals in, and then punched the dibble in next to it to close the hole.
I planted Indian corn sweet corn, squash, and birdseed (millet, sorgum, oil seed sunflower) and buckwheat. The soil has a lot of sand in it and so it drains more quickly than most of the midwestern soil: TOO quickly! It is really too dry for grain. Again, mulching did NOT work!
Next year perhaps I will try winter wheat if the corn fails.
On the GOOD side, while the asparagus is a lot smaller than the asparagus in my garden, it appears to be healthy and there is
enough every year for some me to eat: it is not YET up though. I am sure it will be ready next week to harvest. Some kind of onion appears to be doing well aabove a seep: not AT the seep but above it (good drainage perhaps?). I THINK it is bunching green onions, but since I planted more than one kind of onion I am not sure. The American Plums by the creek that I planted this spring have broken dormancy: we will see where on this land they survive the summer.
And, just for fun the daffodils survived the winter well and have come back again this spring. May they spread and flourish! I like the ones with the mixed yellow and white petals the best: they are so cheerfull! And the Louisiana Iris BELOW the seep are 8 inches tall and promising a good bloom! I wish there were vegetables and grain that were as happy there as the flowers!
Well, perhaps winter wheat as it is harvested so early.