Thanks for the kind words Annie.
Now that last year is is behind us, haha, onto what's cooking in the Pancakery this year.. . .
The raised garden beds are brimming with growing veggies. The sheet mulching from last year has paid of with a drastically reduced weed presence. Last year I could not direct seed anything without a carpet of other seedlings developing. This year, after ripping open a soft half rotted
cardboard giftwraping, I was able to direct seed tons of brassicas, lettuce, and root veggies. There is daily managing over the multiple beds, but it's actually manageable! Win :) The larger seeded plants (squashes/cucumbers/sunflowers) I started inside and transplanted out over the last 2 weeks. Sadly last night it got into the 30s and more than half the squash leaves turned dead and brown from cold damage. I'll try and direct seed into their spots if new leaves don't sprout.
Here is a freshly seeded and mulched bed from April 18th. There are peas in the long strip, and greens/brassicas in the square areas. I foster lots of
nettles,
dandelions, and burdock plants around the beds. They made great mulch plus I eat the dandelions and
nettles.
And the same bed May 24th, no watering besides rain and snow.
I also have been taking some of the seeded patches and digging up a spade of transplants. The lettuce has been the best success this way. But its worked with radishes/spinach/cabbage/kale/beets. Here is a bed already planted with two rows of onions, getting lettuce between them and a comfrey mulching.
A close up of the transplant chunks. I gently tumble the clump in my hands until the seedlings start to come loose. Gently. Did I say gently? :)
And here it is about a week later. Every single one survived transplant and some hot long days. I did
water them the first three days, but not since. I love the little world the tiny plants create.
The overgrown raised beds in the food forest patch have been moved into the main garden area. I wanted to connect some of the beds to get more gardening space, which now looks more "labyrinthy". With the leftover soil and lumber, I was able to build and fill a ~20" wide bed along the
fence in the garden. These new beds are not doing too much, they have been sheet mulched with cardboard covered in yarrow stalks and yard trimmings. The Hardy Kiwis are planted in the beds along the fence, and they are indeed doing very well.
I'll finish off the post with a shot of the whole garden. And some greens that made their way into dinner. A little of everything edible right now and some onion greens for the seasoning.
Thanks for reading my ramblings Permies!