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Subscribe The green, the green, the green!
The green is bursting out all over this week, and I’m so excited to see it. Having spent so much time in my adult life in Texas, the spring always seems to come so late here. I’m way past ready to see it, and nigh upon desperation. We don’t actually have our last frost date until May in West Virginia, but the green-green-green of late April is the signal that real garden time is upon us!
We already have peas in the ground, and the big plastic sheets are down to help smother the weeds before the major planting gets underway.
We have lots of things coming up in the garden already. Elephant garlic (a new one for us this year).
Horseradish.
Rhubarb (trying again this year!).
We add every year to our fruit. I love fruit, and I want it all! I’m impatient for it, but it takes time. We aren’t at the point of harvesting any fruit yet. We started our first year here and keep adding every year. We have a small orchard fenced out in BP-land. It doesn’t look like much, but we have about 7 or 8 small fruit trees out here.
We have several more fruit trees on the small bank between the garden and the driveway. We have plum, apricot, apple, pear, and peach. We had a cherry tree before, but it died, so a replacement cherry tree went in this year.
Very tiny cherry tree.
I’ve got a long way to go before I have any cherries.
We also have blackberry and blueberry bushes that we planted last year, and this year–new!–raspberry bushes! Raspberries, finally! I picked up two small bushes a few days ago to round out our fruit collection.
Grapes are growing outside the garden fence.
Like the cherry tree, asparagus is a replacement plant this year in the garden. We tried asparagus our first year, but it didn’t make it. I’m hoping we do better this time! The asparagus plants are two-year-old plants, so we can harvest some next year.
I’ll also be planting garden huckleberries and ground cherries, so even if I can’t make pie with the new cherry tree or the raspberries–or just about anything else we’ve got going–at least I’ll have that! Setting up my pie garden for the garden huckleberries and ground cherries is up next (including chicken protection).
Everything’s up in my herb garden except my basil and rosemary, so I may need to get replacement plants for them.
It’s garden time! What have you got going in new this year?
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Will you ever be able to remove the deer protection from your trees?
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Granny Trace
http://www.grannytracescrapsandsquares.com
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Three of the trees are just hilled in while I think where to put them.
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dede
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My little wild blueberry patch isn’t doing anything yet. We never get any berries anyway because the squirrels or birds always eat them. I should put netting or something over them but don’t seem to remember to do it.
Gardening is a challenge isn’t it? But so rewarding!
Love all your green, Suzanne! You are a few weeks ahead of us here in ME.
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Tina
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Though, it makes sense to find out if that is true or not first!
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I really enjoyed your map yesterday. It gives me a visual.
Thanks for making my day start out happy.
MN Mona
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I was amazed to see the rhubarb coming back this year, I thougth it had died right before my eyes last year.
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http://chickensintheroad.com/house/garden/planning-a-pie-garden/
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Good luck with the orchard
My black walnut trees killed by blackberry bush. I’ll have to relocate.
Tomatoes and ground cherries and potatoes are all related to the family of plants where deadly nightshade comes from – the flowers are very similar. So, I’m not surprised that they can be harmful to animals. In fact, when Christopher Columbus brought tomatoes back from the New World many people believed that they were poisonous.
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Suzanne
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A word of warning on the Egyptian Walking Onions: they walk miles! They took over a garden I had a few years ago, and when I pulled them up and dumped them in a compost heap in my woods, they were perfectly happy there, too. I had to yank them and bag them to get rid of them for good.
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This is the voice of sad experience speaking. The friend who gave us the horseradish to start warned us not to plant it in the ground because it’s invasive, but we thought “Great, lots of horseradish!” Oh, my. That was about 15 years ago and we’re still digging up sprouts every year. And what we grew in the pot was more than enough, even though we are fond of fresh horseradish. A word to the wise.
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Elisabeth, garden huckleberries are an edible form of solanum nigrum. You might get more info if you Googled “chichiquelites”.
I’m sorry your asparagus didn’t make it previously. We love fresh asparagus from the garden! I planted some from seed four springs ago and hope to harvest it this year. We also have an old bed that we mulch with old chicken manure every spring. It rewards us with great asparagus!
I am planting organic native blue corn this year! It’s sup
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Maura