Last week we had a ton of rain here in the Pacific Northwest and it’s in the forecast for this week as well.
After a heavy rain I always find myself raking the barktopia we’ve got going on in the backyard and it makes me tired. Why couldn’t we have just planted grass all over the place like all the other neighbors? It’s pretty much the only time I feel silly for having a bunch of garden beds and vegetable patches scattered throughout our property.
Carrots. Seedlings to the left, winter carrots to the right.
Strawberries growing in pallets. Have you tried this yet? If there is one thing I like growing in pallets, it’s strawberry plants. Not only do the pallet gardens help keep the berries off the ground, it helps deter the slugs as well.
Poppies and rhubarb. The rhubarb should be ready to pick in a couple of weeks! 🙂
Ahh the greenhouse garden. I love it! If you look closely you can see the cabbage plants growing in the bed to the right of the greenhouse. I plan on transplanting my gutter lettuce out to the garden this week to make room for some other seedlings.
The shasta daisies are growing like bonkers! They’ll reach about 5 feet tall by the end of summer.
And take a look at our raspberry patch. The seven rows of raspberries we planted back in 2009 are coming back in full force this year. I wonder how many pounds we will harvest?
And last but not least, our extra terracotta pots. I can never decide if I want to scrub the green patina off them or leave them as they are.
What do you think? Keep the patina, or clean them?
~Mavis
This years garden is being sponsored by the folks at Botanical Interests Seed Company. You can check out their website HERE, order their new 2014 Garden Seed Catalog HERE.
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Wendy Steele says
I love, love, love the green patina on clay pots. Reminds me of moss, and I LOVE moss!!!
Michelle says
I am a patina girl…I say keep it.
Donna Jantzer says
The look of the ‘patina’ aside, the Master Gardeners encourage the sterilization of used pots with the new planting season to discourage the communication of diseases. I don’t always do that, for sure, but more out of laziness than the love of the patina.
Linda says
I love the photos of you and your garden. It really motivate me.
Living in northern Idaho we have a short growing season so I
am just able to get my cold crops in now. It froze so hard this
winter I thought it would never thaw that’s when your photos
helped me get through the winter. Love your greenhouse I am
working on one now.
Linda Fineday says
What do you do with the runners of the strawberries to keep them with the same plant? Or just what do you do with them looking for ideas? We were told to wrap them around and around but, that didn’t seem like a good idea and it was a never ending job! I like your pictures.