Wednesday, April 29, 2020

2020 Garden Update: April 29

The lettuce and green pea bed is doing great!
With the end of April we're moving into the real growing season here in Zone 7, although we've continued to have rainy, cool weather and a few cold snaps. I'm hoping to see the heat loving vegetables put on some serious growth over the next few weeks! The pandemic continues to affect the usual round of garden store errands and supply runs, so we are mostly making do at home. We made one trip to the local nursery last week with masks and hand sanitizer and picked up some much needed potting soil along with several more plants, but I think it will be quite a while yet before I venture into Lowe's or any more crowded store. The future is far from certain, but at least the garden gives me something to look forward to each morning when I go out to check on everything and see what has changed.

Lettuce continues to be the champ of this year's garden; we get several salads a week out of my crop, which I'm still using as cut and come again to get the most out of it. Alas, I once again failed at growing carrots. Only the Little Fingers germinated, and while they produced big, promising green tops they only grew runty little carrots. We ate them, anyway, and cut the greens up into our salads. I think this will be my last attempt at carrots; I don't actually like carrots enough to keep struggling with them!

Runty carrots again. Sigh.
The green peas are blossoming beautifully with many little pods starting to form, and I'm keen to eat those again because they were a big hit with the family last year. I just hope the critters don't make off with them! We had plenty last year without a net, but the chipmunks here at the new house seem determined to wreak some havoc. I will probably find out soon if I'm going to need to cover the peas with a net, but I hope not! The vines are growing really tall now, and once again I wish I had planted more of them, but this year is a learning curve with the smaller space and raised beds. Both types of green peas have come up just fine, but at this point I can't tell any difference between them.

The squash and zucchini are not nearly as big as I would like, but they are starting to have flowers, too, and I hope the warmer weather ahead will help them grow. I'm not sure they are getting quite enough sun where they are, but we'll see how they do over the course of May. It might just be the cold weather that has held them back, and I did plant them out pretty early this year. The lone survivor of the original cucumber seedlings - a dragon's egg - has also produced flowers, even though it is still a puny runt of a plant. It just won't give up! I admire that and potted it up even though my second round of seedlings is growing much better. The store bought tomatoes all have baby fruit now and lots of flowers, but the heirloom varieties are slow growing (as they were last year). I haven't been able to find the determinate cherry or yellow pear types because of the pandemic and not going to larger garden centers, so we're working with what we've got for now. I expect the darn chipmunks to make off with the lowest hanging tomatoes as soon as they get at all red, but the plants should soon get too tall for them to reach.

Astilbe is doing really well.
The shade garden has filled in quite a lot with hostas, astilbes, ferns, and coral bells. Most of those were bought as bare root plants in mixed bags, but we added several coral bells on our recent nursery run. I would love to have twice as many! I really like the colors, especially the lime. It's a tricky bed to plant in because of the drainage tube, buried pipe, and cables, but we're getting there.

The sunny flower beds are also coming along, especially the irises we moved from the old house. The first one bloomed today! I can see scapes on the Stella D'Oro daylilies and hope to have the first daylily blooms soon. The regular lilies have been doing well, and the tall glads all came up, but I think the mini glads are proving to be a disappointment. I also found out that the chipmunks dug up and ate all of my replanted tulip bulbs from the Valentine's Day pot! At least they didn't get the tulips we planted in the fall.

By this time next month I hope to have lots of flowers and some real vegetable success stories to share!

Friday, April 10, 2020

Love for Lettuce

This year I got my lettuce started on time and have been really pleased to have fresh salad greens available at home throughout the early spring. It can be so hard to wait for the warm weather crops to get growing, which makes rows of tasty lettuce all the more delightful! Lettuce is an easy crop to grow in cool weather, in a small space, and with minimal fuss, and you can easily find a couple of different varieties to liven up your salad bowl. Lettuce is definitely going to be a staple in my kitchen garden going forward!


I sowed seeds from three different types of lettuce this year: Little Gem and Merveille des Quatre Saisons from Baker Creek Seeds, and a Salad Bowl variety from Burpee that I grew last year. All three have done equally well this year and each offers a different color or texture that goes well in combination. I'm using all of these as cut and come again, although the Merveille and Little Gem do form heads (we'll see if I'm patient enough for any to get to that point). I sowed the rows thickly so that I could thin them out as we go through the season, and so far there's still plenty of each growing. I have a row of each in a raised bed in the garden and a large shallow pot of Salad Bowl growing on the patio; the pot actually grew more quickly than the rows, partly because I could move it around for maximum sunlight.

With the pandemic making grocery runs more complicated, it's hard to keep a lot of really fresh produce on hand right now, and the lettuce has been much appreciated as a way to get a garden fresh green into our regular diet. We're experimenting with different salads using canned or packaged ingredients; one favorite has been a salad using canned peaches, pistachios, fresh mint from the garden, and feta cheese. Lettuce is also great for perking up a sandwich, bedding under a bean salad or couscous, or plating with an omelet. The best part is that the lettuce is there when we're ready for it instead of wilting in the fridge.

Our weather this year has been up and down quite a bit, so I don't know how long my lettuce will keep growing before the heat gets to it. If you're in a cooler planting zone you could still plant lettuce for your pandemic victory garden now, assuming you can get the seeds (many online retailers are sold out due to a tremendous surge in demand). Next year I hope to add even more varieties of lettuce to the early garden now that I know how easy it is to grow in containers as well as beds. What varieties of lettuce do you grow? I'd love some suggestions for the 2021 garden!