...well, can't tell much about the garden yet. The soil is packed down and that may be a problem but we'll see...I once again pulled the baby rainbow chard leaves out of the mud, hoping they'll push to the future and not just give up - so much rain! After the long scary night of lightning and thunder, a lazy day for cats:
hey! a magnolia!...and it's April! like Will says, you just can't tell anymore. I keep wondering what will be left to bloom, now that everything has decided to bloom all at once?
All the flats from the side of the house were pulled up under the carport, and a good thing too...I'm trying to decide if the rain has passed - they need the light. You'd be surprised at the difference between the carport and just outside of it - the plants know. I'll give it one more night. I'd hate to move them at 2:00 a.m. from the yard back under the carport....
...and the baby squash and watermelons in their flats are in the greenhouse by the barn. So as much rain as we had (according to the wheelbarrow, probably about 3 inches), it matters not to seedlings who were under cover. Ditto for the carrots in the greenhouse. Hose dragging is for the birds by the way. It seems so stupid to be dragging a hose all the way to the back of the greenhouse after everything else has almost drowned. There must be a better way! All said, it could have been worse. We worried, after the herculean effort of planting, if we were going to lose part of the garden and have to do it all over again...but in the muddy field the corn is sprouting and so are the beans - and the flowers. I think we may have dodged a bullet.
By the way, this cracks me up. We planted 200 gladiolas, and a few of them came up right through a leaf in the mulch! ha.
Greetings-We are pleased to post a review of Jayber Crow at this special time for Wendell Berry:
ReplyDeletehttp://knowwhereyourfoodcomesfrom.com/2012/04/02/wendell-berrys-jayber-crow-a-life-on-the-river/
AND we're pleased to have you listed in our directory of CSA farms in Louisiana...
Frank W. Barrie, Editor
www.knowwhereyourfoodcomesfrom.com