It is done. We have worked extremely hard this month and everything but the sweet potato and pepper plants are out. It has not been easy.
One of my goals has been to focus on saving more seeds. Scattered throughout the garden are labeled bolting plants. It seems attaching a label and tying them to a stake helps me resist the urge to remove them when they start looking ratty.
Dino Melon Banana Melon
The first row beside the lawn has the remaining cool weather vegetables. The empty spots will soon get seeds from the squash varieties which have tough stems that can withstand the mighty army of squash vine borers swarming toward my garden.
The second row has purple hull peas in the front section but the back has been planted with three different varieties of old field pea seeds in hopes something will sprout. I'm still waiting for some signs of life.
The sweet potatoes will be in the third row beside the Orange Icicle Tomatoes. Putting them together should work since the potatoes won't be dug until after the tomatoes die from frost damage or until I angrily rip them up. These are the ones that have trouble with blossom end rot so if they start to suffer, they will be gone.
Thinning seedlings when they look healthy is difficult for me but this has been a hard lesson learned. Maybe the onions will rebound from my mistake.
The next row to the left is the thin row that held the early maturing vegetables which were to be followed by the peppers. Hasn't worked. I misjudged their speeds of growth and our ability to consume the large amount. Later varieties are still maturing and are in the way. Some of the peppers have been planted in other rows but the rest will have to be squeezed in.
The middle of the garden is beginning to fill with vegetables.
My unending quest to successfully grow summer squash continues. Squash vine borers hatched out in my area on May 15th so the plants have been hidden under a row cover. It was removed when the blooms appeared and a scent trap was placed on the corral fence.
All of the squash varieties that are susceptible to the borers are planted close to the trap. They are zucchini, c. pepo; yellow squash, c. pepo; spaghetti, c. pepo; Honeyboat Delicata, c. pepo; and Red Kuri, c. maxima. The Zucchino Rampicante, c. moschata needs the corral for support. All of the other moschata varieties will be further away from the trap. This will be the year I get more zucchini than we can eat! I will succeed!
The potatoes don't seem to mind being in the shade. I don't know if they will produce less because of lower sunlight or if they will live longer due to the coolness of the shade.
It feels good to have the hardest part over now that the weather is turning hot. It is time to sit back and maintain: water, weed, harvest, then repeat.