The weather this summer has been so different than last summer which brought new challenges and successes. Last year, it rained constantly. I had to replant a lot in the spring, because all the water just drowned everything. This year, we've had a decent amount of rain, plus HEAT. Plants that love the heat thrived and plants that struggle in heat did not do as well as they did last year. And that is the life of a gardener; one year you can have an abundance of cucumbers and the next year, barely any.
The pictures in today's post were taken about the middle of July and already I can see a big difference in the garden, which made me wonder if I should have waited to take pictures. But the garden is ever changing, ever evolving, and the pictures I take today could look nothing like the garden tomorrow.
The spinach, pictured above right and below fed us from May till yesterday. It bolted about mid-July but I kept using it till it was gone. Now that spot is empty in my garden. I reseeded more beets, you can see the little sprouts poking up in the middle in the photo above. And I will probably reseed more spinach in the fall. Spinach loves cooler weather, so I will reseed at the end of August.
My lettuce plants have blown me away this summer. No matter how much we eat, every time I go out in the garden, there seems to be more. I can't believe it hasn't bolted in the heat yet! The dark green lettuce in the mix is just starting to bolt, but everything still tastes yummy.
The basil growing behind the lettuce has been such a disappointment this year. It's growing well, but it keeps getting shredded by slugs. I keep putting slug bait down, but it doesn't seem to be working. I really want nice, beautiful basil leaves, not leaves with huge holes in them.
It is getting harder and harder to walk this path everyday as the plants keep encroaching on it. It's even worse now as the cucumber and zucchini plants have gotten so much bigger since this photo was taken.
The plants growing over the edge are beans, with potatoes on the right. Cucumbers, zucchini, and summer squash are in the foreground.
A close up of my bean plants with broccoli behind them. I learned the hard way to plant my beans in a raised bed. The first year I did not and I had to crawl on my hands and knees everyday to harvest them. Now, I can just walk along the path and harvest the beans standing up.
A little broccoli head just starting to form a head. I've already harvested many heads of broccoli.
Here are my insane, out of control cucumbers. I'm trying to get them to grow up to save space, and it's working, but they are so large and healthy this year that they are sending out vines every where. The vines are also spreading onto the brick path today.
My son went out onto the roof of our porch to get these photos for me. It's pretty safe, as safe as a roof top can be. Someday I need to get a drone. These photos were taken a little later than the photos above, so you can see how the cucumbers and potatoes are growing onto the path.
I know you're all anxious for an update on the never-ending hill project my hubby started last fall. You can get a glimpse of it in the photo below. The boards are peeking out beyond the white fence. It has been such a slow process, as he only has one day a week to work on it.
This is an aerial view of the other vegetable garden. This one has mostly potatoes in it, along with carrots, sweet peas, peppers, and eggplant.
I planted sweet peas where I have normally planted tomatoes in previous years. Hubby thought we needed to move the tomato plants for crop rotation reasons. The sweet peas are doing very well here, and the tomatoes seem to like their new spot too. I'm gonna have so many peas this year. And yes, I'm still picking peas every day. I know they are supposed to be a spring plant, but mine came late this year.
I still have carrots left over in the freezer from last year, so I only planted one row this year.
The peppers have been loving the heat we've had this summer. I've already picked two sweet peppers and multiple jalapeño peppers and I usually don't pick any till fall.
I tried eggplant for the first time last year and they did not do that great because the weather was so cool and wet. This year it's been so hot that they are thriving!
On the back patio I grow cauliflower and kale. They love this cooler, more shady area.
A tiny little cauliflower head. I've harvested three heads of cauliflower already. It's been a good year for cauliflower.
I'm growing more kale in another bed on the back patio along with a shrub raspberry bush and some herbs.
Ugh! Cilantro! Does anyone else struggle with this herb as much as I do? It bolts almost as soon as it's starts growing. I've tried cutting it back, but it just keeps bolting anyway. My daughter says, "Oh, just let it bloom, it makes such a pretty flower." So I did. I also reseeded it so I actually have some cilantro when I'm ready to make salsa.
Lemon balm growing underneath the hanging basket. I never use my lemon balm. I tried putting it in tea once and I couldn't even taste it, so I thought "What's the point?" Do you use your lemon balm if you grow it?
Here is the new bed we planted our tomatoes in. Those are onions in front, which aren't growing well at all. I cannot grow onions to save my life. I think I will give up on them as I have tried everything.
My cucumbers are producing so much I can't eat them fast enough. I've been juicing them, making every cucumber salad I can find a recipe on, and I've also dehydrated them making "Salt and Vinegar Cucumber Chips". Yum! They are so delicious!
Some of my sweet peas!
This is about all the raspberries I ever get from my raspberry shrub 😆. Someday I need to dig this shrub up and toss it as it is so useless. It's not raspberry canes, it's a raspberry shrub, so it doesn't produce the same.
I get so tired of picking and processing beans by this time of the year. But they feed my family all year, so I keep going!
I harvested a ton of kale so far. Kale is a cut and grow again plant so I will harvest a lot more before the gardening season is over. I freeze mine to use in soups and smoothies.
The tomatoes are growing beautifully. So far, I picked at least four this size and a handful of cherry/grape tomatoes.
I painted this birdhouse and my husband hung it up inside our vegetable enclosure. Two day later a wren moved in. Wren's have the most beautiful songs! Now I get to hear him sing every time I'm out there.
My radishes did great this spring! Aren't they gorgeous? I only wish I could grow them all summer long, but they only seem to grow well in spring. I've tried reseeding them in past years and never got good results.
And that is how my vegetable garden has been growing this year. If you vegetable garden, how has your garden done? I'd love to hear from you!
Have A Great Day! Amy
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That looks like a huge garden and has yielded a nice amount of vegetables. I used to grow a garden when I was younger - it's too much work for me now. I always enjoyed seeing the vegetables growing in my own backyard!
ReplyDeleteIt is huge, and probably too much work for me too, but I always say "What else would I do if I didn't have a garden?"
Deleteoh my goodness, what a green thumb you have! I am so impressed with what you grow. I grow veggies, but nothing like your "farm". Do you replenish your soil every year? tell us some of your secrets.
ReplyDeleteThank you. I don't have any secrets. We haven't replenished the garden soil, although we are thinking about it for next year. We've always used shredded leaves for mulch and I bury my kitchen compost in the veggie garden so that's about the only natural additives we've ever added. We use an organic fertilizer in the spring when we turn over the soil. That's about it.
DeleteThis is the most amazing vegetable garden I have ever seen! Wow! Do you give any of it away to neighbors or friends or are you able to eat it all? The layout is really nice! This has been such a HOT summer! We are finally getting some cooler weather late this week after weeks of it being in the 90's+!! I just do cherry tomatoes and herbs in a raised bed, but eventually I want to do more.
ReplyDeleteCarrie
curlycraftymom.com
Thank you. I use to give veggies away but I just got the feeling most people didn't want them or there were already many other gardeners giving veggies away. Now I preserve it all and we eat it all winter. I can, freeze, dehydrate my veggies. Right now I have an abundant of cucumbers so I dehydrate them into salt and vinegar chips. So good! Your weather sounds similar to mine. I'm expecting cooler weather starting tomorrow. Yea!
DeleteYour garden looks very good. My husband takes care of our vegetable garden, but unfortunately this year none of the seeds grew into plants...
ReplyDeleteThank you. That is so odd. I wonder what happened. Were they old seeds?
DeleteYou garden is amazing! It must be so nice to go out and pick all of that lovely produce! I've never had luck with growing cilantro but those flowers are pretty.
ReplyDeleteThank you. I'm glad I'm not alone in my cilantro struggles.
DeleteI love seeing everything growing: it's great that you can freeze some things to have during the cold months. Do you also can?
ReplyDeletewww.chezmireillefashiontravelmom.com
Yes, I do can: tomatoes, salsa, pickles, sometimes beets and peppers too.
DeleteEverything looks so hearty...here in Chicagoland we have been boiled (water and heat), hoping to find some goodies in my garden tomorrow with cooler temps...you go Girl!
ReplyDeleteThank you. I'm looking forward to the cooler temps this week too.
DeleteYour garden is doing great!
ReplyDeleteThanks Joanne!
DeleteYour are quite the gardener, Amy! The plants looks so healthy and beautiful. You always inspire me with your garden photos.
ReplyDelete-Soma
Thank you so much!
DeleteSo many goodies from your garden, everything looks delicious! I planted eggplant the first time this year. They are blooming but no fruit yet. I too never have any luck growing onions so I have given up. I also can't grow radish as it gets too hot here too soon. I think I need to sew the seeds sooner. I have a package of "black spanish" radish seeds which are supposed to grow well in fall, so I will try them. I love lemon balm tea for its calming purposes. Not sure I could have handled going solo on my trip to Germany last fall if it wasn't for a cup of lemon balm tea before I left. But I buy organic tea bags and don't grow my own. I imagine the homegrown leaves could be dried and used in the same way.
ReplyDeleteThank you. It's good to hear I'm not alone in my onion endeavors. I can only grow radishes once, in the early spring. I've tried reseeding a second crop, and it never works. They just grow into long roots. I have dried the lemon balm, it just doesn't taste like anything. Maybe I'll try again.
DeleteThis is amazing! Well done, it is looking so good!
ReplyDeleteThanks so much!
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