Skip to main content

my garden - midsummer 2015

It's hard to get up early when you stay up late!  But the mornings I do get up early, I really enjoy being out back in the yard.  It's the best time to weed, of course, and I find it to be a soothing contemplative activity.  During the summer, as I am sure I've previously mentioned, it is lovely to sit out back and sip - hot tea in the morning, cool beverage in the evening, and hear the city just beyond view, the birds and insects within view.  A better place to read, knit or visit is hard to find.  

Some of the things we've harvested so far this year include sugar snap peas...


Sugar snap peas are the first things we plant, at the end of March.  They're a cold-season vegetable, and just when I think I can stand winter no more, I can start my garden.  A few years, I have forgotten to start these soon enough, but luckily not this year.  We had some warm weather in early spring, so we dug up a bed and turned over soil, and planted two rows of peas.  A few weeks later, we were getting record-breaking rains, and the peas were soon poking up from the ground.  They did very well this year.  Everyone in the house loves to eat the pods right off the vine, as well as sauteed with olive oil and salt, or in a stir-fry dish.  First up, delicious, and beautiful blossoms to boot!  I'm telling you, it's win-win-win.  

For the first time ever, my own homegrown garlic...  
A few years ago, we planted garlic - and didn't know when to harvest them.  Since then, I've read up on garlic, and when I saw the plants dying back, I knew it was time to get the shovel!  Boy, I love garlic.  When my mother-in-law introduced me to fresh garlic, it changed my views on cooking forever.  And to have it straight out of the garden, to know we took care of it and raised it organically, so much the better!  Can't wait to roast some, or add it to marinara.  Yum!  I love the dried roots in this picture.  


And the blueberries...


Blueberries are something I did not like until we started growing our own.  Truthfully, blueberries do not readily grow in Colorado; when we planted these, we dug a big trench and filled it with a bale of peat.  The plants have done alright, they are still alive, and we've had blueberries every year.  Though I'm not sure we can say they do well.  However, I know my boys love them, and I know how good they are for us, so it has been worth the few handfuls (and many lovely pictures.)  

Perhaps it's all the rain, I don't know, but we've noticed more butterflies and tons more ladybugs than ever, this year.  I've gotten a few really nice pictures!  I even spotted one without spots today - ha! 



Hopefully we'll have peppers and tomatoes, soon.  I'll let you know!  



Comments

  1. Wow Karen -- your photos are beautiful! Looks like you have a wonderful garden this year you lucky girl! I won't show you mine -- it's pitiful!!!

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

I love reading your comments! Please be sure to LEAVE YOUR EMAIL ADDRESS (if it isn't included in your profile) so that I may respond to you. Thank you!

Popular posts from this blog

garden panos from 2023

 Last year, I made some effort (not thoroughly successful) to capture state-of-the-garden pictures every month, including panoramas stitched together on Photoshop, in order to get the whole view of what's happening.  So here's a little recap of the garden in 2023! early March April May June August It appears that I missed July, and either didn't take or didn't save this project in September, although we didn't have a killing frost very late into the season - we were still harvesting a few things in October.  As much as I loved the lettuce that was growing in the tunnel, and getting an early start on a few things, I'm not a fan of plastic anywhere, especially in my garden, so I am looking at options - cold boxes with old windows, etc.  I'm planning to start my 2024 garden this month - pea planting, planning, and seed starting in March!  What are you planting?  

Night

Trixie (as in Speed Racer) and Stitch (as in per inch) Night My kitten walks on velvet feet And makes no sound at all; And in the doorway nightly sits To watch the darkness fall. I think he loves the lady, Night, And feels akin to her Whose footsteps are as still as his, Whose touch as soft as fur. Lois Weakley McKay ... a childhood favorite from The How and Why Library. Thank goodness my parents moved last year and sent this book my way. Otherwise, I would have just the first line running through my head forever!

Spring Means Baseball!

I've had this idea for a knitting pattern in my head and it's finally come to fruition!  I am still polishing up the pattern, but here's a quick peak:  PS:  There's more than one size and this one is too big for me but it was the only one I had "stitched up."