Pages

Wednesday, April 13, 2016

The Anticipation Spring Brings


Despite waking to a dreary morning outside that rapidly turned into a full downpour, there being mud everywhere there is not still a snow pile, and the general grayness, I like spring better here in my little clearing better than I ever have since living in WY.

Every day some new thing pops out of the ground or shoots out little buds. When I first saw my garlic shoots sticking up through the snow a few days ago, I was so excited I had to go back and look at them two more times that day just to see if they were still growing! Crazy I know, and probably equivalent to trying to get a watched pot to boil, but sometimes things really do grow that fast. 

Last night for the first, I saw two of my rhubarb plants shooting up through their mulch. Even though I couldn't even find the other ones last night, this morning the other two are up as well! Meaning that all four of the plants I put in last year survived the winter.

Daffodils are faithfully coming up everywhere I planted them last fall. Even in the spots I totally forgot I had planted them. About half of the edge of my clearing should be blooming yellow in a few weeks!

Then there are the cherry and apple tree buds swelling every day. Parsnips shooting out tender looking little leaves. Creeping thyme with it's mini dusky green leaves crawling across the dirt. The wide brighter green of salvia and iris coming back up. Tiny little pairs of leaves marking the spots where alyssum seeds fell last year. The yard gradually developing a green haze. And so on. It's just so exciting to find a new live thing that made it through our winter every day!

Now I'm just itching to plant new stuff for this spring! But I am still waiting on some seeds that are in the mail, and it's still a little early for most things. We could easily get some very hard frosts yet since our last frost date isn't till July...





5 comments:

  1. If you buy any type of drink (milk, juice, tea) that comes in gallon jugs, save the jugs. Or have your friends save theirs for you. Cut out the bottom and place over plants if you anticipate frost. Leave the screw cap on overnight or take it off for that "greenhouse" effect during the day. It's a cheap way to protect plants so you can put starts out in garden before the last anticipated frost.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I don't buy any of that, but I work in a restaurant where I can get such jugs. I've used this method before and you have a good point. I might use it again to supplement my big frost covers.

      Delete
  2. It's crazy to me that your last frost date is in July. Here in the Dallas area, Easter Sunday is generally our last date. We don't deal with frost much, but the hail down here is ridiculous. We had baseball sized hail this past weekend. The hail storm before that was golf ball sized and it DEMOLISHED my garden. So we started again yesterday. Which is VERY late in the season to start down here, as by July we're in triple digits and our gardens are getting scorched. More rough weather is expected this coming weekend, so that might be for naught as well. :-( I might use the above suggestion about milk jugs. We aren't milk drinkers, but I imagine some of my friends could help collect for me.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Wow! I think maybe I'll stick with my frost and snow over trying to garden in the heat and hail. Good luck!

      Delete
  3. It's crazy to me that your last frost date is in July. Here in the Dallas area, Easter Sunday is generally our last date. We don't deal with frost much, but the hail down here is ridiculous. We had baseball sized hail this past weekend. The hail storm before that was golf ball sized and it DEMOLISHED my garden. So we started again yesterday. Which is VERY late in the season to start down here, as by July we're in triple digits and our gardens are getting scorched. More rough weather is expected this coming weekend, so that might be for naught as well. :-( I might use the above suggestion about milk jugs. We aren't milk drinkers, but I imagine some of my friends could help collect for me.

    ReplyDelete