Yesterday was the first day of spring. Check out our spring garden!

πππ
It’s going to be a while before we can start building the trellis tunnels (we will be starting closer to the high raised bed, and I hope to eventually have two or three, though maybe not this year), never mind planting anything!
BUT!!!
We do have other signs of spring.

When I shut the lights off for the night, I found two Black Beauty tomatoes had emerged! There had been no sign of them when I turned the lights on in the morning. I could just make out the “elbow” of a third one, and this morning I can see there is a second “elbow” emerging. These are in the cell just below the one with the visible sprouts.
Today, I plan to pot up some of the transplants, and try to start seeds for some losses. We are down to one luffa, two pots of zucca melon still have had no germination, along with one pot of drum gourds, so I’ll see if I can get new ones started, though I won’t bother putting them in the aquarium greenhouse. Their current location above a heat vent should be warm enough. I did remove the plastic cover on the mini greenhouse, as I think the lack of air circulation may be contributing to the losses, and even some of the bigger seedlings have started to look unhealthy.
I stopped at a grocery store to pick up some milk for my mother, and ended up picking up a seed kit. One of the things I wanted to do later on was get strawberry transplants – quite a few of them, depending on the budget – and plant them as a living ground cover around the silver buffalo berry. Last year, the transplants cost about $3 or $4 each. The kit was only $4. So I’m going to try growing strawberries from seed, which will hopefully give me more to transplant than I would be able to afford if buying transplants. And if they fail, it’s not an expensive fail. So that is something else I plan to work on today.
Oh, and I’d better call the plumber about our bathtub before I forget again! After that, I’ll know if I have to be making a trip to get a tub surround and the replacement taps I want.
We’ll see how that works out!
The Re-Farmer
There were some great, but expensive, strawberry starter plants at HomeDepot last weekend.
I really wanted a blackberry starter vine but they’ve failed before, and my preferred spot would be along the fence that’s going to come down, so I decided to skip it.
LikeLiked by 1 person
I keep hearing that blackberries are very hard to grow. Which was a nit of a surprise to me. We lived in Victoria, BC for a while. They grew wild there, and were considered an invasive species. A very delicious invasive species! π
LikeLiked by 1 person
I remember picking wild blackberries on vacation… I think up around the Cal/Oregon border.
I know these plants are hybrid for out climate but I still wasn’t willing to risk it.
LikeLiked by 1 person