Our 2024 Garden: it’s a start, and surprise onions!

Today is turning out to be such a gorgeous day! The outside cats are very happy and spending more time outside, rather than in the sun room.

Unfortunately, the skunks are out, too. I went into the sun room from outside and found one in there, eating the cat kibble. At least the skunk doesn’t bother the cats any, and the cats generally stay in the sun room while the skunks are there. The racoons, on the other hand, usually come in groups and tear the place apart, digging for stray bits of kibble, and they’re easily twice the size of any of the cats. Expect maybe Shop Towel.

As I write this, it’s coming up on 4pm, and we’re at 13C/55F, with a “feels like” of 15C/59F. I couldn’t resist! I had to get out there and get some work done!

So I decided to work on the low raised bed that runs along the chain link fence between the people gate and the vehicle gate. It needs to be narrowed for better reach, but we didn’t get a chance to work on it before the ground froze.

I’ve been making sure to take photos and videos that will be put together in a video later on, but there was one thing I found I just had to share now.

After removing the mulch to get started, I found onions!

Last year, after transplanting onion seedlings in various places, I still had lots of teeny, tiny onions left over. I also found onion bulbs in various places, from the year before, that had survived the winter. Most of the seedlings got transplanted just inside the bricks framing the bed – and most did not survive. The bulbs I found from the previous year’s onions – Oneida onions, if I remember correctly – all got transplanted at one end of this bed, plus there was a single surviving shallot that survived the previous year’s flooding that I just left to grow. It tried to go to seed, but didn’t quite make it. I didn’t harvest any onions out of here in the fall, because there was nothing to harvest.

Well, those previous year onions actually survived the winter, and I uncovered a bunch of them! Even the shallot at the opposite end was starting to show green!

Where they were growing was part of the bed I had to move to make it narrower, so these had to go.

The largest bulbs in here are the yellow onions that I think are Oneida. The shallots had two bulbs growing against each other, plus there were a few little onions that I think may have been survivors last year’s transplants. There is a pair of bulbs that look like yellow onions that I think might be a different variety of shallots, but I’m not sure.

These got transplanted in the raised bed we will have peas planted all down the middle. I haven’t quite decided what I will plant on either side of the peas but, at one end, it now has these onions. If they survive, they should go to seed, which would be awesome. Onion seeds are viable for only a year, but once the plants go to seed in their second (or, in this case, third) year, I believe they go to seed every year. We could potentially have our own annual onion seeds to collect.

We shall see!

After the onions were transplanted, I went to work on the end of the bed next to the people gate. That’s where I’d found there were broken pieces of sidewalk blocks and bricks, buried under the soil. You can read about that here.

Unfortunately, the ground it still too frozen. I got one broken piece loose that can be left in place, as it will not be under the bed. I was able to remove another broken piece, but found the edge of yet another chunk. I tried pouring water over it do make it more visible, and possibly thaw the soil a bit, too, but eventually had to stop. Depending on where it extends under the soil, I might be able to leave it for now.

When I realized I was just chipping through soil that was frozen rock solid, I set that job aside and started working on pulling up weeds along the edge of the bed, and moving the soil away from the path and closer to the chain link fence. In some places, it worked out okay, but for the most part, the ground is just too frozen.

With the mulch removed and the black soil now exposed to sunlight, it should start thawing out faster. Hopefully, we’ll have that bed reworked and ready for planting, soon. It’s one of the areas thawing out fast enough that we will be able to direct sow things that can be planted before last frost.

Gosh, it felt good to be working out in such a beautiful day!

The Re-Farmer

12 thoughts on “Our 2024 Garden: it’s a start, and surprise onions!

    • I’m pretty amazed! They got left in the ground, because they were too small to harvest. I know our winter was unusually mild, but for them to keep growing under that mulch? I’m impressed! I really hope we get seeds, but they are certainly worth keeping!

      Like

    • We love them, too. They are so much more expensive than onions in the stores, so we had to try. I’ve only grown them somewhat successfully once – using sets that year, because the cats were able to get through the protective cover on our small aquarium greenhouse and destroyed my seedlings. *sigh* I tried buying sets again the next year, and they got flooded out. *double sigh*

      I *think* we can grow them okay here, but between the cats and the weather, we really haven’t been able to find out! So far, my seedlings this year are looking good. Here’s hoping they make it after transplanting!

      Liked by 1 person

Leave a reply to mitchteemley Cancel reply