a garden tour

Upon request, I thought I'd show you lovelies around my garden.  As my second full summer in our dear house gets underway, I must say that I'm very happy with the progress that I've made in this space.  The rest of my flower beds and plantings are in the various stages of landscaping a new house, but I feel that I have a pretty good handle on this one.  I was able to get everything planted before we went out of town for the weekend, and I'm so glad that I did!  The weather over the weekend was perfect for seed germination!  All of the seeds that I planted are now poking their heads out of the ground and reaching for sun.  I'm so pleased!

Please, let me show you around.

You can enter my garden through the front gate under our wedding arbor that my dad made for us.  Soon there will be flowering hanging baskets gracing its sides.  

Once you enter the garden, there is a path made from slices of an elm tree that we took down where this front fence now stands.  I do love our wooden stepping path! 

On the north side of the garden, my sunniest spot on the property, is home to a few of my favorite flowering perennials.  First we have the peonies.  There are five different varieties including a light pink, dark pink, red, white, and one more that I don't remember...

Behind three of the peonies you will find my new trellis, also made by my dad, and a new Josephine clematis that will grow up it!  I'm very excited to get the trellis properly fixed to the ground and get that lady climbing! 

Between the peonies and under the dining room windows, I've saved a bit of room for annuals and other random additions.  This year, I put in a few moss roses, which I'm enjoying (and the chickens find to be delicious...ahem!).  I also planted shallots next to the house and am excited to see how they do!  Supposedly, once you start growing shallots, you'll never need to buy them again!  Sounds fantastic to me!  I'm also planning to fill this space out a bit with some flowers for cutting, such as dahlias or zinnias.  This space is also home to my gigantic allium!  I planted it in the fall and am excitedly anticipating it's big bloom!

After the other peonies, you will find my herb garden.  It currently includes chives, sage, spearmint, oregano, thyme, lavender, bay, and lemon balm.  It is also home to my new rhubarb plants given to me from my aunt.  This rhubarb has traveled around Minnesota and first started with her grandma! It's taking a little bit to settle into its new home, but it seems to be slowly coming around.  

On the south side of garden, you will find my veggies.   Most of my seeds were planted on this end of the garden.  Near the fence, I have beets, then broccoli, lettuce, spinach, mustard greens, zucchini, and summer squash.  The spinach and mustard greens are planted around the zucchini and summer squash and will probably finish up before the squash spreads and takes over the space.  The lettuce is planted around the broccoli and the broccoli will shade the lettuce as it grows and help to keep it from bolting in the hot mid-summer weather.  I've never grown beets before, so I'm curious to see how they do!

Next we have the pole beans, bush beans, carrots, and radishes.  The pole beans are closest to the fence and will soon have a trellis of some sort to climb up.  The carrots and radishes are planted in alternating rows.  The radishes will mature first and will be pulled to make room for the carrots.  I think carrots are one of the most fun things to grow!  Each one is a surprise when you pull it out of the ground!  I love it!

Then we have the tomatoes, potatoes, peppers, basil, and cucumbers!  As I mentioned in a previous post, I have 12 tomato plants this year, each a different heirloom variety!  I have a mixture of large tomatoes, cluster tomatoes, sauce tomatoes, and cherry tomatoes.  I'm so excited to keep track of their production and flavor and watch how they grow this summer!  Last year my tomatoes didn't do very well, so I'm hoping for a much better result this year.  I also have 8 pepper plants, including large green bells, small yellow, orange, and red baby bells, and jalapeños.  The potatoes are planted near the fence in a rather shady spot.  Since it's not a great spot for other things, I decided to try potatoes there, just to see what they'd do.  If it works, hurray!  We'll have lots of potatoes!  If not, then I'm out about $1...so, it's a cheap experiment! The cucumbers and basil are near the yard side of the garden and both will likely fill out and take over that side, which I'm more than fine with!  I planted a compact pickling variety of cucumbers this year and so far I am pleased with their quick germination (last year most of my seeds drowned in our June rains).  

Lastly, I decided to plant wooly thyme between my stepping path to slowly create a carpet-like ground cover.  Last year I had a problem with my soil washing away down that path, so I'm hoping that the ground cover will eventually keep things in their place and will make the garden even more alive and full.

I hope you've enjoyed this little garden tour!  I'm in the process of finishing a new flower bed as well and hope to have pictures to share of that soon!  

What about you?  How are your gardens coming together this year?  If you have a links to pictures, feel free to share them below!  It's so fun to see how things growing!

putting down roots and watching them grow

Easter weekend, for me, included some much desired time in the yard and garden.  I was able to clear away leaves and debris from the long winter, enjoy the gorgeous weather, and day dream.  My day dreaming brought me back to this time last spring when I was carefully awaiting the arrival of leaves and plants, excited to see what plants popped up in my yard.  While this year the sentiments are the same, seeing what pops up from the ground is a very different experience.  

You see, we bought our house in the summer of 2012 and then got married that fall.  With all of the wedding planning/prepping/making (there was  lot of making!), there was little time to care about the haphazard landscaping that the contractor had thrown into the ground before we closed on the house.  So when spring came, I really had no idea what was under all of that snow and dirt!

This year is different, though, because not only do I know, but I am excitingly anticipating each and every plant's arrival.  I know where the tulips should be emerging and what the tiny little leaves of the Sweet Woodruff look like.  I know where the oregano is and the thyme.  I know which ones are Stella Lilies and which are Siberian Iris.   I know, because I planted each one of them.  

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However, as I pulled away the leaves on Saturday, I found that there were some things that I didn't know, or at least didn't realize.  I didn't realize that my Sweet Woodruff would come back two to three times the size!  I knew it was a ground cover, but I didn't expect that much growth this year.  I was more than thrilled to see that!  

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I didn't know that my Tiger Lilies would shoot up multiple stocks where just one used to just be!  How fun!!

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I didn't know that my peonies would have such a unique sea creature-like look as they emerged from the ground!

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And as I noticed all of these things, I realized that this is one of the things that I love most about gardening.  I love the hard work, the planning, the waiting, but I also really love the unknown.  Not knowing what things will look like in the spring.  Not knowing if everything will make it through the harsh winter.  Not knowing when the flowers will bloom or stop blooming.  It's the not knowing that makes it exciting.  It's the unknown that reminds me that I can plant and water and tend, but at the end of the day, it's really out of my control.  And I kind of like that.  

It reminds me that life can't be controlled.  That's the beauty of it.  

planning to plant

Garden planning started in this house in mid-February.  With sub-zero temps and snow piled high outside, the planning and dreaming brought a bit of warmth and hope for spring into my living room.  Some may think that February is a bit early for such hopes in Minnesota, and while I may agree, I must say that it truly made February more enjoyable.  

The early planning was also necessary for me, as my early-bird heirloom tomato, pepper, and basil order was due early March, I had a week-long vacation planned for mid-March, and my chicks (formal introductions to follow later this week...) were scheduled to arrive late March.  So with the busyness of March, February was the perfect time for me to dream about the dirt hiding under the piles of snow outside my windows.  

The other day, as I was busy being distracted by chicks (a now normal occurrence in this house), I realized that April is now upon us (April!!!) and that I need to get a few seedlings started inside if I want them to be ready for planting in May.  So, this morning I pulled out my dear little garden journal and trusty Garden Primer, by Barbara Damrosch, and made a few plans for what needs to start germinating in the next few weeks.  This will be my first time starting seeds inside in this house and so I'm curious to see how they'll do.  I think I'll keep it simple this year and just start with broccoli and cucumbers.  Hurray for planting!  And hurray for a reason to go to my favorite garden store this afternoon! 

How about you?  Have you started your garden planning/dreaming?  Are seeds spouting up in your sunny windows yet?