But I'm posting about it anyway.
For the second year in a row I planted one of my favorite flowers of all time: the sweet pea. And for the second year, my plants failed. I got a wall full of leaves and one flower. I grew these all the time as a kid, I don't know what I am doing wrong!
Fairytale Eggplants.
I also grew a lot of mesclun greens, arugula, basil, dill, lemon thyme, rosemary, cilantro and parsley.
One last view, from different angle, the tomatoes are far to the right. You might be able to see some of my cosmos and coreopsis. I am especially proud of my cosmos. Last year I mostly grew flowers for cutting, I saved the seeds from the orange cosmos, since I liked them the best.
Unfortunately, some creature has been eating the blossoms off the mini pumpkin plant we planted from the seeds we saved.
Things I learned about gardening this year:
Don't plant tomatoes so that one plant shades the other. Duh, duh, and duh again.
Cool rainy weather is not good for eggplants and peppers.
Cool rainy weather is great for swiss chard, kale and salad greens.
I should grow salad greens only on my
I'm really not that into lilies. If they don't perform well next year. I'm giving them away.
If my tulips survive the wet soggy summer (they like to stay dry in summer), I will transplant my lemon thyme over them, since that needs little water in the summer. This will also free up valuable space.
Plants will do well much closer together than the spacing guidelines on seed packets.
Cilantro bolts very quickly.
No need to pull out an entire chard or kale plant at a time, just cut the leaves needed... the plant will keep producing!
Arugula will grow in the shade of the tomato plant.
Yay! for garden pictures! Thanks for sharing. I bought some fairytale eggplant today at the farmers' market for a curry dish, yum. Next year, I hope to plant my own - when we'll be home more.
ReplyDeleteMy mom's sweet peas fail every year--we can't figure it out. :(
ReplyDeleteImpressive gardening!
ReplyDeleteOh, I love your garden photos! And thanks for sharing what you learned this year. I'll try growing the arugula in the shade of the tomatoes next year... that's a great idea!
ReplyDeleteFantastic! So impressed! By the way, I'm not a gardener myself and always wonder what it means when people say something "bolted." ????
ReplyDeleteyour garden looks a HECK better than mine. Sorry no ideas on for how to get your sweet peas to take off, I can't even get my tomatoes to bloom :)
ReplyDeleteShan: when something has bolted it means that it has flowered and is on its way to seed. This generally means the plant is about to run it's course and will stop producing (no more cilantro leaves!), but it often changes the flavor of the plant. For example, arugula which has started to flower is very spicy.
ReplyDeleteAh, I see! Thank you for that gardening mini-lesson. :)
ReplyDeleteEven my "slow-bolting" cilantro bolts too quickly; it never gets bushy like the supermarket kind. And I have never, ever gotten sweet peas to grow beyond hopeful sprouts. Nice gardening, though!
ReplyDelete