Friday, December 10, 2010

Garden Neglect

We've gotten so busy with our stores... baking & woodworking... that the garden had gotten covered in snow last week before I got all the veggie out! I still have dozens of heads of cabbage, radish & lettuce I hadn't gotten out yet. Some of the cabbage seems fine though, and since its going to be back in the 50's and out of the teens here shortly... I hope they survive & give me a little more growth.

I picked the lettuce yesterday, a lot of it was bruised, but a few heads still had tender leaves. I think I have enough for 1 family salad. Thank goodness :)

I can't remember us ever being so cold in December or having snow this early in eastern/central NC.

Things I still HAVE to do in the garden to be ready for spring:

Till over the empty beds
Lay hay on the strawberry patches
Lay hay on the onion & garlic beds
Break new ground for the new 50' garden plot we have planned
Clear out the over growth near the pond where I want a new wildflower patch

These things will not wait for spring for me willingly. Especially when I have a feeling the strawberry crops in the spring or the surrounding farms may not be ready as early as they used to be. I have to depend on my own berries for Jam. :)

Will go out and photo everything this weekend so you can see how mother nature has beat on my garden beds this year.

3 comments:

  1. we planted out first garden this past year and are planning on expanding our plot too. I think things are the same all over as far as weather trends, we're in the SouthWest corner of Canada and are expecting our coldest winter on record.

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  2. Good luck on getting it all done. Mine is covered in a foot of snow and I have accepted the fact that I will just have to wait til spring. I'd love to see photos :)

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  3. Thanks for the comments... we still haven't finished what we have hoped we would. The one day I had the afternoon to do it, it poured and poured out. :p

    I am supposing by tomorrow, if the winds die down, I may have an hour to take care of the strawberry beds. Thank goodness they are perennial here.

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