Great to hear (and see) the update! Iโm still waiting for the last frost; I donโt dare plant things like tomatoes until after the last full moon in May, which is on the 31st this year. Weโre still having regular frosts here in upstate NY, USA.
๐๐ a heavy March frost got most of our peaches, stunned our plums, hit the pears and mulberry trees, and torched our fig trees. Figs have rebounded, nectarines survived, pecans look good, and we have tomatoes on the vines! Heirloom and propagated varieties. We harvested all our early beets and are about to get our carrots and rutabagas. Our kohlrabi is doing incredible! And I just saw some apples escaped the frost attack ๐ช jalapeno in buckets this year, growing like crazy, and the herbs are gaining traction. We need rain for vegetables and pastures๐๐ค๐ซ๐ June is blueberry month here in GA but were already getting a few. Cheers to your best garden yet!
I remember the cherry tree-lined mustard fields in the countryside of Moravia, free for the picking, so heavenly! I've tried many varieties here in East Texas, they refuse our climate, big surprise.
Great to hear (and see) the update! Iโm still waiting for the last frost; I donโt dare plant things like tomatoes until after the last full moon in May, which is on the 31st this year. Weโre still having regular frosts here in upstate NY, USA.
๐๐ a heavy March frost got most of our peaches, stunned our plums, hit the pears and mulberry trees, and torched our fig trees. Figs have rebounded, nectarines survived, pecans look good, and we have tomatoes on the vines! Heirloom and propagated varieties. We harvested all our early beets and are about to get our carrots and rutabagas. Our kohlrabi is doing incredible! And I just saw some apples escaped the frost attack ๐ช jalapeno in buckets this year, growing like crazy, and the herbs are gaining traction. We need rain for vegetables and pastures๐๐ค๐ซ๐ June is blueberry month here in GA but were already getting a few. Cheers to your best garden yet!
I remember the cherry tree-lined mustard fields in the countryside of Moravia, free for the picking, so heavenly! I've tried many varieties here in East Texas, they refuse our climate, big surprise.
Too hot for cherries and apples. The closest that seems to thrive is pears.
our pears suffer with the weather whiplash of geoengineering. and anyway, cherries to pears? It's like comparing apples and oranges. ๐
Snow in Calgary Alberta Canada yesterday. Dammit. Melted already, thankfully. Rhubarb survived.
Lovely. Thank you for sharing your garden with us.
Do you know if the peach tree was a grafted tree? If it was and it resprouted below the graft, who knows what kind of fruit it will actually bear.