Ah, the signs of spring are with us. Thunderstorms, hail, sudden downpours. Actually, these are good things. They all get the land prepped and ready for the real signs of spring – gardens! We (that’s She and He) have different approaches to our gardens. Where She has a green thumb and can make rocks bloom, He has rocks for thumbs and can hardly grow dandelions. But somehow throughout the summer, there is bounty to be had at both households.
We began our spring ritual last weekend. That’s where we sit on our respective decks and think out loud of what we’re going to be planting. We usually begin with the pretty stuff; hanging pots, flower baskets, blooming plants based on time, duration, and color of the good stuff. That segues into the veggies. Tomatoes, beans, spinach, onions, zucchini. Cabbages, lettuces, peppers, and potatoes. And don’t forget the herbs.
That’s a lot of stuff for a couple of yards just barely outside the city limits. How do we do it? She starts out with a few things in pots and various other containers on her deck. But then, since She has that green thumb, she also takes a more diverse path. Who’s to say the front yard can’t be a vegetable garden also. Think of some of your veggies. Lush greens, colorful blooms, all the things you want in a showpiece. And show she does. It’s not unusual for neighbors to stop by her driveway and catch her as She climbs her front steps, lavish her with planting praise, and ask for help in selecting flora for their front yards.
He keeps his gardening to pots hanging around on the deck. Some of them literally hanging, suspended from posts and rails. Small tomatoes on small plants in small pots yield big harvests of big flavors. Towers of terra cotta pots hold a variety of herbs. Beans climb up trellises mounted to the rims of planters. All very compact and all providing veggies through the summer.
So why are we telling you this anyway? Because it’s spring! It’s time to start working with the world around us and harvest the best stuff on earth, the fruits (or veggies) of our own labors.
If your goals are bigger than little flower and vegetable plants, tomorrow is Arbor Day. Don’t just sit there. Go plant a tree!
Now, that’s what we think. Really. How ‘bout you?
(Did we ever tell you of the time we took a tree home in the front seat of the little convertible?)