Some photos from the last storm:
I now have five celery starts and have just started snacking on my lettuce mix. I need to cut up that spaghetti squash and toss it on the manure pile while it's still relatively cold. That one came out of my manure pile last year, from a store bought squash I'd thrown out there.
I'm pleased to say that due to the warm February, I was able to stretch my winter heating products enough to make it through to spring. This is the first time in the six winters I've been here that I haven't run out of wood, wood blocks, or oil before we ran out of cold weather. I have about ten pieces of firewood left for an especially raw spring day, a couple packages of wood blocks, and half a tank of oil. Normally I'd spend at least two or more weeks uncomfortably cold at this point. Now that we've entered spring proper, my attention will turn to starting some plants for the garden. It looks as though we're going to have another cool, damp spring, so I don't want to start them too early, like I did last year. Most of my cucumbers and tomatoes ended up stunted and not producing any fruit, and I had to replant a lot of things. This year I'll start my plants in mid April so they don't get quite so advanced before the soil warms up enough to transplant them. My kingdom for a cold frame! If I were planning to stay in this house, I would build a few of those in the yard. I'll save that effort my next home.
This weekend I'll get my green on by taking my mother to the Portland Flower Show in Maine. I'm excited to attend a short lecture on creating habitats for pollinators. I'm sad that I'll miss a lecture on medicinal plant gardens, but them's the breaks. Hopefully I'll have some photos to share.
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