Or is this just a lull in the storm? It had been such a soggy mess last month - 75% rain and cold and 25% sun and sky - that we left the empty garden beds alone and ran off on vacation. Now that temperatures seem to have finally stabilized, half of the tomato plants that I had started from seed in February have gone directly into the ground under poly-tunnel protection without first hardening them off. Well that's just too bad. A few never made it through the shock, but it is a huge relief to simply get them out of my living room space. There is still the other half to contend with, but for now they are happy with their new digs in the coldframe.
The borage decided to head north from the previous year.
In prealpine country, I find this stage of the gardening season to be the most hopeful yet most worrisome part. You've got your early seedlings to set out, you've got seeds like beans, corn and squash to set into the ground, you can make out the tiny beginnings of plums, peaches, cherries and apricots on the tree, but you HOPE to high heaven that the weather doesn't pull a fast one and start blowing typhoon gales, more rain and sudden hailstorms your way. What's funny are the things that you didn't even expect to appear, like the borage that was hastily transplanted the previous year. It decided to make a come back, only on the other side from where it had originally grown. We didn't even notice the plant until it had reached this size. And then there's the "weed" Aquilegia vulgaris that my husband had yanked out from the roadside. The village mowing crew gives curbside a good trim before summer visitors start arriving, and everything in their path gets hacked to bits. I've seen some really pretty flowers cut down along with the rest of the stuff, so I thought it wouldn't hurt to save at least one of them.
Today's high: 19°C / 66°F
4 comments:
thanks for sharing the name of this "weed" I have a photo of a white version and was wondering what it was :)
This evening we took the dogs for a walk and "saved" another of these weeds. Boy those maintenance people razed the whole mountainside in one area! No wonder I've been sneezing so much lately. Too much dust!
Ho ho - if you plant borage once, you'll have it forever - all over the place. I made that mistake in my London garden. I'd pull it up now, quickly, before it goes to seed, and then try to dig the root out. Otherwise in five years time, the whole of Lombardy will be covered ...
Sue - but it is only one plant! I promise to yank it all out next year if it becomes a problem. I can't bear to get rid of it as the bees love to visit every morning.
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