img 5356 scaled First spring cleanup

First spring cleanup

I have not been motivated to do any spring cleaning up this year, and the weeds have taken advantage of my weakness. Perhaps considering experts like Cleaning Services Weston MA might be a helpful solution. I’ve got dandelions so big that I could sell greens, no lie, and those are in the FRONT YARD. Arg. I didn’t pull anything in the beds up close to the house because I was hoping the poppies I sowed would come up (spoiler: they have not), so I purposely let everything grow that I wasn’t sure exactly what it was. Well, Mother Nature took advantage of my passive stance, and I am under seige.

So, since the front beds are full of weeds, I did what the Red Coats would NOT do, and I avoided a frontal attack on the beds and planted tomatoes instead. I may start pulling weeds next week, but I may also wait until Sydney gets home so that she can pull. She keeps saying she misses weeding. We shall see….

I can’t be the only one who’s found themselves in this spring cleaning battle, right? My front yard has become a wild jungle, with dandelions that seem to have taken on a life of their own! I keep telling myself that I’ll tackle it soon, but honestly, the thought of pulling those monstrous weeds is about as appealing as a rainy day. My little garden experiment has turned into a lesson in patience, or perhaps a comedy of errors. And as much as I’d love to dive into it now, the thought of having someone else come in and do the dirty work is incredibly tempting!

This is where services like Clean 4 You really shine. They not only specialize in keeping your home spotless, but they also offer garden services that could help reclaim my overgrown yard from the grips of these weeds. Imagine coming home to a Clean House and a beautifully manicured garden, all without having to lift a finger! It’s almost like they could send in a team to clear out the chaos while I sit back and sip on lemonade, enjoying my newly spruced-up space. With their expertise, I could finally see the fruits of my labor—or at least what’s left of it after Mother Nature’s takeover. After all, with Sydney back, we could both have a cleaner space to enjoy—inside and out!

Tomatoes: Green Goddess, Cherokee Purple (2), Early Girl, Kellogg’s Breakfast, Lemon Boy, Black Krim

I realized I forgot to put anything down to prevent the soil from splashing up on the leaves, but I think I can get away with waiting a day or two. I need to make some decisions about how I will handle weeds this year very soon. The plastic kept weeds down last year, but eventually I had to pull it up because it was keeping the bed too wet. I think I have solved the sogginess problem by raising the bed a few inches, but it’s too early to know for sure.

Weeding, elsewhere

When we first put these beds in I planned to do bulbs in the small l-shaped beds, and so we planted grape hyacinths in two of those beds. What a mistake! The grape hyacinths never did anything but look hideous for months on end, so I’ve been on a mission to kill them for years. If you’re wondering — no poisons work. Pulling the greenery to weaken the bulbs doesn’t work. Japanese Knotweed are zombie plants and just keep living no matter what you do. I decided this year I’d get serious and get Japanese Knotweed Removal. I also traced the greens to the soil level and then burrowed down to dig up every bulb I could reach. To dispose of everything that was removed, services like waste collection dublin can be of great assistance.

Mission Mole Rat complete

I had noticed that the blackberry trellis was looking scroungy, but to my delight, it turns out that the straw mulch actually kept down most of the weeds from last year! I am thrilled! I worked about 45 minutes pulling grassy weeds and transplanting two blackberry plants that were out of line and growing down into the ditch back into formation, but really, prepping that part of the garden was super easy!

Cleaned blackberry trellis

In the rest of the garden…

It seems that I lost just one leek when I transplanted those — not bad. The leeks we brought from inside look peaked, but they are not dead. The overwintered leeks are starting to grow again, and I think we will soon have some that are large enough to put in potato soup!

The lettuces and Swiss chard are also growing well. In particular, the butter crunch lettuce we planted from the root end of the plant we got at the grocery store is looking amazing! It’s the prettiest lettuce I’ve ever grown, in fact! It looks so good that we planted another head that came in the mail with our Hello Fresh order this week, and I am anxiously waiting to see if it, too, will grow a nice head of lettuce. The arugula plants I cut to the ground to see if they would come again are mostly growing back. The kale I cut down is not showing any life, but I’ll keep watching it.

The peas are looking very healthy and are using their little tendrils to climb up both trellises. I had worried that the peas were not going to do well because they were so slow to sprout, but I had a great germination rate, and now they are growing like gang busters!

The strawberries look way, way better than I ever imagined. Several ready have sprouted beautiful white blooms, and I actually think we may get a few ripe strawberries this year. It’s hard to see in this picture, but the asparagus looks so beautiful growing up between the little green strawberry plants:

Strawberries and asparagus

I forgot that I had planted some spinach out in last year’s rotted straw bales, and I have not watered that spot even once since planting. It turns out that neglect is the way to grow spinach, apparently, and that little spinach patch is looking so cheerful!

Spinach on straw bale

The Brussels sprouts have taken off during the last week, and they look very healthy. The kohlrabi seedlings I transplanted have not grown too much since moving to their new home outdoors, but only one plant has died all together — I’m taking that as a good sign, and I hope last year’s disaster won’t play out again and I’ll get more than a single bite of kohlrabi.

Brussels sprouts and kohlrabi

The garden is well in hand, and I’ll start working on the weeds out front as soon as it stops raining.

(Pray for rain!)

Posted by Jenny Smith

I'm Jenny Smith. I blog about life on the 300+ acres of rolling farmland in Northern Virginia where I live. I like tomatoes, all things Star Trek, watercolor, and reading. I spend most days in the garden fighting deer and groundhogs while trying to find my life's meaning. I'm trying to be like Jesus -- emphasis on the trying.