We have just passed the summer solstice, and the garden is finally looking full and green. Albany has had a fair amount of rain over the past month, and lots of cloudy weather. It has been warming up over the last couple of weeks, and the summer plants are showing signs of growth. Most of the seedlings are now planted, the garlic is almost ready to come out, and the cucumber and squash seedlings are looking good.

A single day’s harvest of lettuce
The star of the show for the spring has been lettuce. I’ve never managed to grow this many lettuce plants before, or to have them be so healthy. I’ve been harvesting just the outer leaves of the plants, and the romaine is now producing full sized leaves.

I direct sowed a couple of rows of a mesculin mix in the greenhouse in late April. This produced a variety of seedlings including romaine, butter crunch, oak leaf, and merlot lettuce. I have enjoyed the range of colors and shapes that have been growing. I did not thin them and just let them all grow close together. Then in late May I started transplanting them out of the greenhouse corner into other areas because I needed that spot for the cucumber plants.
About a dozen of the lettuce plants went into planters and the rest were scattered about the garden beds wherever I could find room. The cool spring has allowed them to remain growing longer than I expected. Once the summer heat hits, they will most likely all bolt and start to go to flower. The plants stop focusing on leaves at that point, and they also become bitter. I’m taking advantage now while I have abundant leaves, and am sharing the harvests, since it’s more than 2 people can eat. I plan to sow some more seeds for a fall crop in August.

I started harvesting the garlic scapes about 2 weeks ago from some of my plants. I have made 3 total harvests. Removing the scapes, which are actually the flower stalks, encourages the plant to focus it’s remaining energy into bulb production. This final month is when the garlic bulbs put on most of their growth and bulk up. I will probably harvest the garlic in mid-July.

I made my first batch of pesto, using mostly garlic scapes along with a few sprigs of basil off of my small plants. I ended up with 2 cups. I’ve been enjoying it as a dip for chips and on sandwiches.

The flowers in the garden have been starting to pop all over the garden. This is on my new, small peach rose bush.

My two small yarrow plants survived the winter and are starting to bloom now. It is a medicinal herb that I can harvest for use in a first aid salve. It’s also good for certain pollinators because it has lots of tiny flowers.

The petunias in my homemade coco-coir hanging baskets are now blooming. I have purple and white flowers. They have been growing in the greenhouse but are now large enough to be moved outside and actually hung up.

I have been harvesting and drying my first few bunches of flowers, including lavender and chamomile for tea. The marigolds and cosmos can be used for natural dye.

The main garden bed is full of all sorts of plants, in various stages of growth. Garlic and onions run down the middle along with multiple tomatoes, peppers, kale, broccoli, lettuce, herbs and flowers scattered throughout. Beans are starting to climb the trellis on the end.

The first of the Early Girl tomatoes are starting to grow, as are some cherry tomatoes. It’s almost tomato season.

The greenhouse is quite full at the moment, lots of plants in the ground and also in containers. There are a bunch of tomatoes near the bamboo trellis with lemon balm, sage, peppers, nasturtiums, lettuce, kale, marigolds, and rosemary interspersed throughout. My small potted fig trees are in the greenhouse, and a couple are even trying to produce figs. The far right corner has 5 cucumber plants and we need to put in the trellis before they get too much taller. The far left corner has snow peas.

Typical late spring harvest, lots of herbs have been hung up to dry, and there are a bunch of strawberries growing on their tower.

My new raised bed is absolutely brimming with the dahlia plants. There are 7 in the bed along with some nasturtiums, marigolds, and calendula along the edges. The smaller plants are honestly getting crowded out, but I’m leaving everything to see what makes it.

The first dahlia flower is about to open! Can’t wait to see it in full bloom.
I have harvested about 9.5 pounds of produce from the garden so far this season! And that’s been mostly lightweight leafy greens and herbs.
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