Hi! Errr, long time no post. I keep meaning to do more updates, but it usually breaks down that I either have time to blog about gardening, or actually DO gardening. And we all know which one wins that competition.
So, a quick update since we last talked. May was cold. We had a frost warning on Memorial Day, for goodness sake. I lost most of the first batch of tomato seedlings I started. I don’t know what it was, maybe bad starting soil. So I re-started around the end of April. It turned out to be a good thing, since with such a cold May I had to wait until May 31st to plant. I did lose a few more seedlings, but since I started with about twice as many as I needed there wasn’t a problem. I did give 7 seedlings to my Mom, 6 to my cousin, 5 to the nice lady who provides us with perennial plants for free, and 5 to some lady Vicki knits with. No shortages here.
I planted 42 tomato plant in the garden, 2 in pots, and one under the bird feeder. They’ve been in for almost 3 weeks now and are mostly 2-3 feet tall and getting bushy. I have flowers all over the place, and a few tiny green tomatoes on my Stupice. I also went with my plan of making huge tomato cages. They’re a bit cost restrictive so I only made 20, but I think they’ll stop the Tomato Jungle like I had last year. Here’s a few pics:

You can see the cages. They took some doing, since I had to cut them out of a big roll of fence and bend little hooks so I could attach the two ends together. I also cut small windows so I could reach in and weed, pet my plants, and hopefully have somewhere to pull the ripe fruit out of. The garlic in the foreground is doing okay, but not great. Since the sun doesn’t hit that area until the end of April due to the shadown of neighbor’s house they got a late start. The main garlic garden is doing much better (pic below). Also the potatoes are growing like crazy! (upper left) They’ve just started to flower, which means they have about a month to go before they die back. But I can start stealing a few potatoes pretty soon.
Oh, and what’s that behind the tomato cages on the right? Yup, more mutant huge sunflowers, already taller than the tomatoes. The cages should keep those pushed back so I don’t have to worry about them crushing my toms this year.
Here’s another view of that garden:

Yes, that’s tomatoes all the way down to the end, with another patch past the potato patch. And there’s 4 sweet pepper plants down by the rain gutter between tomato patches. I also have 2 of my cages down on the end to act as pole bean supports. I started two kinds of beans this year, my Granny’s green beans and a white runner bean I got from Victory Seeds. Here’s a close-up of the beans:

They’re just starting to send out runners to climb. I love the pole beans since they take up little space and you get tons of beans. And they actually add nitrogen to the soil, so they’re good for the garden.
Here’s a picture of the OTHER garden:

That’s the main garlic haul. They’ve started sending up scapes, which are the seed pods that curl up from the plant. I cut them off and eat them, since I don’t want the plant expending energy to flower when they could send that sugar back down into the bulbs. Besides, they’re delicious in a stir-fry.
That also means that the garlic has a month or so to go before harvest.
In the middle of the picture are the brussel sprout plants that Vicki requested. I think I might have started them a bit early, since you don’t harvest anything until after the first frost (mid to late October here). I wonder how big they’ll get with all that time to grown. Yikes. Towards the back are little plots of lettuce, spinach, onions, and peas. It got really shady back there when the lilac bush got going (upper right) so I don’t know how much I’ll get. I’ve already harvested some green onions, spinach, and lettuce, so it’s not a complete waste of time. I have to harvest the rest of the spinach and lettuce before it gets too hot and they bolt (send up seed pods) and get bitter.
I also planted some melons and squash on the extreme left side of the picture. The idea was that they’d get going right about the time the garlic would be dug out, so they’d have all that area to vine across towards the sun. I have a few little seedlings, but they haven’t been growing much. It might just be too cool here. Those big viners like really hot weather and it’s still cool here when the wind is over Lake Michigan to the east.
What else, you ask? Well, I have some more of the Japanese Climbing Cucumbers which we grew last year. They’re in a pot with another of my towers around it. 
Still pretty small. They like the hot weather, too. The pot helps with that a bit, since it gets hotter than the ground soil. Gotta watch out that it doesn’t get too dry, though.
Speaking of pot, I mentioned about that I put the last few tomato plants in some pots since I’d run out of garden space. Here’s Abraham Lincoln, next to a pot of catnip.

Lastly, here it is! Drumroll, please!
.
.
.
My First Tomato of 2008!

Mike