
With an expected jump in temperatures, it was time to get many of the seedlings in the ground before the heatwave hit. I started on Saturday morning, nice and early. I had cleaned out one of the shade gardens the previous day, which did my back in with all the bending.

The following day, I worked on the butterfly garden. It had a lot of maple seeds that had sprouted and needed to be pulled. Plus, I had another new weed that seemed to have come from somewhere and decided to start colonizing, too.

It is hard to see the seedlings that I grew, but they are planted between the perennial plants. I put in a tray of zinnia, cosmos, blue star flowers, verbena, and nasturtiums throughout. I still haven't started any sunflowers, but I sure need to do that asap.

Today, I plan on planting out all the impatiens in the clean shade garden before we get a huge thunderstorm this evening.
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This is one of the new varieties of Salvia that I had purchased from the nursery. I planted it next to the pond with a few verbena, zinnia, and lobelia. The hummingbirds have already been visiting the blossoms.

The Cuphia plants I purchased for the hummingbirds also hang next to the pond. I moved the feeder closer to the porch to keep it out of the hot sun. The hummingbirds are loving the new plant this year.
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The Oriels are visiting their feeder too, which makes me so happy. I don't think I could move it close to the porch. I may have to find a shady spot to hang it from a tree for them.

This is how hot the greenhouse was before the heatwave. It is way too hot for the plants, and they were starting to stress. I spent Sunday moving out all the peppers that I had transplanted up into larger pots. They are underneath shade cloth in one of the raised beds until I can plant them out.

They are still small and will need some time to grow a bit before I find places for them all. I did overplant, once again. Oops!

The Roma tomato plants are the perfect size. I planted 14 of them along the cattle panels.
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I was careful not to disturb the young peas that had started to sprout. You can see where they are surrounded by crushed eggshells to keep the slugs off.

They look so happy planted and out of those 4" pots. They all had wonderful root growth and will take off in no time at all.

I have four tomato cages along the side of the house where I planted two rib-stile and two zebra tomato plants. I just had to find another post and get a cage around one of them. I have two more F1 hybrid slicing tomato plants and need to figure out where to put them.

Meanwhile, underneath the insect netting, the cabbage plants, kale, and arugula are doing fantastic.

I had to harvest all the hydroponic plants due to the intense heat in the greenhouse. I had the Asian greens and the Bok Choi left to do. I had already done two lettuce rafts because they started to bolt.

All the hanging baskets got moved out and are surrounding the back porch. Of course, with the nice weather finally here, Mika and I are enjoying our afternoons sitting and watching the birds.

I was sure that I had ordered purple sweet potato vines back in February. They still had not arrived, and I was beginning to wonder if I had after all.

Well, yesterday I was busy planting the gardens in front of the house, the mailman came, and I forgot to go get the mail. Later that afternoon, 4 hours later. My hubby went and found a box in the mailbox. Mind you, it was 90°F. out, and sure enough, they shipped those slips during our heatwave.
Those poor plants looked half dead; the roots were wrapped in one paper towel, drier than dry. When I unwrapped it, half of the roots came off with it. I could not believe how bad they looked. I put them immediately into a glass of water, and am hoping for the best. Sweet Potato slips are very expensive, and I sure hope they recover from their hot journey.
Well, I need to get out and plant the impatiens this morning. I hope you, too, are having a nice time planting your gardens.


It all looks fabulous. I am so jealous.
I got my sweet potatoes yesterday, too. And they looked even worse than yours. The directions said that is normal, to pop them in water for a week and they should be fine. I'm going to plant them in an 8 by 2 elevated container - if all goes well, it should be spectacular soon, and provide a good amount of sweet potatoes to store,
Wow, you too! The slips would have been fine had they shipped them a bit earlier in the month. I see that mine are starting to show signs of recovery. I am going to put some in a 2x8 bed too, then the rest into 15-gallon grow bags. I saw a video last fall where a gardener used the grow bags and had good success. We shall see. I''m hoping for a decent crop since I love them so. Good luck with yours and keep us posted.
I used large grow bags last year, two of them, and did get quite a few, but not as many as advertised, more like 7 pounds per bag. Also, many of them were too small to store, and I chose to eat those right away. They stored very well - I still have a few pound left, the last of my 'root cellar' veggies, and didn't need a whole lot of watering. The best part of them was how beautiful the plants were, hence my planting them in that elevated planter, which has housed strawberries one year (gorgeous!) and green beans the next (so easy to harvest!). It's likely to be spectacular planted with purple leaved sweet potatoes! Onions on the west side - I got great onions from that planter last year - and early lettuces on the east side.
I remember that my slips looked even worse last year, and took a few weeks to get going, but they took off after that. I think yours are probably fine. Where did you get them? Mine are from FEDCO, Vardaman variety.
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I am always jealous of your garden. Something is eating my salvia and I don't know what it is. I've given up on flowers till the warmer weather. I probably shouldn't, but with my elbow I'm fighting it hard to be motivated to do one-handed gardening. Your tomato plants look so healthy. Would you believe I'm still getting seedlings pop out of the garden beds because the weather has been unusually mild. Maybe I am just used to A cooler temperate garden. Do you have any way of opening up the windows of the greenhouse or covering it when it gets hot? I want to build a small greenhouse down the side of the house but this has to be a consideration. Another job for Jamie haha
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Believe it or not, @riverflows I only use the greenhouse from mid-march to mid-may. Otherwise, the sun heats it up too much. Even if I shaded it, it would still be too much. I open both doors all day, and an exhaust fan runs all the time, it still gets too much for the plants. I would love to do more hydroponics during the summer, but the water in the tubs gets too warm, plus the lettuce and greens all bolt.
Not sure what would eat salvia plants, I plant lots of it and nothing ever bothers mine. Maybe it is slugs or mice. You would have to bust the critter to be sure. If Jamie does build a greenhouse against your home, ventilation is key. Plus, some type of fan to stimulate wind so the seedlings grow strong. You will find it useful, I'm sure! I sure hope that elbow heals soon for you.
I had hoped to do gardening this weekend, but life dictated otherwise, And now the heat is here...sigh... I'm hoping to get out and get some of the peas planted, finally this morning before it gets hot again. Tomorrow is to be much nicer and maybe I can get the peas all planted and mulched.
We didn't get the promised rain and everything needs watering...
Funny, they were threatening a major storm, and it passed us by. I managed to get most of the annuals planted and the jalapenos. Today, I hope to put in some sweet peppers, but I have a lot to do around the house as well. I sure hope you get those peas in, the weather is to be a bit cooler, Pam.