We decided it was time to try planting the potato eyes in the straw bales. This one was prepped by watering it and wrapping it in plastic.Paula plants the same variety in the unwrapped bale that received water and fertilizer.A little baby yarrow! Not sure if this is a transplant from home or from seed, but glad to see it.Maximilian sunflowers are still coming up from the area we dug up. We pulled them up and put them along the back fence.While digging a hole to plant a little elderberry shoot, I broke open an underground fungus ball. Neat!
Dill seeds are developing.A lightning bug rests on carrot leaves.This pillbug (rolly polley) looks very fresh, perhaps it just molted? It’s on a dayflower.The prairie is very lush and some of the tepary beans are sure climbing tall!Beautiful fungi on woodpile.Dog says things are okay!
A lot of blue lake green beans.Several tomato varieties are ripening.UF garden gem was fine but all of the UF “W” at a similar color rotted and molded. Perhaps they don’t like the endless rain? I will watch more closely for ripening now too.The Chef tied all the onions up for storage.The mini bell peppers are more mini than I expected.Corbaci peppers. I think the three little ones aren’t ready, but their plant died.A mini bell pepper plant died too, in the same way, a rotting brown at the base.This mushroom looks like it should be named lemon chiffon something.Weighing the dried garlic.Pseudothyris sp. moth resting on strawberry leaf.
A bit more cast iron forest this afternoon, not just the garden!
Probably a Common Buckeye butterfly caterpillar. Neat shelf fungi on a blackjack oak that has been burned in the past. Spring Beauty flower. Saw just a few! Moss with undeveloped capsules (thanks Jeanne!)Mexican Plums blooming had just a few bees on them. It was windy. Briar helped look for frogs. A round bit of moss. Close up of Mexican Plum flowers. Cardamine sp. (Thanks for ID, Abby!) You can see the leaves/rosette here. Flower of Cardamine sp. There were lots in this damp area. You can see in both pictures some nearby sedges.