

No matter how hard we try to be good garden waterers, we fail miserably in comparison to what occurs after a significant downpour. We even installed one of those do-it-yourself drip irrigation systems from Lowe’s and credited it with the record heirloom crop of tomatoes we had last year.
This year is already different. Here we are 3 weeks from our traditional Mother’s Day planting exercise, and the zucchini and cucumbers (and even a few tomatoes) look as if they’ve been in the ground for a good 60 days! It has a lot to do with the fact that it has rained almost endlessly on the East Coast for the better part of the past two months. Washington’s reputation as a swamp is no longer limited to the early years of the city’s growth, but a modern reality with daily flash flooding and standing water alerts. This weekend is supposed to be sunny, but by Monday, the rain promises again to be in the scary thunderstorm category.
Farmers everywhere are rejoicing; even those of us in the city that define locale as our front or back yards–we are the true locavores, even though we need deer netting to get any crop to survive!
I personally am amazed by the speed of garden growth. Yes, I admit I am tired of grabbing my raincoat and any additional covering, but my garden is truly smiling. the plants are the earliest, the biggest, and the crops of the future, giving new meaning to “Early Girls.”
Look at these photos.
Amazing.
All those gardeners out there who began early are still way ahead of the game. That is if their crops did not succumb to a late spring freeze or fall behind their growth pattern from odd weather fluctuations.
, buying local, focusing on food miles, and buying in season, that it’s time to dig into the concept on our own. In most parts of the country, you can get the soil ready without too much of a worry of another frost. If your area is still susceptible to a nightly temperature drop, then keep the seeds in the garage or a sheltered place before considering ground planting.
Every foodie with a computer has been encouraging the Obamas to take the lead in 