I can walk! After doing the June tour on crutches, I finally got an X-ray and found out that what I thought was a sprained ankle was actually a spiral fracture of my fibula. So, I’m madly rehabbing my ankle constantly and being very careful but I’m thrilled to be mobile again. I have even more appreciation and compassion for people with permanent mobility difficulties. I tried not to whine, really.


Vegetables and irrigation
Needless to say, the garden isn’t quite where I envisioned it would be pre-wipeout. Although I give my husband, who is more of a landscaper than a gardener, full credit for managing single-handedly as well as he did. Hand watering the vegetable containers alone could take an hour or more to do properly, so in the last few days I finally built a drip irrigation system. Hallelujah!
It’s not pretty (yet, but the tweaking is half the fun) but it only takes four minutes per zone to get everything watered through. It’s mind-boggling to me, I wouldn’t believe it if I wasn’t seeing it but the plants are showing the difference just from two days watering, and plants don’t lie. Why did I wait so long???




The Garlic Experiment
I grew garlic for the first time last year, not altogether successfully. I didn’t know that the ‘flowers’ that garlic throws up are called ‘scapes’, and beyond being my new favourite raw vegetable to snip over my salad, now I know that you need to clip them so the growing power goes into the bulb, not the flower. One of those duh-in-retrospect moments.
This year has been much more successful, due mostly to better planting, fertilizing and watering – and snipping the scapes. There is just no comparison with grocery store garlic when you slice into it. So satisfying!
But check this out, last fall I planted some of my garlic in the ground (left) and the rest of it in half gallon containers (right). I transplanted the container garlic into the ground in the early spring, and the difference was unreal. It was all absolutely huge, whereas the in-ground garlic developed into several smaller heads. I’ll also wait longer to harvest it next year because I just pulled out this monster (bottom right) the other day! I intend to use the bigger heads as my seed garlic in the fall.

And now for the flowers…
The sunflowers are lovely but I’m rethinking my decision to try to use them as trellises. While kind of amusing to go bushwhacking hunting for peas, beans and cucumbers, it’s not especially efficient – or user-friendly. So the vegetables will stay in the containers close to the house in future, and the back garden will be for perennials, annuals and herbs.














Alright, we’re off to our favourite spot on the west coast for my 50th 😱 birthday holiday. Be kind, stay calm and stay safe.
❤️ Amanda
Absolutely fabulous and stunning . Wow. So proud of you.💖💖💖💖💖🌟🌟🌹
Sent from my iPad
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Wow! Amazing garden. I’m green with envy–and that’s about the only thing that’s green in our yard….
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Haha! Thanks Donna!
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Hope you have a wonderful 50th. Away from it all- your earned it!
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Thanks so much Sue. I had a lovely vacation and birthday.
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Look after yourself Amanda, beautiful garden 🌻
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Thanks Elaine!
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I just love seeing photos of your amazing gardens. Everything is so pretty and wild and green and colorful! 🙂
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Thank you! That means a lot, that’s what we love about it too!
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I’ve tried desperately to grow veg in containers and have had limited success. Your’s look so green and lush. What size containers do you use?
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I invested in new containers this year, black plastic 10, 15 and 20 gallons. The difference is insane. I got them at a landscape wholesaler and they were pretty cheap.
Fertilizing is especially important in containers because they only have so much soil to get nutrients from. It’s also important to water consistently and water through so it leaks out the bottom each time to prevent mineral buildup. What sort of veggies have you tried?
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Courgettes(Zuchinni), squash, melons, aubergines, cucumber, lettuc, radish, onions, potatoes, tumeric, ginger, physalis, herbs and kumquat. What fertilizer do you use?
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Great photos and good job on the garden! Enjoy your trip and birthday celebration.
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Thanks so much, I did!
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Your garden is incredible! So beautiful. Glad to hear you are up and about!
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Beautiful!
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Thanks Lindsay!
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