Went out today to discover--much to my relief--that things in the garden were in pretty good shape.
All that time I spent last spring covering the paths with plastic sheeting and wood chips and tarping the beds with black landscaping fabric was well worth it.
The paths still look good and are practically weed free. And when I pulled back their covers, the beds were clean and the soil ready to be worked.
I'll have to clean up the one uncovered bed--the one that had the bean tower, but it should be quick work. That and a few edges of beds that have large, easily pulled up weed clumps should be all the clean up work I'll need to do this spring.
I added composted manure (it really doesn't smell bad!) to last year's tomato beds and planted them with peas. I added broccoli plants I bought in the store and the damned cabbage plant JR got in school and has ignored ever since---it's only alive because I took care of it.
I planted seeds for turnips, kale, lettuce and spinach. And I planted a dozen or so red onion sets (tiny bulbs) that I picked up along with the broccoli yesterday.
I gave the rest of the broccoli plants to the lady with the plot next to mine and she gave me some of the summer lily plants she was dividing. I stuck them in one of the edge areas I always have weed problems in--hopefully they'll crowd out the weeds and attract more butterflies and bees!
And the green lemon thyme, provencal thyme and rosemary I planted last year made it through the winter. In a month or so I'll probably move them elsewhere--right now they're smack in the middle of what will be this year's tomato bed.
All done in about 2 hours.
I still have to go out and clean those other beds, but the garden is up and running again!