I was too busy with hay last year to do any gardening so this year I'm determined to at least plant pumpkins. I ordered ~500 seeds yesterday and have 2 garden beds tilled. I typically get my seeds ordered sooner but I'll get them planted as soon as they're delivered.
The place I ordered seeds from has a sale going (harrisseeds.com) but it ends today. I tried posting this yesterday when I ordered them but the site would break and not reload every time I tried to post. The pumpkins and decorative squash I posted in fall of '23 were from them and they grew a lot better than the store varieties I tried.
I seeded 1 of my garden beds back to hay while I was fixing some weedy spots of pasture earlier this spring. I don't have a picture but it's growing in nicely so my plan is to mow it over with a regular mower after I get the hay around it cut. Doing this cuts weeds down that grow faster than the grass and choke it out, I lose a little hay doing this but the end result will be less weeds next year.
Here's a new garden bed I tilled, it's at a neighbor's farm I bale and was completely overgrown with weeds and grass. This is after mowing, tilling, and sitting for about a week. I need to roundup the bed (sorry chemical haters) but my sprayer is broken at the moment.
I baled the first couple pastures of the year this weekend, you can see one of them in the background of the garden picture. I sent my baler in to the dealer for repairs over winter and it was not cheap but after stuffing that thing full and putting out nearly 70lb bales I feel it was worth it. I typically fix things myself but buying this heavily used I wanted someone more experienced to check it over, they found several broken and loose things that I missed while checking it over in the fall. Ever heard of a $1200 sprocket? Me either until now!
The best picture of the hay has a cat in the way, he's not as mean as he looks he just wanted attention
