It’s about 2 weeks until I start germinating some of my plants to go outside. They go out the last week of May, there’s usually a frost near the end of May. Squashes and other long plants don’t do so well here.

So what’s in everyone minds to get going this year? I usually try to get some cucumbers if they can finish in time, as well as tomatoes, peppers, peas, carrots and lettuce.

An early unexpected frost took my peppers and tomatoes last year unfortunately.

  • SchmidtGenetics@lemmy.worldOP
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    8 months ago

    Yeah it’s tough though, dealing with carpal tunnel through all of that, than working in the yard last year I got a hernia, still waiting for a referral for that ughh haha.

    It looks sooo much better, I would use cedar if it wasn’t for the price, like 3x the cost of PT when I source it. Cedar is naturally resistant and looks snazzy imo.

    Thanks, I originally had it 2 feet longer but cut it back, hence why the beam is flush with the end instead of cantilevered, wanted the extra yard. Was a mid build change up. I’m lucky I can just write this stuff off as an expense for “my portfolio”. Wasn’t overly bad, was a couple year project as I built it down the side of the house. Would love to just rent the gear and go to town on a weekend, but that was all barrows and buckets over many weekends or slow days at work.

    • ThrowawaySobriquet@lemmy.world
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      8 months ago

      Preach. I hurt a bit more than I think someone my age ought to, but it’s hard to tell which familial curse I’m contending with. Either growing up busting my ass or the rheumatoid arthritis lurking in my genes.

      My god is cedar expensive. Especially during lockdown. The fencing worked out way better than I expected. It was very light and I assumed I’d be replacing staves as they failed, but no issues at all. So far.

      Look on the bright side: you didn’t rent any equipment, but you also aren’t helping the hardpan get worse! Plus it’s good for the vittles (I’m still nursing a sore back from the buckets and barrows I pushed through that mound of dirt, so milage may vary)