Is your garden spot all tilled and ready to go? If it isn't, you'll have to wait for it to dry out. If it is, you can gently poke the seeds into the ground and hope for the best. Working wet ground isn't a good idea because it will harden into brick-like chunks and you'll have to fight it all summer.
I didn't get my early stuff in a week ago, then I came to Reno to visit my daughter/granddaughter/son-in-law and it started raining. I tilled and top-dressed my garden area with compost last fall, and I should have spring tilled a week ago when I could get into the garden to do it. Now I have to wait for it to dry out. The weather looks promising though, so maybe in another week or so I can plant peas, onions, and potatoes. They should go in first along with radishes and spinach and other greens. then when the soil warms up more, beans and tomatoes and the melons and cucumbers. The last group is really sensitive to frost, so planting them before the first of May is dicey.
We moved out to our berm home 6 years ago, and I've been feeding the garden every since. We are on the edge of the Flint Hills, and the ground (while fertile for grass) needs supplementation to support row crops. As much as I like corn, I don't plant it because it attracts raccoons and they will tear everything up to get to it. The first spring, I had a guy deep til for me (my tiller is a small Troy-built, and it needed to be deeper) and then in the fall I had him add a load of composted manure. It really helped, and every year since, I've put on my own compost (recently year old chicken manure), and the garden does quite well for me. I used burlap to shade the tomatoes during the excessive heat last summer, and I had tomatoes clear into October (a few). We also had lots of cucumbers, but most of the plants didn't fare too well in the heat. My beans looked great, but they didn't set on a single bean. Oh well, I tilled them in for fertilizer.
Good luck. It is amazing to grow your own veggies. they taste so much better than the store bought ones that are shipped in. Like eggs, though, you don't really save any money if you figure all the expenses in. At least not for the first few years.
sharol
I am hoping to get my garden started this weekend. Any recommendations what I should plant right now, this is my first ever vegetable garden!
I don't really know what I am doing. I had a schedule and calendar and all this stuff planned, then I got really sick and now that I have been feeling better, its been raining nonstop Any recommendations would be amazing!!