I didn't see the cool snap coming the last few days so on last weeks false heating up for the season and in the midst of the heat and drought, I sowed my beans, peas, cukes, squash and melons and strawed them in. Took a peak under some straw yesterday. Got peas, squash, and cantelope breaking through. Still waiting on green beans, watermelon and cukes. Finished soiling up the taters yesterday. Now for a heat streak so the maters, peppers, and okra can quit staring at me. I'm excited for my best seed starting year I've had thus far. Peppers were 50/50 and I bought some extra, but hte tomatoes were about 90-95% self germinated og what I wanted to start up in the greenhouse. I have learned that proper seed starting mix is key. Exie swore by Coast of Maine seed starting mix. My locally owned garden center I frequent carries it and I didn't even know. I typically only seed up tomato and pepper and okra, as everything else I plant is easily sowed direct with great germination success. And my tomatoes of choice are not often found outside ordering seeds. I can get cherokee purple already started as well as the more mainstream heirlooms, but what fun would that be. But, if you have suitable heirloom trellis support for those vining heirlooms, you will want to try Goliath. Up to 8' high, with wonderful flavored smooth and crackk free fruit, much like a Better Boy gone crazy. We have a local mennonite garden center that gets all his seedlings of everything from a producer up in KY. He always has Goliath in his deliveries. I thoroughly enjoyed eating that tomato last year, but went back to Better Boy this year instead. Those are my two "insurance" reds to supplement my annual trying of other heirloom reds. Of course Better Boys are more like a standardized heirloom so to speak. They are indeterminate as far as harvest season, yet compact like determinates. And still one of the best eating IMO.
Also learned a new trick. This past week, when I've used green onions in the kitchen, I've trimmed the roots and cut off the end cap. Took those rooted white caps to the raised bed and poked them in soil level. I now have green onions coming back already and when I need scallions I can just go clip them off at ground level and have a perpetual supply. I will keep adding to them.