I have some flowers elsewhere in the yard but that's a good idea to have something for the table!
Here's a great resource: https://www.youtube.com/user/MIgardener
In our area the city offers free compost and will even load it or deliver it for a small fee.
Most farms are looking for people who will take manure. Horse boarding facilities too, many times they will have equipment to load it and are happy to :•)
I've also learned that table scraps will compost in about the same time without being turned. We keep a bucket outside the kitchen door and fill it with coffee grounds/filters, egg shells, banana peels, corn cobs... then take it to a pile in the tree line. Each year start a new pile and use the old pile, easy if you have a spot. (animals never bother it as long as we stick to fruits, veggies, eggshells, and coffee grounds)
...and only plant what you like and what you'll use. One year I planted 50 tomato plants, that was overwhelming, lol.
For some inspiration:
garden of my parents:
View attachment 920
Or if you like my gardening better:
View attachment 921
Take some rabbits, you won't have to mow.
Plant roses, they love clay soil and lots of sun.
Pete from Peterborough UK
Plant daisies ~ they look like a smile
so are you wanting a vegetable gardene, or a flower garden?
We live near a lot of farms and that's a great idea to ask them
My mom always planted way too many tomatoes as well. Did you ever do any canning?
Yeah, everything from chicken and fish to fruits and veggies. I learned that it's not necessary to skin and seed the tomatoes when making salsa. Just chop the tomatoes up and throw 'em in the pot with onions and peppers and anything else you want boil 'em for 15 minutes and ladle it into clean jars...I don't bother putting them in a water bath, always works well.
Did your mom can, do you?
unfortunately to much rain is as bad as not enough. This late in the season you might want to try container garden as plants now are half off and if you can find them almost grown you would still have time to get some tomatoes at least. I have two plants on my back porch and they are prolific, planted in a five gallon bucket
Corn, tomatoes, zuchinni, probably others but cant think of them right nowIt would cost too much to get the containers and soil. We already put too much money into the fencing around the portion we have now and won't recoup any of the cost through produce this year. I'll have to rethink how I plant things for next year. Certain parts of the garden are in the path of water flow down the hill and unless I entirely move the garden (which I refuse to do) then I have to change where I plant things. Which vegetables love water the most?
I'm sorry you got to much rain and it ruined your stuff.