Garden planning notes.
I have until the end of February to plant peas, then all the other early crops are in March. Beets and such. I think those will be great worm food for cannabis. That's also when I plan to start cover crops that are mainly things like legumes and root veggies.
I pulled out the string and line levels and I'll need to move a ton of soil to have one level garden, and the retaining wall needed would be about a foot higher. Since I am wanting it to be tall enough to contain a decent amount of mulch I am doing two levels of pots. I have some sturdy injection molded 5g pots but they aren't tall enough for the near part - unless I have a solid fence of plastic pots at the bottom. Fill them then level the soil behind them, then the cloth pots on top of that level. Set back so I can plant in both levels of pots.
That's probably plan "C" though and I haven't started backfilling soil yet. I ain't mooving all that shit three or four more times because it wasn't right. It's at least gonna last this season, and should be easily replacable next year pot by pot leaving room to work on a different retaining wall if needed. But the soil in the main garden will be set and I'll just be fucking with this edge.
Depending on how much soil is left (if any) after filling those pots and levelling behind them, plan "D" is to have just the plastic pots and a few taller cloth pots at the end on this level, then so another row of cloth pots and another terrace far enough back that I have room for those clothes-drying racks for the tomatoes. The pots may also be a safe place to do some carrots or potatoes without the chipmunks getting them.
I got a selection of wire-mesh sacks to put the transplanted tomatoes and peppers into that should keep the main rootballs safe from passing underground traffic.
I have about 30g of fruit wood chips in a 60g cloth pot to age and a 2x2 raised bed full of some shit invasive shrub I have in the forest, There *was* a huge one by the garden. And the motherfucker will grow back unless I excavate it. But it's a nice windbreak by the garden, and it's lots of skinny straight branches that chip easy so I may keep it.