Last fall The Ones I Love and I made our first venture into planting bulbs. My Girl and I spent a lengthy time at the local garden centre selecting a mix of tulips, daffodils, and hyacinths of various heights, colours, and blooming times. Then we went to work in the garden. We dug. We added new soil. And we buried those bulb in four different areas around our home: The little circular garden around our young maple in the front, the bed directly in front of the house, a small patch beside the front walk that has always looked scruffy, and in My Girl's garden in the back yard.
Within minutes of covering over those bulbs, the squirrels were out, doing their own digging! So we found some chicken wire and laid it over the bulb beds, pinning it in place with whatever we could find: sticks, tent pegs, etc. But by then we weren't sure how many bulbs were even left, as there was a big hole in My Girl's garden and several smaller ones in the front.
This spring we waited for the snow to melt, for the ground to soften, and for the first green tips to poke out of the ground. When we saw what was coming up, we were overjoyed! There were many little plants growing, and we were able to begin identifying them right away by the leaf shapes and sizes.
Given a bit of time, this is what our gardens held at one point of their production:



The bottom photo, at the tree base, is one of the many faces the little garden showed this spring. It went through a white and yellow phase, then this one with orangey-red added in, then the white and yellow were gone and replaced by purples other colours. I loved the changing colours of this particular bed, and, while the growth was a little spotty (thanks to the squirrels), I am pleased with the results of all our efforts in the fall.
Here is this year's boulevard garden, complete with several varieties of tomatoes, peppers, beans and peas:

We expanded it to double the size of last year's plot, so it's almost 4' long. Can't wait to see what it produces!
And in one of My Girl's emails to me while I was in North Carolina for the ChildLight USA Charlotte Mason conference earlier this month, she told me that the clematis had a blossom. Here's the photo she took of it that day:
I'm learning to enjoy gardening, but it's still a stretch because of my small knowledge base. I'm sticking with the basics and going from there.