A sand colored house with a stone foundation and multiple windows, surrounded by trees and a well-maintained lawn, with a smaller red building nearby and outdoor furniture under a clear blue sky.
Close-up of white pear tree flowers with pink-tipped stamens and green leaves on a plant.

Summer in the Garden:

Growth, Maintenance, and Lessons Learned

The long-awaited planting season is largely complete, and the garden begins to shift from preparation to maintenance. Vegetable beds are filled, flowers are stretching towards the sun.

Summer arrives quickly in the north.

A garden scene with stones, plants, and two small bird sculptures among the rocks, with a stone wall in the background and sunlight filtering through trees.

The kitchen garden is now planted for the season, although a few crops are still growing indoors. Sweet corn, in particular, needs a little more time before it can face the Nordic weather.

By giving the plants a stronger start inside, they stand a better chance of thriving outdoors, even if the harvest arrives slightly later than usual.

But still, the first signs of the coming harvest can already be seen.

The Garden Enters a New Season

A person with a tan skin tone is harvesting a large green leafy rhubarb, outdoors in a garden with other plants and grass visible in the background.
A man in a blue cap and dark shirt holding a garden hose and watering large leafy rhubarb outdoors in a sunny, green forested area.

Summer Maintenance Begins

As every gardener knows, summer is not only about planting. It is also the season of constant care.

Flower beds need weeding, paths require attention, and edges between lawn and borders must be maintained.

This year, new trenches were dug between several beds and the surrounding grass. To suppress weeds naturally, the trenches were filled with fresh grass clippings. The mulch helps retain moisture, enriches the soil as it decomposes, and creates a barrier against unwanted growth.

Watering Challenges in a Northern Summer

Watering becomes increasingly important as temperatures rise. Not every decision made in spring turns out to be the right one.

Some of the newly planted vines may have suffered from periods of insufficient water, a mistake that only becomes apparent as summer progresses.

Gardening remains an ongoing lesson in observation, patience, and adaptation. Now the question is how many of the young plants will recover and continue to grow.

Successes, Failures, and What Gardening Teaches Us

This is the season when the garden reveals both its successes and its shortcomings.

Summer gardening is rarely perfect. Some plants flourish unexpectedly, while others struggle despite the best intentions. Yet these experiences become part of the garden's story and often provide the most valuable lessons for future seasons.

Throughout the summer, this page will continue to document the work, challenges, and rewards of gardening in a Scandinavian climate. From vegetable harvests and flower displays to unexpected setbacks and seasonal experiments, it will serve as a living record of the garden's progress.

The growing season is far from over. In many ways, it has only just begun.

Explore more: Nordic Garden