Ok.. we are back up and running with the purchase of a new camera last week. Little Panasonic point and shoot, love it so far. Apparently having a 9 year old digital camera was quite rare, the salesmen were all shocked. Needless to say I'm impressed with how far cameras have come.
I'll summarize the last month into 2 posts that will cover most of the changes. I learned a valuable lesson about seedlings being ready when THEY are ready. In the last post I mentioned that the tomato seedlings were one of the few nursery quality plants I had produced. Sadly, trying to time the seedlings being ready to transplant with my schedule and Denver's crazy weather schedule I waited to transplant about 10 days too long. Sounds linnocent enough, but I went from 14 strong seedlings, to having 7 keel over in their pots and 7 make it to the garden on the last legs.. of those it looks like 4 will supply. Live and learn.
The exciting first project was installing a drip irrigation system. I discovered via pure dumb luck that I didn't actually need all the sprinklers in my backyard, I could cover the whole yard with only one of the two installed zones. I happened across a few articles about converting a sprinkler zone to a drip irrigation system and was intrigued. Several hours of reading and bumming around in Home Depot and I thought I had it figured out. Sure enough for less than fifty bucks I converted a zone to a drip system and ran drip lines through all the garden beds. It is now all automated off of our sprinkler timer so watering will happen on vacation or if Sara and I are out of town at the same time. I'm thrilled about this. Oh and I buried all the distribution lines, so no more running the hose all over the yard. See the pictures of the sprinkler installation below.
Running the Line

Buried Distribution Lines(need to learn how to take a picture without my own shadow)

Doing It's Thing