Also we are well into spring (at least in the northern hemisphere), why is this sub so dead? Gardening is praxis, even if you don't have much outdoor space you can always stick tomatoes and peppers in containers! That's how I got started.
The deer, rabbits, and rodents in my area are absolutely brutal (cursed suburbs) so I have to keep that in mind with everything I grow.
I didn't get a chance to set up a proper veggie garden this year, so I'm mixing in a few with my flower beds. Jalapenos, plum and brandywine tomatoes, pickling cucumbers, and basil.
For flowers I am trying to stick to natives or their hybrids/cultivated versions as much as possible. I sowed poppy, larkspur, calendula, marigolds, nemophila, nasturtium, and sunflowers directly in the dirt, and most of them have sprouted already, which is a pleasant surprise since it's the first time I've direct sowed and I really didn't expect much to grow.
I started columbine, catmint, coleus, cosmos, snapdragons, delphinium, lavender, milkweed, and a ton of foxglove in trays. They are all about ready to go in the ground here in 7A, except for the lavender which is slow as shit.
Ordered a ton of daffodils and alliums to plant in the fall since those never get touched by hungry animals.
Also growing some shrooms for the first time in my basement but I don't know if it counts for this sub lol
Lets see what I can remember without askin my wife...
two or three kinds of apple trees, a pear tree, acres of wild black berries, wild black cherries, several varieties of wild mulberries, two types of strawberries, potatoes, sweet potatoes, chard, kale, tomatoes just went in the ground, garlic, onions, basil, sage, lettuce, at some point bell peppers and jalapenos are going in, a few small blueberry bushes, grapes may not happen this year with a snap freeze that happened like a week ago that looks to have killed all the leaves and might have set back them actually producing grapes... and that's all I can remember...