I'll take a short moment to say a little more about summer greens.
A forum member once noted that much of the US spinach seed is from an area just a few hundred miles from here. I said, that is my problem! Spinach (and other annual greens) bolt to seed beginning with the first days of summer.
Amaranth, tender and tasty, that I have grown have been very tiny plants. I've wondered if that was because of summer heat and tried sowing seed very early, tried it in the hoop house. Nope. Still, they are very tiny plants. That's okay but they bolt also and I have to be very careful to pay attention to that ... and, leave the garden one summer afternoon with about as many greens as would fill my hat ...
I'm left with my garden biennials. Baby beets are a real favorite for my entire life. The leaves begin to coarsen as they mature. If I plant seed this late, the seedlings are tiny and just sit there until the weather cools, and then they have no time to make any growth.
Chard was a recent discovery. I know! But, I was turned off to the thick stems of chard at an early age! Didn't want to grow it - then, I learned that there are thin-stemmed varieties of chard! I have a nice stand of that again this year. It will be my summer green along with kale.

Steve
who still doesn't know what he is using to replace the peas ... could wait about 3 weeks and plant more peas ...