Here's what I've got going on so far. Some pics of my wintersown containers, 33 altogether. Most were done on March 10th, but really you are supposed to do them in like January or February and leave them to do their own thing. Various stuff is sprouting in 28 of them so far.
Close up of alyssum and red mustard...
These are swiss chard, lettuce, morning glories, poppies, evergreen bunching onions, bok choy... I've had the tops open for a couple of days, even through all the rainstorms we just had. I shut them tonight
just in case, although if it frosts tonight, we will be the last ones to get it. After that, forecast is mostly 70's in the days and 50's at night.

That's morel hunting weather!
Here's the main garden after the chickens have been rotated over all four quadrants this past fall/winter. I did not have to remove any of the cardboard, straw or dead vegetation other than sunflowers and cornstalks. The chickens composted everything, even the cardboard is gone without a trace. Only the skeletons of a couple of pepper plants were left. I tossed all of my kitchen compostables in with them too.
This is all that is left of my 2 big apple trees. Lost them to fireblight.
And today DH started on cutting down the 6 big maple trees across the road from us. I am so excited because my view of the sunrise will be totally unobscured AND no more annoying maple seed propellers clogging up my gutters! And it will be awesome to have all of that firewood ready for next year.
One of our neighbors bought this strip of land off of our other neighbor who needed some money for hospital bills. It's maybe 1/3 of an acre, but all long and narrow, maybe 20' wide along the road. He was going to park his RV over there but changed his mind. Now he's talking about putting a mobile home on it then selling or trading it to someone. (Ack!) It faces directly across the road from the front of our house. I don't think you could put a home on it because there is no sewer out here and no where to put a septic system over that embankment behind it. I don't know what he's thinking.
I'm fairly sure no one will want it and he'll soon get tired of mowing it and paying taxes on it. We offered him twice what he paid for it cash in hand and it's really worth more than that to us to prevent what it will do to our property value if we ever want to sell this house. I love living in the country, but the fact that your neighbors can do any number of screwy things on their property is one pitfall.

If he'll sell it to us though, I'm going to plant fruit trees on it and put in another garden plot.