We just planted our seeds for tomato, tomatillo, and pepper starts. Last frost here is sometime after Mother's day, so we've got a while for the tender things.
I also just bought 4 gooseberry bushes and 4 red currant bushes. We have a flower bed on the edge of our lawn before the rest of our acre starts that is bordered by 4x4s where we're going to put them. We have another area where we're planning on putting a firepit and a big low-water/native perennial area, so we don't need the beds for actual flowers, and I'm hoping that the gooseberry and currants are less invasive into our lawn than the raspberry bushes we're also planning to get. I know they're nowhere near as bad as blackberries in the PNW, but my parents have taken to just mowing down the raspberry suckers that pop up in their yard next to their row of raspberry bushes, so I know it's still a problem. As I was checking out, the cashier told me she has gooseberry bushes - she said "you basically have to gear up in kevlar to avoid the thorns, but it's totally worth it, they're delicious", which is great to hear.
We're in a new-to-us house as of last August, and we have a whole acre of Colorado plains to fill up (and irrigate). We're focusing on the base of the landscaping right now.
There's a lawn area of a decent size next to the house. Past that, we've put in a big old play structure for the kids, some horseshoe pits, and we're putting in a firepit and native plants (as I mentioned above). Past THAT, we've got about 3x as much garden as we used to, a giant mobile chicken run, and...grass? I'm going to just throw a bunch of wildflower seeds out there with some native grass seed and see what I get. We might use it for livestock or meat chickens eventually, but right now it's just sad, mowed-down, clumpy grass. Flowers will be infinitely better.
We also have a bunch of fruit trees (theoretically). They didn't actually have any fruit on them last year when we moved in, which seems odd, but I don't know WHY. Hopefully I'll get a better idea what is going on this spring, and we can prune and plant new trees accordingly. I'd love to have some fruit trees.