In the sun-kissed hills of Montecito, California, where celebrities retreat to craft their picture-perfect lives, Meghan Markle’s latest Instagram post has ignited a firestorm of speculation. On May 28, 2025, the Duchess of Sussex, 43, shared a seemingly idyllic snapshot on her “As Ever” lifestyle brand account: her rescue beagle, Mia, joyfully sniffing a woven basket overflowing with vibrant produce – broccoli florets, plump carrots, golden corn ears, red bell peppers, squash, leeks, spring onions, lettuce, and fresh herbs. The caption? “The unofficial quality inspector of this morning’s garden haul.” Accompanied by a glimpse of Meghan’s perfectly manicured toes in chic open-toed sandals, the image painted a portrait of rustic domestic bliss, evoking images of a devoted homemaker tending her lush backyard plot.
But beneath the wholesome facade, royal watchers and social media sleuths detected something amiss. Why does this “morning’s garden haul” appear so meticulously staged? And more intriguingly, how could her garden possibly yield such a diverse array of vegetables every single day – or at least with the frequency implied by her ongoing posts? The controversy erupted as eagle-eyed fans dissected the photo, flooding platforms like Reddit, TikTok, and X with accusations of deception. “I’ve never seen vegetables so clean after harvesting,” one commenter quipped on Reddit’s r/SaintMeghanMarkle. “No dirt, no bugs, no imperfections – that’s straight off a Whole Foods shelf!” Another added, “She’s so good at gardening she can grow all things from all seasons at once. Wizardry or supermarket run?”
At the heart of the uproar lies a simple, seasonal truth: Mother Nature doesn’t operate on a celebrity schedule. In California’s coastal climate, where Meghan and Prince Harry have called home since 2020, vegetable harvesting follows strict timelines dictated by soil, sunlight, and weather. Broccoli, for instance, thrives in cooler months and is typically ready from March to June, aligning with late spring picks. Carrots and spring onions can indeed be harvested year-round with proper planning, as root vegetables store well and quick-growers like onions mature in 3-4 weeks. But corn? That’s a summer darling, usually ripe from June to September, demanding warm nights and ample pollination. Squash varieties vary – summer squash might appear in May, but winter types lag until fall. Red bell peppers, heat-loving and finicky, peak from July onward, while leeks prefer the chill of autumn and winter.
So, how does Meghan’s garden seemingly defy these cycles, churning out photo-ready hauls with enviable consistency? Critics point to the May timing as a glaring red flag. “It’s way too early for corn, squash, and peppers in Montecito,” noted a gardening enthusiast on TikTok, referencing resources from the California Farmland Trust. “Who harvests corn in May? That’s not backyard magic; that’s imported perfection.” The basket’s contents, critics argue, represent a mishmash of off-season items that no single garden – even one as pampered as the Sussexes’ – could realistically produce simultaneously without advanced techniques like greenhouses or hydroponics, which Meghan has never publicly touted.
Enter the supermarket theory: Detractors speculate that the produce was sourced from a high-end grocer like Whole Foods or a local farmers’ market, then artfully relabeled as “homegrown” to bolster her burgeoning lifestyle empire. This isn’t Meghan’s first brush with authenticity questions. Her “As Ever” brand, rebranded from American Riviera Orchard in February 2025, launched with sold-out jams, honeys, and teas in April, tying into her Netflix series With Love, Meghan, which showcases her Montecito homestead as a haven of artisanal living. Yet, the garden posts feel like calculated content fodder – daily glimpses into a curated idyll that aligns suspiciously well with marketing timelines. “People who actually garden will know she bought those at the store,” one Reddit user vented. “And those shoes? Harvesting in sandals with white-painted nails? Please.”
Defenders, though fewer in number, rally around Meghan’s genuine passion for self-sufficiency. She has long championed home gardening, from her Toronto balcony plots during Suits days to the Sussexes’ beekeeping ventures featured in their 2023 docuseries. In a recent Fast Company interview, she gushed about rooting her brand in “the love story of your home and garden,” hinting at verticals like future produce lines. Could her setup include season-extending tools? Montecito’s mild microclimate – rarely dipping below 40°F – allows for extended growing with row covers or raised beds. Perennial herbs and cold-hardy greens like lettuce could indeed provide year-round staples, while strategic succession planting (sowing seeds in waves) ensures steady yields. Broccoli and carrots, being cool-season crops, fit May perfectly, and perhaps the corn was a precocious hybrid or a neighbor’s gift.
Yet, the skepticism persists, amplified by Meghan’s history of public scrutiny. From her 2019 strawberry jam recipe (eerily similar to Martha Stewart’s) to accusations of plagiarizing wellness trends, every post invites forensic analysis. With comments disabled on Instagram, the backlash spilled onto X, where #MeghanGardenHoax trended briefly, amassing over 50,000 mentions in 48 hours. “Embarrassed she thinks anyone believes this,” one viral tweet read, garnering 12K likes. TikTok creators even staged recreations, dumping store-bought veggies into baskets to mimic the “pristine” look.
This isn’t just about vegetables; it’s a microcosm of Meghan’s post-royal reinvention. At 43, balancing motherhood to Archie and Lilibet, a Netflix deal, and a brand valued at millions, her content walks a tightrope between relatability and aspiration. The garden hauls humanize her – a duchess digging in the dirt – but when they veer into implausibility, they fuel narratives of inauthenticity. As one supporter on X countered, “Let women enjoy things without turning it into a crime scene.”
Ultimately, whether Meghan’s bounty is a triumph of horticultural savvy or a props department triumph, the incident underscores the relentless gaze on her every move. In a world craving realness, her “endless” garden has sown seeds of doubt. Will future posts reveal mud-caked boots or hothouse confessions? Or will the duchess simply harvest the publicity? One thing’s certain: in the court of public opinion, the produce is always ripe for debate.