Recently in Planning Category
So so sorry, dear blog, that i left you in shambles as the season waned. The truth is, i had planned a winter garden; but while wracked with indecision, didn't clear the proper space for one until too late. The vast quantity of winter squashes turned out, predictably, to not be that good.
Oh well, mistakes noted, a new year approaches.

Now's the time of year you can start your broccoli and heat lovers (tomato, pepper, eggplant).

More a bit later (promise!) on some DIY projects cooking in the background for the Noble Good Of The Garden.
Turn your back for a second, and they strike! Actually, more like turning your back for a week or two. The urban gardener isn't always quite as vigilant as the farmer, and sometimes the combination of the 8-to-5 grind and the small garden area makes you say, "I can skip a day, these plants grow pretty slowly." Bad decision.
Actually, the bad decision comes much earlier. Springtime, when the gardener is flush with anticipation and has all their seedlings in neat rows, the temptation is great to tell oneself that Chaos Is Vanquished. It's not until mid-to-late summer, when the gardener really finds out the consequences of earlier decisions. My mistake, a mistake I keep repeating and am probably doomed to repeat in future years, is to see the eager volunteer seedlings standing up forthright in the newly groomed beds and allow them to prosper, rather than yanking them out and planting my own. As I've alluded to before, sometimes these volunteers are a nice surprise and bear some interesting fruit. But other times, as in this year, they end up taking over the garden and giving not much in return.
This sprawling winter squash has spilled out of its own bed and threatens to take over the three adjacent beds. the flowering you see is the last of the spring broccoli, which was definitely a success for repeated harvests, so much so that we would have needed to eat broccoli almost every night to keep up with it. But now it's time (and rapidly becoming too late) to start the winter garden, and this squash will completely bollox that idea. Our plan is to go in and take back some of the bed space so we can get some fall planting done pronto.

