Herels the latest. Not quite 'welcome to the jungle' - yet. Here's a little philosophy I twigged on today. While on the roof I saw that my patch of wild (or historical) day-lillies are starting to pop. At one point I would have been digging and transplanting and such to put the pretty things near the house. Now it's just stuff to look at walking through the woods. I have plenty of boulders too. Free to a good home but I ain't paying shipping.
The overview. Tomatoes are a lot bigger. Peppers are not so much. I spend about a half an hour a day walking the tomatoes and twisting the new growth around the drop cords. All the peppers that are in cages are those where I can fuck them up dragging a garden hose around. I prefer stakes and ties. Along the edge of the new part I fenced in at the back I added some short-fence rows with bush beans on the frint side and corn on the back. Behind the corn I am gonna start assorted clover.
Took 5 days for the corn and beans to pop. Damn grey roly-poly's were all over the beans when they popped. Seems they don't like cayenne pepper - I hope the corn and beans do. The little palm tree is a balsam and they have almost no roots and move easy, and reseed for next year. Bumbles love them.
I have lots of random stuff like millet, chamomile, various herb. looking for info on youtube about the chamomile and therewas some reddneck gardener shoeing me lots of pretty flowers. I was waiting for right part of the video because he was talking about "sha-mom-a-lee" and it didn't click
Maybe he was being snarky? Sorghum looks like corn.
Protecting the raspberry with a fence was a premonition. I thought I was saving it from animals. The birdhouse gourd is gonna outcompete the poison ivy in the woods. there's volunteer lemon balm about to get overrun, and i put a cage around a new mulberry that popped up. at the bottom.
@treefarmercharlie this is the wood sorrel. I am getting some fat okras on it and I will try collecting the seed for an indoor cover crop.