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T O P I C R E V I E WChanterelleTrying to practice the former, not the latter. This weekend I dumped out all the flower seeds that are older than 2020, and now I’m trying to make up my mind about what else to plant (suggestions welcome).Too many tomatoes: Matt’s Wild Cherry, Ozark Pink, Mountain Princess, Paul Robeson, Honeydrop Yellow Cherry.Too many peppers: Doe Hill Golden Bell, Ashe County Pimento, Hungarian Paprika, Aji Chinchi Amarillo, Cayenne.Way too many kinds of lettuce: Cosmo, Thai Oakleaf, Black Seeded Simpson, Buttercrunch, Sweet Valentine, Deer, Tongue, Bronze Arrow, Tom Thumb, Red Sails.Bush beans, pole beans, asparagus beans, or lima beans? Two types of watermelon, three types of cucumber, four types of squash— what was I thinking? Specifically, why do I even bother trying to grow watermelon?🤷🏼♀️RandallBump!RandallBump!RandallBump!RandallBump!RandallBump!ChanterelleFunny thing, my cucumbers and squash have done terribly this year, but there’s actually one good watermelon forming. And lots of luffa gourds, which I’ve tried and failed with numerous times.vansioYour plant list is pornographic! I’m having green thumb envy over here; drooling at the novelty of a variety. The little garden where I live, without any effort, has brambles, and a overload of mint. We laid the cabbage scrap, that continued to grow in the compost, on top of some soil, and a stalk grew and flowered a meter tall before shriveling. ChanterelleVariety is the most important thing, as far as I’m concerned— monocultures rarely occur in nature, outside of extreme or disturbed environments. The tomato and squash plants growing straight out of the compost pile are twice the size of any of the ones I planted on purpose. I’ve forgotten which beans I planted where — one patch got eaten by a tunneling critter— but I ought to find out soon.RandallBump!RandallBump!
The little garden where I live, without any effort, has brambles, and a overload of mint. We laid the cabbage scrap, that continued to grow in the compost, on top of some soil, and a stalk grew and flowered a meter tall before shriveling.
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