jansman wrote: ↑Sun Jun 18, 2023 7:06 am
Pleased to say that we are now harvesting strawberries,gooseberries, lettuce, Egyptian and Welsh onions - lots- and Daubenton perennials kale .
One thing about spuds these days is that I don’t ‘plant’ them. I just leave a couple of tubers there when cropping.Sling some compost on when I can be bothered,and next year,regardless of weather,a crop. Done! Same with perpetual spinach. And lettuce. I just let them go to seed,whack ‘em and let them grow. And they do. The garden looks a little ‘wild’ ,but in a crisis,the majority of townies here now would not realise it were food if they trespassed
Good thinking about the spuds. So it's sort of like a deliberate 'volunteer'? That's a pretty remarkable testament to nature that a spud can sit in the ground untended for many MANY months and not decay. Nature Rocks!

I had mused over that idea, but no-one on t'internet suggested it. We get all sorts of know it alls saying never grow spuds same place etc. Pah!
Interesting to know how you handle annual weeds between your lettuce and spuds, while waiting for them to germinate? I guess you must be a dab hand at knowing weeds from veg? I see that problem where I sowed carrots: All sorts of annual weeds are popping up amongst them and it's only luck that I recognise carrot tops so i can pull some weeds without wrecking them. Straight lines: Pah! Thinning out: Pah again!
In spite of the allotment, I still embrace buckets and pots, where I have peas and carrots and even spuds doing their thing.
I'm letting my Egyptian onions do their own thing: Not harvesting this first year. A couple got all gnarled up and died but about 4 are drooping down their bulbils. It's a wonder to behold. I hope to eventually have a 1sq m bed full of them.
I agree about the rain. I watered just a bit, knowing that our British weather would know what to do. We let the lawn's get parched, this year: Lawn's just a darned chore. Might bed out the back lawn, which is neither use nor ornament.
Back to the topic of letting things go to seed.... I have about 5 parsnips left in the ground. They are about 6 feet tall

I'm hoping they'll give me masses of seeds. I do hope they somehow pollinate. If not, I'll have wasted a year's worth of bed space. My Chives went to seed and the chive patch is growing great. Self sufficient in chives. A few spring onions have been growing forever. Pretty much gone wild on me and given zero love and attention. I harvested a few last week and they were big and round. Who cares if they were the wrong shape as they still went on my cheese butty.
Jansman..... I'm reading your 'lazy gardening' style as giving me some permission to be lazy too

Weeds pulled and dropped where they are. Some grass clippings scattered where others might hoe and clear. Cardboard where others would have beautifully hoed and tended bare earth.
I've got a big raised bed just for 'pretty flowers' Guess how much effort that gets:... Rake once. Sprinkle with a couple of kiddies bags of 'cottage mix' and let it get on with it. Every summer it bursts into colourful life, weeds and all. So what if its a mess, so long as it's a mess of colour.