A few months ago I posted
My First Really Good Garden and this past Tuesday I put it to bed.

I pulled up the cages holding up the tomatoes and squashes, removed the pots and put them away for the winter, and put the finishing touches on expanding it for next year. I made next year's garden twice as large by rearranging the t-posts and using a lot of extra
chicken wire fencing and whatever other fencing materials I had on hand.
One thing I did but hadn't planned on is trying to overwinter some plants that are annuals in my zone 5b or 6a. I like Dusty Miller and geraniums, and read that Dusty Miller are hardy in zones 7-10 and am thinking that placing them inside and covered may ’simulate’ overwintering outside in a zone 7+ region. It probably won't work, but there is no cost to me except time spent lugging them to the garage and a sore back. Same thing for geraniums. I saw something on Pinterest about how to overwinter them, and so I stuck them next to the Dusty Millers. I have no idea if that's what the Pinterest item suggested, as I didn't read it. But, my options are limited as I have no
greenhouse and don't want to overwinter anything in the basement. If they survive, great, if not, they all get tossed in the
compost as starters for next years's pile. Like I said, the attempt isn't costing me anything except the effort.
I was just all jazzed up about this year and thought, ”Why not give this a try?” Perhaps it'll make me work a little harder in getting a
greenhouse!