posted 5 months ago
Volunteers: 
 - Peas (volunteered from previous cover crop, nitrogen fixer) in my flower bed (soapwort, daisies, crocuses, echinacea, tulips, sun chokes)
 - Fennel (re-seeded itself, attracts pollinators) in an herb bed (comfrey, marjoram, oregano, onions, alyssum)
 - Hairy vetch (re-seeded itself for the second year in a row from a cover crop) in my fallow bed (full of volunteer sun chokes, wheat, leeks, peas, and weeds)
 - Lemon balm (sprouted from seeds carried by wind from a plant several yards away, shades out weeds while I wait for the yarrow sprouts to get big enough to do it on their own. Then I harvest them for food/medicine as they become competition) in my aspiring yarrow/thyme/clover lawn area
 
 Wild:
 - Lambs quarter (erosion prevention, food) in my fallow bed (full of volunteer sun chokes, wheat, leeks, peas, and weeds)
 - Clover (nitrogen fixer, soil shader) in the recently-revamped perennial flower border (daffodils, iris, day lilies that provide shade for shrubs that don't love full sun)
 - Plantain (medicine) in a part-shade raised bed (walking onions, carrots, ground nuts, alyssum, clover, and soon others)
 - Fungus (not technically a plant, but a compost-maker) in the wood chips of an herb bed (comfrey, marjoram, oregano, onions, alyssum)
 
 I encouraged them all by selective chop & drop (chopping their competition and their siblings where were less-ideally placed) and by keeping them watered.
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"It is better to remain silent at the risk of being thought a fool, than to talk and remove all doubt of it." - Maurice Switzer
 
Staff note
(gir bot)
:
 Rebekah Harmon approved this submission. 
 Note: That's it! You've become a permaculture gardener 