posted 4 years ago
Weather seems to be changing, there are no real winter's any more. I plant lots of stuff in autumn/ end of summer.
Garlic, spring onion, endive, mustard leaves, black radishes, Brussel sprouts, Kale, Brocolli, Palm Kale, Minutina, Landcress, Winter Salads, Swiss Chard, red beets, golden beets, most of these covered in a ground cover of lamb's lettuce or miners lettuce. Many herbs like to be planted outside in autumn too, thyme planted in autumn survived the summerheat gloriously, the spring ones had problems.
It grows slow but steady, i take a leaf here and a sprout there kind of thing. All stuff that can take quite some freezing temperatures, but the slow growth of winter i prefer above the ground flea attacks of summer.
It could be that i will lose all my effort to a very strong freeze, but i like to imagine i am saving the seeds of the most frost resistant specimen and work with those the coming years. The pressure of weeds changes as well in winter. More grasses and the like.
And in spring these plants that survived just explode into abundance while others are speaking of start ups.
I guess saving seeds has made it that i take chances, if they die bummer, start again in spring.
Creating edible biodiversity and embracing everlasting abundance.