The area I have been calling a food forest want to be has changed. We removed a large old apricot tree. I'm not going to lie it made me quite sad to remove it, but it was down to one living branch, and that didn't look great. Out it went. It's surprising how much it opened that space. I planted a bare root apricot, an Asian pear and a pear. The trees are doing well, except the apricot is growing pretty low, and the little existing branches are dead. It's very strange. The growth is above the graft, so I'm just going to let it do it's thing.
I decided to plant blueberries in pots and put them between the apricot trees. There are also two pots with sweet potatoes. The mature tree should give some much needed afternoon shade. Being a a tight budget I used the black nursery pots. I always worry about planting in them because I worry about the soil super heating the roots. I lined the pot with cardboard. I was thinking it will hopefully keep the soil a little cooler. I have been thinking maybe I should paint the outside of the pot white, or cover them in burlap, and I still might in the future, but for now mother nature is taking care of it for me. I have a volunteer growing, I believe it's a pumpkin. Boy is it growing well. I was going to put watermelon there, but I decided to just enjoy the free no work pumpkin. It's started to grow around the pots. Problem solved the large leaves of the pumpkin will shade the black pots. I just love it when nature helps me out. Not only will we enjoy the pumpkin, but it will provide shade for the pots, ground cover for soil health, and maybe a little weed suppression. This beautiful pumpkin plant is definitely my friend.
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pumpkin growing over the shade the pots
“We can complain because rose bushes have thorns, or rejoice because thorn bushes have roses.” — Abraham Lincoln
A lot of people cry when they cut onions. The trick is not to form an emotional bond. This tiny ad told me: