GARDEN NEWS-VOLUNTEERS IN THE GARDEN
yesterday when i entered the garden early in the morning just as the sun peaked over the trees i looked around
and
i could see all these volunteers in the garden
not humans
plants
some edible
some not edible
some vegetables
some flowers
this sunflower above appeared in my garden path a few weeks ago
i am sure some bird planted it for me
thanks
since it was not in my way i decided to let it stay there
this unknown volunteer sunflower
last week it was about 5 ft tall
now
this week it is well over 6 ft tall
its some type of giant sunflower
time will tell if it has one big seed head on it or several smaller seed heads
the sunflower will provide nectar and pollen and food for bees butterflies and birds
the bees crawl all over it
after the seeds all form i will either leave it hanging for the birds to eat
or
i might cut off the seed head and let the chickens eat the sunflower seeds
i plan on leaving the stalk in place
at the base i will either plant a red malabar spinach vine pictured below
or
i might plant a vining tatume squash
both of them will vine all the way up the sunflower stalk
this is borage
it is a bee magnet
it seeds through out the garden
if its not in the way i just leave it in place
the blue flowers are edible
i use them in salads for color
these are poppies that are also all over our garden
i have a lot of them along the outside border of my garden bed
if they arent in the way i leave them in place
sometimes though they pop up in the wrong place so sadly i have to remove them
recently i had to remove some so i brought them home to put in a flower arrangement
ms b informed me
you know you arent suppose to pick the poppies
evidence
she was listening to her kindergarten teacher
this is chamomile
it has the right of way in our garden
this one popped up in the walkway between the onion bed and the leek bed
the white flowers have all fallen off
those orange flowers in the picture above are poppies that havent opened up yet
several human volunteers in the garden harvest the chamomile for chamomile tea
here many people look at purslane as a weed
i know in texas i use to buy it every year and plant it in the garden
it has a pretty flower on it
this one is a yellow version
it is a succulent i think
i harvest it to use it in salads
we get a lot of it in the garden here
sometimes i will pull it up since it grows like in a mat
then i place it around my vegetables as a mulch
this is purple amaranth
it is a grain
soybean farmers for example see it as a invasive weed
the grain that purple plume at the top can be harvested and used as a grain
you can buy amaranth grains at the supermarket
i use it like this
the small tender leaves are harvested and used in salads
the larger leaves are harvested and used in stir fries or in a pot of greens with collards or kale or swiss chard
this is a volunteer malibar spinach vine
its ancestor was bought years ago at the natural gardener in austin texas
it reseeds every year
the day we drove from austin to santa barbara i harvested several of the baby plants
and
placed them in a zip lock bag
on arrival three years ago i planted them in my garden
we use the smaller leaves in salads
the bigger leaves we use in spinach casseroles or my wife she makes a mean sag paneer with it
finally
this is a volunteer tomato that i found growing in my garden path
i dug it up and transplanted it into the large tomato bed we have in the community garden
so
i labelled it
the mystery tomato
so in our community garden we use a lot of volunteers to take care of our garden
but
we also use these volunteers above in our garden
i must say this time of year
these plant volunteers are the showcase in the garden
this is one reason i volunteer myself
the organicgreen doctor
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