We all had corn on the cob again with dinner, which was bittersweet, because a part of me wants to hoard all those seeds for drying. The cobs are only medium sized and some of the plants only have one or two ears on them. But they are SO GOOD I couldn't help myself. We had a dinner to match them too; bean burritos, okra, rice. I think next year I should plant a space for those corn 3X the size, if we want to actually eat lots of corn through the summer. I should have plenty of seeds (

) for next year to do that much. This year the seed supply was scant.
All the progressions in the edible landscaping project have been a real learning experience. First, the look was too sparse. Then individual plants bloomed, which was nice, as the vegetable plants gained in size. Still looked a bit thin though. Then things seem to fill in a little, and now we're totally filled in and some of the plants have even dried their seeds - delphiniums, bush beans, marigolds, poppies. I think the idea has potential, though I didn't 'nail it' this year. I had a good start. Tonight I noticed one of the delphinium plants I clipped is reblooming in light blue next to the celosia plant which is blooming in hot pink. The beans beside them are covered in white flowers. It's a nice combo.
I planted some little purple annual salvia plants, and those have flowered very nicely among the vegetable plants. The ruffled green kales are big and luxurious looking, the purple stemmed beans amongst them make for a nice combination. I think I'll add more pansies in the future, and maybe even some in ground petunias. The Fair Play rose I got keeps blooming every time I cut off all the flowers for the vase, so I'd like to maybe buy one more next year and add it. That extended flowering is nice. The Lemon Thyme and Lemon Balm hold their own nicely too.
The cabbages have proven to be the most difficult customers in the project. On the one hand the leaves on the purple cabbages are big and dramatic, beautiful really for a veggie. But the worms are something else. I'm hopeful with my new cedar shavings idea. The worms were eating right into the small forming heads and putting holes all over the leaves (along with really gross poop), but the cedar seems to have stopped that. I noticed today the heads have recovered and are perfectly smooth with no holes. Next year, if I try again, I'm going to layer the ground with a thick layer of cedar shavings and keep a bucket of shavings nearby so I can sprinkle them on every week or two. If that doesn't work, then I'll have to abandon that landscaping plant.
I'm also wondering if rows might be better than the cottage style I went with. Something carefree about the kitchen garden 'potager' look, at the same time, I find straight rows deeply satisfying.....