Huckleberries are part of childhood growing up on the west coast, but they look nothing like the plants that you have pictured. Our huckleberries are smaller than cranberries and rosy pink, with the airy small-leafed shrubs almost always growing out of the base of rotten trees. As kids they were treasured treats, picked in the wild.
That's because what
@heirloomgal is growing is what is called Garden Huckleberry. It isn't actually a true huckleberry at all (which is a member of the blueberry family). It's a form of
Solanum nigrum (or maybe the Hybrid
Solanum x burbankii, I tend to get Garden Huckleberry, Sunberry, and Wonderberry confused.) They LOOK sort of like Huckleberries in a pie (well, Eastern ones, most of the species have blue berries, not pink, the West Coast one is unusual in that respect.) but I've heard they don't taste of much on their own, they need a lot of sugar to make pie filling.)
Anyway, my updates.
1. Finally, the bean plants in the corn patch have gotten their flowers, so they should catch up with the ones on the patio soon.
2. It looks like maybe one of the rice beans actually did make it through, though it's way behind. So I might get a little, hopefully
3. I did a little digging around in the pot of Korean Mountain Garlic (I was getting worried that it all seemed to be dying) and there are at least a FEW bulbs in there (which, since I started from bulbils means they must have grown there.) So I suppose it is simply a matter of it being an early spring vegetable rather than a mid summer one. Probably just leave them there for a few years to let them multiply (there won't be that much this year anyway, and I have had really bad luck trying to store the bulbs outside of the soil over the winter*.)
*Of course, up until now I was working with fresh green plants I had bought at the supermarket and then FORCED to try and go into storage mode by chopping off their tops and letting them dry. Maybe it works different if the tops die down naturally.