Volunteers You Can Count On

Last year I allowed Green Wave mustard greens to go to seed, and now I am finding the occasional beautiful volunteer in the garden. This one has such a striking form with swirly ruffled leaves. It's almost too pretty to eat! 😊
I agree. This definitely falls into the category of decorative vegetable. Beautiful shiny, frilly leaves.
 
Volunteers are especially welcome in the autumn when there's not much else going on in the garden. I found these squash and brassicas the other day.
 

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Today I found a volunteer Golden Flax in the garden, and it looks to be thriving. The long term forecast has us well above freezing for the next two weeks. Maybe the plant will have time to bloom!

I'm finding Silene Sibella Carmine here and there as well. This annual flower must have a high degree of cold tolerance. In the past I have sowed the seed for silene in April, but I'm kind of wondering if it would be better to start it in June and then plant it out as a flowering late summer ground cover. https://www.swallowtailgardenseeds.com/annuals/silene/sibella-carmine-silene-seeds.html
 

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One of the vegetables that I mentioned in today’s harvest from the garden thread. I don’t think that we will be eating it — there are other lettuce choices which includes lots of volunteers in garden beds.

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:). The bricks represent a high traffic area. How the seed turned up here would be a complete guess. It’s nowhere close to where the 2025 lettuce plants saved for seed grew. And, dozens of feet from where the seed pods were processed.

Steve, who misses @Branching Out ’s post this Spring.
 
One of the vegetables that I mentioned in today’s harvest from the garden thread. I don’t think that we will be eating it — there are other lettuce choices which includes lots of volunteers in garden beds.

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:). The bricks represent a high traffic area. How the seed turned up here would be a complete guess. It’s nowhere close to where the 2025 lettuce plants saved for seed grew. And, dozens of feet from where the seed pods were processed.

worm food! :)


Steve, who misses @Branching Out ’s post this Spring.

moi twooo!
 

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