2wks ago:

Today:

Doesn’t easily look like much has changed, but it continues to do so.
From the back

You’ll maybe notice the gaping holes in that back bed – we harvested all the remaining daikon, turnips and beets. Something keeps eating the turnips and daikon (and radishes in the side bed) – some sort of wormy thing – so we couldn’t keep as much as I’d like. Doesn’t bother the beets though, strangely. I’ll be pickling those beets and with the daikon made our standard relish. Today I planted lettuce where the daikon were and more drying beans where the beets were. Beans being nitrogen fixers has me hoping for a better beet harvest next year (plus the dragon tongue beans produced really well and I’d like to have more). I’d like to put in more beets but ran out of seeds. Zucchini plants (all two of them) have started fruiting also, and hopefully we’ll have lots of that, too.
It’s hard to see anything defined in the garden – it’s such a riot of green. The morning glories, though not as tall as I’d hoped, are starting to bloom prettily. The mint is blooming and attracting every bee, butterfly, moth and flying bug within miles. Perfect since the pickling cucumbers right near it are *covered* in blossoms. I’m almost afraid of how much we may get. The slicing cucs are doing very well and starting to really produce. Ken’s worried that I’ll have too many tomatoes and said, yesterday, “I hope you know how to can stewed tomatoes!”

Those’re all 4-6″ or so long, so in a few days we’ll be overloaded with them.

Tomatoes are starting to blush (those’re Riesentraube – a russian cherry) and should be edible in a few days. I can’t wait!
Since it’s hard to see what the garden is doing, I stepped up onto the hillside and snapped this:

The mess in the middle is all tomatoes (with a few onion stragglers that’re fighting the odds), the leaning trellis on either side is cucumbers, the bushy mess on the right is hybrid tomatoes, improperly “contained” (aka left to go wild) – some of the tomatoes have had rotted blossom ends (not quite blossom end rot, though, I don’t think), but I’m leaving the rest to see what happens. It’d sure be a lot easier to see what’s what if we’d do more weeding, wouldn’t it?
Maybe one of these days I’ll figure out the best thing to lay down for the paths (I lean, increasingly, toward white stone)
On the other side of the house…

The raspberries continue their bid to take over the world. I have no idea how tall they are, especially since they arch forward and appear smaller than they are. They aren’t as berry-heavy as I’d like, but they’re definately great for daily pickin’s.
The blackberry has grown a lot this year

Since a month ago, it’s grown by 3 siding strips! The hosta’s on either side of it are the only hosta that haven’t been eaten by the deer – I figure because they can’t find them in the jungle. I wonder what our best bet for raspberry containment is? When I replanted the one raspberry into the veg garden I tied some twine around the top to keep it contained while I moved it, and then left that twine there because it kept things contained. I wonder if I should do that with these?