Stop planting flowers around your garden and start planting them inside it.

Most companion planting advice puts the helpful flower in a border or a separate bed. The problem is distance. The scent cloud, the trap effect, and the predator recruitment all weaken sharply past a foot or two. A flower planted twenty feet away from the vegetable it’s supposed to protect isn’t doing much.

The flower belongs in the row. Right next to the stem it’s defending.

Basil between tomato stems is the clearest example. The aromatic oils that confuse pests looking for tomato foliage work as a scent screen — but only at close range. Basil in a border across the garden is too far. Basil planted within a foot of the tomato stem masks the signal where it matters.

The same principle applies to every pairing that works.

Pairings that work when planted close:

– Nasturtiums at the base of each squash hill — soft foliage that pests prefer over squash leaves. When the nasturtium is loaded with aphids, the vine beside it is clean. Replace heavily infested plants mid-season to reset the trap

– Flowering dill or cilantro in the brassica row — the blooms attract tiny beneficial insects that target cabbage caterpillars. Let one or two plants bolt on purpose. The bolted herb is doing its most important work

– Flowering chives in the carrot row — the scent masks carrot foliage from flies that locate carrots by smell. The chives need to be in the same row, not in a pot nearby

– Sunflowers at the end of a bean row — aphids climb the sunflower stem and cluster at the top, drawing them away from bean foliage below. The bean fixes nitrogen that feeds the sunflower. Both benefit

The distance between the flower and the vegetable is the variable that changes whether companion planting works or doesn’t.

Watering Potted Plants

Watering Potted Plants

The pot has a drainage hole. You added gravel at the bottom for extra drainage. Water runs out when you pour it in.

The plant is still struggling. And the gravel is part of the reason.

A layer of coarse gravel under fine potting mix doesn’t help water move through faster. Water resists crossing from one texture into a very different one — it pauses at the boundary and the soil above holds more moisture than it would without the gravel there at all.

Fill the same pot entirely with potting mix, no gravel, and water actually moves through more evenly and exits the drainage hole sooner. The root zone ends up drier without the layer that was supposed to make it drier.

The fix is simpler than the problem.

Three things that actually improve container drainage:

– Skip the gravel — fill the pot with potting mix all the way to the bottom. A uniform column of the same material drains more consistently than layered materials with different textures.

– Lift the pot — a drainage hole sitting flat on a solid surface can seal under the weight of wet soil. Pot feet, small stones, or any spacer that lifts the base half an inch lets air enter from below, which is what pulls water downward and out.

– Bottom water when soil resists wetting — dry peat-based mixes sometimes repel water, sending it down the inside wall of the pot and out the drain while the root ball stays dry. Setting the pot in a tray of water for twenty minutes lets moisture pull upward through the soil evenly, rewetting the whole root zone from below.

The pot that looks like it’s draining well and the pot that’s actually draining well aren’t always the same pot.

FDA Covered Up Safety Signals

Sen Ron Johnson FDA Uncovered

This is earth-shattering. Senator Ron Johnson just revealed that Secretary Kennedy provided him with 11 MILLION pages of HHS documents on the COVID vaccine. What the documents exposed about the FDA is truly disturbing.

JOHNSON: “We have now uncovered the fact that FDA officials knew in March of 2021 that their analytical system for the VAERS system, was completely inadequate, that it would MASK significant safety signals.”

“They had a different system that would, you know, produce this information unmasked.”

“They presented that to top FDA officials, and they covered up.”

“They were 49 cases of extreme masking, resulting in 25 safety signals, including sudden cardiac death, bell’s palsy, pulmonary infarction, very serious side effects.”

“And again, I said, I don’t I didn’t need a sophisticated system.”

“I saw deaths per year go from a couple hundred to over 20,000 the year the vaccine came out in 2021.”

“And yet the FDA officials hid behind their analytics that they knew would hide these safety signals to continue to claim to this day, we didn’t see any safety signals with the Covid injection.”

Click to view the video: https://x.com/overton_news/status/2047370947150192792?s=20

Ignatius J. Reilly by John Kennedy Toole

John Kennedy Toole

His mother believed in him fiercely.

John Kennedy Toole grew up in New Orleans under a mother who treated his genius as her personal mission. Thelma didn’t just love her son — she managed him. His clothes. His friendships. His future. John’s father, quietly fading from the world, offered no counterweight. So John learned to be two things at once: extraordinary and obedient.

He was brilliant by any measure. He skipped two grades, entered Tulane on scholarship at sixteen, earned a master’s at Columbia, and eventually landed in Puerto Rico with the Army — where, for the first time in his life, he breathed air that didn’t belong to anyone else. It was there, in a borrowed office, that he began to write.

He invented Ignatius J. Reilly: an enormous, pompous, brilliant man who lived with his overbearing mother and waged absurd war against the modern world. The character was hilarious. He was also, in ways Toole understood completely, a mirror.

John called the novel A Confederacy of Dunces. He knew it was something rare.

He sent it to Simon & Schuster, where editor Robert Gottlieb corresponded with him for two years — revisions, suggestions, glimmers of hope — before delivering the final verdict: unpublishable. Something inside John cracked open after that. The rejection confirmed a fear that had been whispering louder every year. He began to unravel. Paranoia. Drinking. A deepening silence his students and friends couldn’t reach.

In March 1969, at thirty-one years old, John Kennedy Toole drove to Biloxi, Mississippi. He rented a cabin. He did not come back.

But his mother was not done.

For eleven years, Thelma carried that manuscript like a torch. She showed it to anyone who would hold still long enough to look. She eventually found her way to Walker Percy, the celebrated Louisiana novelist, and put the pages in his hands. Percy began reading with polite reluctance. Then something shifted. A prickle of interest. A growing excitement. Then disbelief — how had no one published this?

A Confederacy of Dunces was published in 1980 by Louisiana State University Press. The first print run was just 2,500 copies. Within a year, it won the Pulitzer Prize for Fiction.

Twelve years after John died believing he had failed, his novel received the highest honor in American literature. It has since sold over two million copies. It never goes out of print. There is a bronze statue of Ignatius J. Reilly on Canal Street in New Orleans, where tourists stop and laugh every single day.

John never held a single published copy in his hands.

His story doesn’t come with a clean moral. It doesn’t promise that persistence always pays off in time, or that the world always recognizes what it should. Sometimes it doesn’t. Sometimes it does — but too late.

What it does offer is this: the thing you’ve made, the thing you believe in, the thing the world hasn’t understood yet — it may be carrying more weight than you know.

John thought he had failed.

He had written a masterpiece.

Edibles That Replant Themselves

Edibles That Replant Themselves

The garden that feeds itself started with one season of not cleaning up.

Let these six plants flower, drop seed, and finish. They come back on their own.
– Dill — one plant scatters thousands of seeds in a six-foot radius, seedlings appear everywhere the following spring.
– Cilantro — stop fighting the bolt, let it drop seed in June, a fall crop emerges in September from the same seeds.
– Arugula — self-seeds so readily that one flowering plant often means volunteer arugula in every bed for years.
– Lettuce — bolt produces hundreds of seeds that land in the same bed and fill the cool-weather gaps between planned plantings.
– Chamomile — one plant produces a carpet of seedlings the following spring, harvestable for tea, zero maintenance.
– Borage — blue flowers, cucumber flavor, drops seeds that germinate reliably in the same spot each year.

The grocery herbs you keep rebuying evolved to do this without help. You just kept cleaning up before they could finish.

Peach Tree Guild

Peach Tree Guild

Peach trees die from the same companion planting that saves apples. The dense understory that works under an apple canopy traps humidity around stone fruit — and humidity is how brown rot, peach leaf curl, and bacterial canker move in. A peach guild is built on the opposite principle: open ground, airflow corridors, and companions spaced far enough apart to let air circulate through.

Every plant earns its position by solving a stone fruit problem specifically.

Close to the trunk — but never crowding it:
– Creeping thyme in small patches under the canopy — thymol vapor rising from the foliage suppresses brown rot and leaf curl spores at the source.
– Hardneck garlic at the drip line with bare soil between each cluster — allicin from the roots reduces overwintering fungal load where it concentrates.
– Tansy planted trunk-side of the drip line — its essential oils repel clearwing moth from laying eggs at the bark base where borers enter.

The wider ring handles recruitment and surveillance:
– Lavender’s silver-green mounds attract parasitic wasps that target Oriental fruit moth larvae inside the fruit.
– Yarrow’s flat white flower platforms beyond the canopy edge pull hoverflies and lacewings that dismantle aphid colonies before they establish.
The gaps between plants aren’t lazy design — they’re the most important feature in the entire guild.

My AI Experience – Nick

My AI Experience - Nick

Nick Howarth posted on Facebook:

My experience with AI is this:
1. Never take advice from AI
2. Always cross check the data
3. Use it to create structured work based on your own information, and even then check that it didn’t insert some kind of idiocy

(Tom: This matches my experience.)