
Quotes From 1955

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 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

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.)
The Man Out of Time
Germinating Seeds

Harvesting Herbs For Growth

Elderberries vs Pokeweed

Perennial Vegetables

