My garden has gone insane. Lots of peas, more broccoli leaves than I know what to do with, and I should really pick the rest of the beets and see what the carrots are up to. Tomatoes are starting to fruit, finally, but none ripe yet (but yes, it is at least theoretically possible to direct-sow tomatoes in Chicago, apparently). Sage has gone insane, and basil and mint are not far behind. Squash leaves are everywhere, no matter how much I prune them. And I thought I could convince them to grow up a trellis, but they refuse to be contained. Something is growing up the other trellis, too; I think (and hope) it's the melons. Lots of flowers, but no fruit so far.
The 2 squash and 2 cucumber seedlings that I gave my neighbor have now taken over her entire bed and are encroaching into the bed on the other side of hers.
The peppers and eggplants didn't do much of anything, probably because they are too well-shaded by the tomatoes and squashes. Neither did the amaranth, which I probably won't bother trying to grow again. I finally ripped out the mixed salad greens, which were starting to bolt, and shared the abundance with a co-worker. The cauliflower and romanesco are showing signs of little tiny heads - I should probably thin those out, too. Can those leaves also be eaten like broccoli leaves?
The moral of the story: I probably should have planted less stuff, but hey, it's a learning experience and I'm not feeling very goal-oriented about it. I still have seeds for a later crop: cabbage, broccoli rabe, and kale, which I will plant if we ever manage to eat al this other stuff, maybe a row of broccoli rabe where I am about to pull out the beets, and start the cabbages where I already pulled out the salad greens?
But I wanted a big variety of stuff. Maybe next year, I will plant only partial packets of seeds, either split packets with someone or save some for later - how long can I keep them before they lose potency?