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Cake day: October 4th, 2023

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  • I know some farmers who have done this - basically they used a mesh bag when the petals fell off, and allowed the seeds to dry on the plant. (This is also how most commercial seed production happens, too.) I’m not sure what varieties are good for eating. But the general consensus among friends was that it was “more trouble than it’s worth.” Keep in mind, this is coming from tired end-of-season farmers :)





  • I’ve definitely noticed. When I was a kid in the South, lovebug season was a whole thing. I got drafted to wash the car constantly. Last time I was down there during lovebug season driving around, I didn’t see a single one. No splats, no scraping bugs out of the grill, nothing. No fireflies either. It is depressing. I’m a city girl now, but I still keep a densely planted organic flower garden. Even with huge patches of native flowers, I see very few pollinators, and it really bums me out. But I do often see bees sleeping in my flowers, so there’s that.



  • No, everyone in this thread is correct about foliage, bloom structure, petal count, etc. I never know how much info to give with plant ID corrections without coming off as an arrogant plant nerd, lol. But as a former flower farmer and florist - and knowing you like the info! - yes, those are pansies. They are not violas (although all pansies descend from violas) because they are orange; violas only appear in blue, white, purple, and yellow. Additionally, pansies have been bred for bicolor and streaky appearance which these seem to have. You will notice pansy/viola foliage is compact, low, with oblong leaves. They are prolific volunteers so look forward to more!



  • I am a flower freak, so I would just plant a ton of hellebores. That is what I’ve done with a very shady spot in my backyard, and now I have hundreds of blooms I can cut from and bring inside from January to April. They are never going to be super tall, but they are massive now! I also have hydrangeas (including oak leaf, which give pretty autumn foliage), astilbe, heuchera, sanguisorba, ferns, and rhododendrons in shade, as others have mentioned.


  • You may know this already, but mints, raspberries/blackberries, and lemon balm will completely take over a space over time. You are probably okay for this year since it’s a new planting, but I would highly recommend repotting it at the end of the season into a separate, contained pot. It can still hang out near your bed and provide some pest management! Just best to keep it separate so you’re not pulling it up constantly.