My first gardener left much too soon, but lucky for me Becki stayed over a week. We were eager to get some plants in the raised bed so the harvest would be quick. We planted lots of lettuce (I cannot fathom buying lettuce
plants but it sure is fun to have an instant garden!), radicchio, arugula, broccoli, Swiss chard, and Chinese cabbage.
Most herbs went in their own pots – peppermint all by itself so it doesn’t have a chance to take over; thyme, oregano and basil in a pot together; but chives and cilantro are in the raised bed.

Once the plants were in, we could seed to our hearts’ content. Mostly I used old seed – some from as far back as 2007 (Nuesslisalat) and many from the years since. I finished up the Fedco Chioggia and root grex beets, mokum carrots, and added to the salad section with buttercrunch, arugula (wonder how Ice-Bred will do in SoCal?) green deer tongue, lollo rosso, and petite rouge lettuces (several from Baker Creek). We need LOTS of greens, so added tatsoi, blues Chinese cabbage, spinach (again a cold weather variety) and Fordhook giant chard. Topped it off with Zefi Fino fennel, Afina cutting celery, and cilantro.


You have no idea how luxurious? Counterintuitive? Just plain backwards? It feels to be planting all of these things at the end of November! I was getting better at cold frame gardening in Boston. If things were at the right stage, I could harvest kale into December, and the dormant spinach would revive in April, so I was learning how to extend the season. But to be warm while planting the seeds and plants, to actually see them germinate, and to not worry about basil being nipped by the cold – these are truly wonders of the South. Granted, I am not yet

so secure in these cozy warm thoughts – the basil is in a pot that I will bring inside when the weather forecast threatens. Becki and I also made a raised bed in the back yard by putting hardware cloth on the ground, then mounding up our 1:1 mixture of compost and dirt. We then put the brussels sprouts and tuscan kale there, and a few arugula plants. At the end I made a home for the Heuchera 'Wendy' - coral bells.
I also splurged and bought a 6-pack of pansies! They are providing a splash of color to several corners and are super cheery.
I am thrilled to once again have a compost pile, since I got an Earth Machine at the county, and 4 wonderful bags of leaves from a nearby yard.

Becki and I kept digging tree holes. But before we tucked the Gold Nugget tangerine and the Moro blood orange in for the winter, we built cages to protect their delicious tender roots from the evil gophers. We chose a design basically consisting of an ‘L’-shaped piece of hardware cloth, so that the four sides and bottom are each about 10” x 10”. By cutting close to the intersections, we had long enough pieces of wire ends that we could pull them through the adjoining sections with needle-nosed pliers and twist, to form a sturdy box.
We managed to plant the above citrus in the previously planned spots without incident, then added the

Sweet pomegranate. However our tree-planting progress is at a standstill due to an as-yet unresolved conflict between the powers that be, one of whom prioritizes Fruit Trees and the other of whom does not wish to compromise his View. Soon the remaining trees will not doubt find a home, but for now they remain above ground.
I did transplant the Meyer lemon and Mexican lime into bigger pots; their home for now is as part of our patio border.
We planted the bigger Mexican fan palm, and one we moved from next to the driveway, up on the hill close to the Queen palms.
Little avocado grew from one we ate from Jean Hildebrand's tree, and I've just put it in soil.
I love the way you share how you have done things, pictures of your seed packets, their full names, even the little avocado plant with credit to Jean. She will enjoy seeing that some day! Instructions on your hardware cloth baskets, even. That is very thoughtful and educational! Such a great job...and funny, too! Proud of you, girl!
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