bounty
A week before Memorial Day -- so, a bit over two weeks ago -- I bought some seedlings and put them into pots.
Tonight, I changed dinner plans because holy smokes some of that needed to be harvested. I made a vegetarian larb for the first time, because one of the over-achievers was Thai basil, which I got for the first time this year to see how that would go. Didn't expect it to outpace my regular Italian basil!
The Thai basil has filled out quite a bit even though that's only a 6" pot. (I know, it should be bigger -- ran out of bigger ones. It came in one of those 3" cups.) Next to it is rosemary that's doing ok; don't know why it's leaning in like that, but eh, whatever. (That's in an 8" pot.) Behind the two of those is an 8" pot of Greek oregano that I've already harvested a bit from (for one meal a few days ago). Finally, bought on a whim and in a 6" pot, is English thyme. The thyme has been kind of slumped over all along; I'm using the little plastic ID card to prop it up some. The seedling didn't cost much more than a single bundle of fresh thyme at the grocery store, an amount I'm planning to use this week, so I figure anything else I get from it is profit.

Last year I planted cilantro but it didn't do well; it got tall and spindly and didn't produce a lot of good-quality shoots. The Internet says it wants a deep pot; it has more of a root system than I thought. So I tried again this year and put it in a 10" pot. It was just a little thing in the center of the pot two weeks ago. Now, not so much:

(That was before tonight's harvest.)
Rounding out the herbs are sage, Italian basil, and sweet mint. (You can't see it in the picture, but the mint is raised a bit so it can drain. That's my only non-self-watering pot, but mint can handle less-good conditions.)

Cherry tomatoes did well last year, and we seem to be off to a good start this year:

I grew mini-peppers two years ago (disappointing yield) and banana peppers last year (good, but I like them more than Dani does). This year I got another large pot and a regular (not mini) sweet red pepper. I'll be curious to see how many I get. The plant seems happy so far:

I wanted chives but there were none to be had. The tags on the strawberry plants claimed they were good for containers. That surprised me, so I consulted the Internet and found the claim that they don't actually need much depth and a pot would be fine, so I figured ok, let's experiment and see how much fruit it produces.

I don't know what that one tendril is about.
I'm not planning to post frequent pictures like I did the first year I tried this. That was a learning year and I was chronicling progress. I expect the week-to-week deltas to be comparable. I'll probably post when I get my first harvests of the fruits and vegetables.

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I don't seem to have whatever it takes to start from seed successfully. "Whatever it takes" is probably a combination of skill, inside space with good sun, and persistence. I skip ahead to buying seedlings, which I'm much less bad at. I'm sorry to hear about your early basil attempts and especially your invader.
Thanks for the clue about the strawberry! I'm curious, so I might try that -- put a pot full of soil next to the runner and see what happens.
no subject
Although I put some pole-bean seeds in a planter-box in the back yard, ignored them for a few weeks, and now they're climbing up the trellis, a foot high.
I've gotten the best germination results by filling the bottom half of a clear-plastic egg carton with dirt, planting seeds in that, and watering it every day with a few spritzes from a plant mister in each compartment (this is gentle enough to not disturb the seedling once it starts trying to root). The top half of the egg carton acts as a greenhouse, keeping humidity in and predators out. (When I used a clear-plastic egg carton on which I had cut the top half off, so it sat loosely on top rather than hinging, Something got in and dug up the seedlings.) Then I transplant seedlings into a larger (e.g. 3" or 6") pot, and then Something digs them up. I could probably prevent the latter (and keep humidity in) by tenting a plastic bag over the whole pot, as I do when I'm going on vacation.
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no subject
Well, you've done it successfully in the past -- so it's not that you don't have what it takes, but that you're now playing on a higher difficulty setting. :-)
Thanks for the tip about the plastic egg carton and its greenhouse effect -- not something I would have guessed!