There used to be a time when I thought that bolting vegetables and aphids in my garden were a bad thing, over the years however I have found that in fact having these so-called problems can often do much more good than it can harm!
By simply letting go of the idea that my garden needed to look perfect all the time, I was able to step back and let my garden and nature do what it does best; work together.




I let the carrots, lettuce and arugula that wanted to bolt do so, and they soon produced a beautiful abundance of flowers throughout my vegetable garden. Those flowers then attracted an assortment of beneficial insects, and I soon had a garden that was bustling with even more life than before!
Instead of trying to also get rid of every single aphid I found (if it didn’t seem to be doing any major harm to the plant) I decided to leave them be. After a few days of leaving the aphids to do their thing, something quite beautiful began to happen… the infected areas of aphids began to attract ladybugs. Within a few days the insects that had been attracted to the aphids had completely cleared them from the infected plant!
By letting the aphids stay on the plant, I was allowing the other beneficial insects in my garden to find them, and the aphids then became a food source for those insects and ladybugs as well as a perfect place for the ladybugs to lay their eggs.


This had been the first time that I had let go of the idea that these insects had no place in my garden. For years I had always thought they were so detrimental to a veggie garden. When I gave up control to mother nature, she gave me an “I’ve got this” response back! It was one of the most beautiful things to witness in one’s own garden, and I realized then that maybe having the most perfect garden wasn’t always a good thing and could in fact be less beneficial than an imperfect one!
So the next time you see a few vegetables starting to bolt that you would normally pull out or those tiny little aphid pests on the stalks of a plant that you might spray off with water or dose with some manor of spray, maybe pause for a moment and wait to see what mother nature might be able to take care of for you first!
Till next time,
H

























