Don't eat so much broccoli and cut back on the dairy products.
Cut into florets then freeze on a try. After freezing place in a frezzer bag, back in freezer.
yes at the end
cauliflower and broccoli
you can eat all of a broccoli
By all means, mow them! Iit will not hurt them as the new 'berry plants' come from root runners under the ground or shoots as some people call them.
After they have flowered. Do not cut below green wood as they do not sprout from brown stems.,
Ferns are wild, I couldn't see why anyone would actually buy these. If you cut them back they still grow, you cant hurt these plants, so cut back whenever you want..oh use a pair od scissors, or a knife to cut these back..I just pull em out.
This is a hard question to answer since there are so many variables. To give you a guesstimate, I would say that you would definitely get back all the seeds that you had in the packet, if you let one of our primary broccoli heads go to seed and was careful about the shattering of the dry seed pods.
There are a LOT of different types of salvia. Some are perennial and some are annual. If yours is a perennial you should cut it back for the winter. Recommendations differ for different climates, but usually you can cut it back to 6-8 inches. Leave the stems a little taller in Prairie climates.
After flowering. Unless the plants have outgrown their space it is better not to prune them. You may lose the next years flower.
broccoli bamboo beans berries banana basil