Best laid plans......
I have learned SOOOO much this year about basic gardening.
The 'Mt. Rotmore' garden is growing and producing like crazy.
I have 2 pattypan squash plants and I can't give them away fast enough. We're eating them daily... stuffed, fried with potatoes & onions, hidden in sauce with porkchops..... Lessons learned:
1. They grow UP into a large bush, not vineing along the ground. Very good around the bottom of something that does grow UP, like corn or maybe trellised something.
2. They PRODUCE so 1 plant is more than enough for me - 2 supplies everyone I know - 3 will overrun the county.
I planted 3 spaghetti squash. Harvested the first one yesterday but not SURE it was really ready so will have a verdict after cooking it.
Lessons learned:
1. They vine like MAD. Up the fence, down the fence, across the yard, heading for the pasture... some of them probably pushing 20'.
2. They produce A LOT
3. They take a LONG time to ripen
4. They will ripen 15 giant squashes all at once so have a plan for giving away or freezing
Tomatoes.... I planted 4 varieties... I have no idea who is who in "THE JUNGLE".
Lessons learned:
1. They do NOT stay small so when the little voice in your head says that the tiny little tomato seedling looks lonely in the middle of that big space.. beat the little voice into submission and cage that little seedling!!!
2. Label them with something bigger and tougher than they are. I will probably never find the little plastic labels I carefully placed in front of each pie wedge shaped section of tomato varieties. Doesn't matter anyway this year, I'll be picking whatever I can manage to spot and reach ...
3. Don't plant cucumbers near them.... It is not possible to pick things in a 4'wide mass of vines. :/
Cucumbers... I have 3 varieties.
Lessons learned:
1. One word... TRELLIS!!!!!!! Mine managed to go up the tomatoes and then over to the nearby fence. I now have a tunnel that is about 3' high. I can only pick cucumbers while on my hands and knees. BUT, I have a nice shady place to hide. 
There are 8 corn plants. I haven't harvested any yet so I can't say how the corn production is going other than that there are nice, big ears on the stalks.
Lessons learned:
1. They are (so far) the one thing that I've tried that is not happy in a compost garden. The soil is too soft and loamy to hold them up and they go over every time we get a little wind. On the other hand, the soil is so soft and loamy that I can stand them right back up without damaging the stalks or roots.
Already making plans for next year.

This is my yard. The white lines are the current garden and chicken run. The yellow lines are the future gardens and chicken run. There is already a mini-Rotmore where the middle garden will be.
Will the seeds that I got this Spring still be good next year? There are a LOT of things that I never got around to planting. They are just in a box in the kitchen.
http://www.theeasygarden.com/forum/uploads/8721_sadie_lane_tobe.jpg