Thanks, guys! catbirds, that potato field might last us a winter, maybe leas than that. We always cultivated potatoes back in Russia for winter and such a field was about enough for a family.
Róisín, I think those are thistles, though I’m not that great at knowing the names of the plants. They have spikes by the edge of the leaf and also on the trunk. They bloom with purple flowers (but we usually don’t let them bloom, because if they do we lose the game :'D they’ll give seeds and cover everything else around, what wasn’t covered yet).
Also, thanks for the tips about the deer! People do hunt them on the property where the field is, so the animals there are rather shy, more shy than in the town (yeah, we have deer on the main streets sometimes). And we have a fence, for now it works.
Huh, that is very interesting, I know about the Hexagrnia hatch, we also enjoy trout and salmon fishing here in MI, however I don’t know which time of year exactly they come up. In Russian they are called “falling ones”, since when they hatch they fly up and fall down, fly up and fall down, as their mating dance.