Showing posts with label farm. garden. Show all posts
Showing posts with label farm. garden. Show all posts

Sunday, July 19, 2020

Making a Garden



After no garden last year, I am getting a great deal of pleasure from this year's effort


Yes, the blight will eventually come for the tomatoes, the cows may get out and trample the corn, the deer may rediscover us . . .



But for one brief shining moment, things are looking good.



Thursday, June 7, 2018

Garden Catch Up



After last week's rains, the weeds were flourishing. The corn was big enough to remove its protective netting and John set in to hoeing while I thinned it.


He also ran a second string to hold up the tomatoes and then I unched along on my derriere, suckering and weeding around each plant. They're looking good at the moment, some even have little green tomatoes on them!

In the upper box beds, the lettuce is thriving. So far, the covers are keeping the pests out.  


The uncovered beds have summer squash and cucumbers and various herbs, none of which have been bothered by deer or rabbits in the past. The only damage I saw was that something had eaten the tops off a few sunflower seedlings. 

Next to weed the asparagus, hoe around the kale, collards, sweet potatoes, peppers, and beans in the lower box beds. Then the potatoes and pumpkins . . .

I'm trying hard to get all caught up in the garden before leaving for John C. Campbell this coming Sunday. Today's the day as I'll be keeping Josie on Friday and Saturday.

Fortunately, the weather is just about perfect -- clear and breezy and cool enough to need a blanket along with a light quilt at night. Days like this, anything seems possible.


Sunday, October 5, 2014

Freeze Warning!



There's a freeze warning for Sunday morning so I head for the garden to pick the last of the green peppers.  

 Good bye to the nasturtiums that have been so prolific . . .

 And goodbye to the green pepper plants that I weeded and propped up only a few days ago. It's earlier than usual for frost warnings -- mid-October being the usual time.

Still, this could mean a comeback for the kale and collards that had suffered a bad bug infestation. They may continue to grow, bug free. Plus, they're generally reckoned to taste sweeter after a frost.


John has tilled the garden tiers and sowed crimson clover seed  . . .

I almost fill a bucket with peppers and a few last eggplants and bring them to the house.


Cory gives the harvest her careful attention.



Monday, August 6, 2012