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#1
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Garden pickings
Wife picked a fairly large bucket of sweet peppers this morning and we
found some hot ones in the crowd. She found the culprit and pulled it as we can't anything that hot. Also got a smaller bucket of Japanese eggplant, lavender ones this time. All the stuff pulled went to the church pantry as both freezers are completely full and there is no more room in the refrigerator. I may go ahead and pickle a bunch of peppers as I have always liked those and we only have one jar left in the pantry. Got a small hit of rain yesterday afternoon but it certainly hit the spot, this morning every plant was "perky." As was the !@#$% grass, that stuff grows two inches if someone spits on it. Sisters-in-law went home to Maryland yesterday, it's a lot quieter around here. Eldest granddaughter is well and truly married as of Monday and off on their honeymoon. The whole wedding shebang was lengthy, a dinner with both families and extended families at that, then two days later a huge, orchestrated wedding, which I did not attend as I had had a sugar low before the dinner and wasn't over it yet. Had to drive to the restaurant in a blowing, huge, rainfall, doing at times less than 5 mph and at other times had to pull over to the roadside. Made me nervous as a cat in rat trap factory. I'm slowly getting over it. I've had so few sugar lows in recent years I had forgotten what was happening. Dear wife gave me several paper bags of sugar off the dining table and I tossed them down and flushed a glass of water afterward. I'm still feeling tired and have been doing a lot of naps, of which the dog loves. It's rather nice to just have the three of us in the house again but we do love the sisters as both are very good older women than they were teens. G George |
#2
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Garden pickings
George Shirley wrote:
Wife picked a fairly large bucket of sweet peppers this morning and we found some hot ones in the crowd. She found the culprit and pulled it as we can't anything that hot. Also got a smaller bucket of Japanese eggplant, lavender ones this time. All the stuff pulled went to the church pantry as both freezers are completely full and there is no more room in the refrigerator. I may go ahead and pickle a bunch of peppers as I have always liked those and we only have one jar left in the pantry. Got a small hit of rain yesterday afternoon but it certainly hit the spot, this morning every plant was "perky." As was the !@#$% grass, that stuff grows two inches if someone spits on it. Sisters-in-law went home to Maryland yesterday, it's a lot quieter around here. Eldest granddaughter is well and truly married as of Monday and off on their honeymoon. The whole wedding shebang was lengthy, a dinner with both families and extended families at that, then two days later a huge, orchestrated wedding, which I did not attend as I had had a sugar low before the dinner and wasn't over it yet. Had to drive to the restaurant in a blowing, huge, rainfall, doing at times less than 5 mph and at other times had to pull over to the roadside. Made me nervous as a cat in rat trap factory. I'm slowly getting over it. I've had so few sugar lows in recent years I had forgotten what was happening. Dear wife gave me several paper bags of sugar off the dining table and I tossed them down and flushed a glass of water afterward. I'm still feeling tired and have been doing a lot of naps, of which the dog loves. It's rather nice to just have the three of us in the house again but we do love the sisters as both are very good older women than they were teens. G our house is so tiny it would be a challenge to have more than one or two visit for more than a day or two. glad you've recovered and are enjoying the naps. i did a bit of that yesterday. heat and humidity again, but after today we're getting back to more reasonable temperatures. even forecasting one night this coming week into the 40s. i'm ready for some cooler weather for sure. feel like i'm hardly getting anything done here. good luck with the fall plantings! we'll be finishing up what we can get done here and hoping for a nice long fall before the frosts set in. songbird |
#3
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Garden pickings
On 9/9/2016 7:23 PM, Derald wrote:
George Shirley wrote: Wife picked a fairly large bucket of sweet peppers this morning and we found some hot ones in the crowd. She found the culprit and pulled it as we can't anything that hot. Also got a smaller bucket of Japanese eggplant, lavender ones this time. All the stuff pulled went to the church pantry as both freezers are completely full and there is no more room in the refrigerator. I may go ahead and pickle a bunch of peppers as I have always liked those and we only have one jar left in the pantry. I'm still getting purplehull peas, okra, jalapeño and bell peppers. Hermine upset one of the okra beds a bit and knocked down a few small pine limbs but did nothing consequential here. Left us cooler and drier for a few days but we're getting back to warm humid normality at flank speed. Nights are cooling somewhat while days remain warm, a typical autumn weather pattern that usually prevails until around Hallowe'en and some years lasts 'til around Christmas. Some years, though, we do get a "October Surprise". I've optimistically planted more Provider green beans because most years the weather stays warm long enough to get a decent crop. Also, optimistically planted "Little Marvel" little green garden peas this morning. We're in the planting window but daytime temps are still a bit high. I can (and do) plant several flight of peas between September and March so as to have a continuous supply until April or May. Gotta few heat-tolerant greens up and growing among some tomatoes but am delaying the sure-enough "cool season" veggies until we have a longer stretch of cool weather. The English peas should be up within a couple of days and I figure that when they're three or four inches tall I can put some mustard greens under them. I, too, have enough japs to be considering pickling a few pints (hot peppers in vinegar are called "pepper sauce" down here) using my BIL's most excellent recipe. We're in Northern Harris Cty, TX, USDA Zone 8b, used to live in Louisiana, zone 10B, that used to be 9B. It's 88F outside at sunset and will be in the mid to high seventies when I get up tomorrow. Last year had no winter for us, temps never got below 60F if I remember correctly. The Gypsy pepper plant we planted in early spring of 2015 is still producing and the avocado seeds dear wife planted two years ago are about four feet tall now. We grow green beans and peas every two to three years as there are only two of us here and we can enough in one season to hold us that long. Gives us a chance to try new things in the garden, some have been okay and a lot more have been duds completely. A few of our black crowders dropped some seed and now the fall garden is being covered by massive pea vines, some have set fruit and I spotted about six, six to seven inch pods in there. May get a second crop this year. The lavender Jap eggplant have gone crazy, picked eight more today, most six to seven inches long and about 1.5 inches in diameter. I may have to make a new batch of eggplant fritters. We're having some tomorrow with dinner that we put up in 2014, another eggplant massive season. Our climate is just right for some things. The Tennousi pears are now pear honey and pear sauce. We saved enough to make a large pear pie, my spousal unit is the pie queen in the family, known in three states and four countries for her lemon meringue pies. I may have to put in a lemon tree to go with the rest, probably would have to take down the garden shed to get the room though. I used make real pepper sauce, fermented kind, doctors finally told me to stop that and get off the stuff as that was what was eating my stomach lining. What the folks in Florida call pepper sauce is pickled peppers down here and I just put up a batch of sweet peppers for future eating. About time to start thinking of what to grow this winter/spring, if the pepper plants continue on another year we won't need any of those. Won't be long until we're picking kumquats so I have to think of what to make with that crop. Someone mentioned kumquat wine but I might do something else, already have a good bit of kumquat marmalade so may just put them up ground up for kumquat pies and cakes. So much time to make as much as we can, it's a disease. George George |
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