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Old 22-06-2010, 02:57 AM posted to rec.gardens
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Default Solstice

So we are met again at the long and the short of it. Here's wishing you
in the global south a fecund year in which your labor is amply rewarded,
and may your trials be few. I hope your hours of winter planning will
adorn many a dinner table with many colors, smells and tastes. In a few
scant weeks, some of you will begin the germination of this years crops.

Rebirth for you, and the harvesting of what we've sown for us.

Good luck.

"The most noteworthy thing about gardeners is that they are always
optimistic, always enterprising, and never satisfied. They always look
forward to doing something better than they have ever done before."
- Vita Sackville-West
--
- Billy
"Fascism should more properly be called corporatism because it is the
merger of state and corporate power." - Benito Mussolini.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Arn3lF5XSUg
http://radwisdom.com/essays/this-is-your-brain/
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Old 23-06-2010, 02:59 AM posted to rec.gardens
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Default Solstice

On Jun 21, 6:57*pm, Billy wrote:
So we are met again at the long and the short of it. Here's wishing you
in the global south a fecund year in which your labor is amply rewarded,
and may your trials be few. I hope your hours of winter planning will
adorn many a dinner table with many colors, smells and tastes. In a few
scant weeks, some of you will begin the germination of this years crops.

Rebirth for you, and the harvesting of what we've sown for us.

Good luck.

I always dread the summer Solstice because it means that the days will
be getting shorter.
I HATE the early dark; I fold up like a flower when the sun goes
down. The ideal would
be to go to the other side of the world for half the year. But no...

Crop-wise, I lost a full month when I was out of the country in early
Spring, when I would
normally be putting in crops. After too much travel and a lot of
fatigue, I finally got
my act together, but everything will be late this year. Fortunately
we have a long growing
season. If all goes well, there will be lots of corn and cucumbers,
and maybe those
young watermelon and cantaloupe plants will produce fruit.

I picked the first yellow wax beans yesterday. MOST productive plants
I have ever hard.
They roared up out of the seeds and began producing like demons. Last
year, almost zip.
Go figure.

Dwarf orange is -- sssssshhhh - I don't want the jealous gods to hear
-- finally producing!
This is the first of at least 3 previous tries which went nowhere. So
I'm hoping that those
lovely little green spheres will get bigger and bigger and bigger,
till about January, there
will be orange FRUIT!


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