My walking onions are all sprouting. Thanks @Sally PB !
I pulled a baker's dozen of garlic heads out of the shop and will start separating them tomorrow to get the biggest cloves for planting. I'm thinking 80 should be enough.
Spent some time yesterday and today cleaning up onions and shallots for storage. Trimmed off the tops and roots and rubbed off loose skins.
They're in the shop now until they're all gone and I think I'll have enough to keep me going until next year. Not a bad return on 7 bucks worth of seeds.
Picked around 5 pounds of tomatoes plus some habaneros and jalapenos. Put 12 pounds of ripe tomatoes and the peppers in the freezer for making salsa sometime down the road.
Plants are wilting in the garden but I don't care much. I've been too busy painting the house to give the garden much of my energy. And it's supposed to rain the next four days so I won't have to water.
They mark each piece with spay paint here. Lilac, purplish? Not sure what color it is. And it's all piled together on a couple of carts in the middle of one of the lumber aisles.
I love that idea. I might just puree whole tomatoes next time I make salsa. I bet the seeds are full of good nutrients. I like processing the onions and peppers to a fine chop too, making the salsa more spoonable.
I'm done with ladders for a while. My legs are tired and sore, but I did get most of the trim painted on the front of the house, so curb appeal is back. LOL. The rest of the house, who cares about that trim. No one can see it but me. LOL
Here's my stash of HomeDepot cull lumber. Quality evidently depends on who's sorting it out. Most of what I get has minor splits or dings. I only buy warped or twisted pieces if there's enough usable for a specific project I have in mind. I buy wide boards intending to rip them into 2x4 widths.
I just keep them piled up in the box, inside on the kitchen counter. They don't need any light to ripen. They create ethylene gas that speeds up ripening, and the box sort of traps the gas. Works for me.
When I was a little kid cracking black walnuts with a hammer and picking out the meats with a nail was a winter day project for me and my grandpa. Sit in the cellar and crack walnuts with maybe a sweet potato or two cooking on top of the wood burning stove. Good memory.
The walnuts eventually...
You are very welcome!
I did a little more brush painting around some electrical stuff I masked off before I used the spray painter. Had to remove some screws to pull a few things away. I'll put them back in place when the paint dries. Now it's just going to be a little painting at a time, here...