Major sticker shock in the grocery store yesterday.

It shouldn't have been because I've been in for bread and milk and whatever is far enough on sale so I've seen the increases. But we've been eating from the garden mostly. And bulk staples from the Amish store. The prices just haven't registered completely. This time we stocked up the college bound kid. I'm glad he mostly cooks for himself rather than opening boxes and cans. This is the 15th straight year we have had at least one kid in college full time. One year there were six of us in college. And one kid might benefit from the college loan giveaway

. We filled them up with food periodically and usually gave them gas money to cover visits home but didn't give them much other help. Four graduated without debt, one paid off his debt within six months, one might still have some debt four years after graduating. It can still be done via keeping costs down and jobs.
A bit of silver lining to the sticker shock in the grocery store is it made processing the fruits and vegetables more satisfying. We thought we lost both zucchini plants to squash bugs and squash borers and we have but we've also gotten "one last" zucchini about eight times. We nursed them along with surgery, picking the bugs and egg cases off, burying the secondary roots, and watering. We ate about half and I dehydrated the other half.
Most of the rest of the vegetables did well.
I found another apple tree in the pasture! Whoo hoo! I picked what I could reach off five of nine trees I know about. And picked up most of the windfalls under the two that tasted better this year - different trees than tasted best last year. I'm about 80% sure the bear is eating them too. I know what deer scat looks like; that was not deer scat.
Anyway, I don't think I got a single salable apple but I'm don't care. I didn't give them any input other than pruning and I grew up eating the unsalable fruit and vegetables. Just cut out the bugs and bruises and deer/bear bites; the rest is just as good as the pretty ones. I got three or four grocery bags full. Half are dried or applesauce. Half the scraps went to the chickens and half are soaking in jars for apple scrap vinegar for cleaning. Later, I will save out some less buggy/bitten scraps for apple scrap vinegar for cooking.
I'm pleased the apples are twice as big as last year. It might be because it is a bumper year for apples but I think it is mostly because I seriously pruned the trees last spring... I cut back half of the trees by a third, the other half by less than that but still quite a bit. I still have at least one that hasn't started to ripen.
The wild grapes look good but aren't quite ripe. Maybe I will prune some of them too next spring.
I can probably still get a few more pickings of blueberries too. I may have to go north a ways to find a u pick still open.
The Baby Golds should be ready soon.