What did you do in the garden today?

Bobcat. We have them around, just never seen one in broad daylight in the open like that. That is a very healthy one too. Probably about 45 pounds.
Here kitty, Kitty, KITTY! :eek:

@chickmom3941 One of the reasons I don't plant much squash is the vine borers. I'm interested to see how well your transplants do. I'd always heard they didn't do well as starts/transplants unless they were very small, which wouldn't help me much with our long season for borers. Please keep us posted!
so . . . Pickles and waffles are going in the kitchen. And it's July, so gotta do pickles to get the produce used up! I need something different to do with cucumbers.

Water well and transplant in the evening so they have the night time to recover. Try not to disturb the roots. Offer a little shade if you can for a few days. Should do nicely. :old

Pickles...sweet sour, bread and butter, Kosher dill, slab dill, regular dill, sweet gerkins, Senfgurken (made with the older yellow ones), chowchow, vinegar cold pickle.....the freeze some for the birds in winter...just cut lengthwise for winter or chop and freeze in a qt bag with water for early spring and hot summer treats.
Our two dogs are 13 and 9. Gracie has a huge in operable benign tumor on her neck and now another on her abdomen. She still is a bouncy Australian shepard and we are facing a grime future. Red, the Catahoula/lab is now recovering from a coyote attack when protecting a cow with a newborn calf. Had him in a wheelchair for a while, but now he is getting around nicely without it.
Picked 178 banana pepper yesterday (hubby counted them) and made 22 pints of salad peppers..finished at 10 pm.
Put some juvies outside in pens and something got one of the Cochin cockerels..got inside the pen, must have flushed one out under the screen, tried to pull it thru the 2x4 wire fence and since it couldn't just ate the baby in the pen. I didn't have the camera set. Thinking this is a skunk by the way the carcass looked.
Going to spend today with my younger sister....leaving shortly. Her scar tissue in her brain is acting up again after surgery in 2005...really depressed... balance is really off and she is using a walking stick even in her small garden. Taking her produce she cant grow in her tiny backyard. She can't drive now, so I'm taking her to lunch and to do a little shopping. Still running tests.

Life can suck when you get over 65, but you just keep plugging along and make the best of it. A garden keeps you healthy and rejuvenates your spirit each spring....will garden til I die
:th
 
Most pickles are easy. At least as easy as tomatoes. They were the first thing I ever canned. I've been making them on my own since I was about 20. So yes, a long time. Cucumbers always make more than we can eat or give away fresh. And pickles, relish, chow-cow let us enjoy them anytime! We do love our relishes in the South.
Chow-cow? I assume that's a southern treat?
 
I am hoping to make some pumpkin pies with them. I have never done it before.
I hope I can. lol

As for your plants and transplanting them, try adding some 20-20-20 to them when you do plant them. It helps keep them from going into shock so bad and will help them bounce back. I use it faithfully.
Thanks for your suggestion! That's what I'm hoping - that if they do go into shock, with some TLC they will spring back. I love pumpkins & squash, not only for eating, but for fall displays, as well. I'm also growing some Indian corn to add to fall decorations.
 
@chickmom3941 Lmao :lau I meant chow-chow. Yes, a spicy savory southern pickle/pepper/onion plus whatever relish. Good on red beans, and mostly anything else. I'll be watching for your transplant updates.
@NanaKat Great idea about freezing for treats! Thanks. :thumbsup Sorry to hear about your sister. My younger brother passed just over a year ago from brain cancer. He fought harder and longer than I could have myself. He was only 54. His son hadn't graduated from high school yet, his daughter in her sophomore year on a full college softball scholarship. His wife has Wilson's disease and is fully disabled. I guess he felt he needed to get more done before he could rest. It was all I could do to hold it together and support him in his battle. He loved fishing and we had the best talks of our lives together while holding poles. Then I'd go home to my garden and cry, get myself together. Gardening heals me and centers me. I understand. :hugs

Today in the garden I watered very early and deeply, harvested mostly cukes and beans. Several more cantaloupes have set. :celebrate

Still focused on the coop/run and got the foundation, floor, two walls, and the door done so far. Metal roof panels are here. Used up all my screws yesterday. Off to Lowes with the trailer today to get more, and another load of lumber. I can only find room to store so much lumber under cover, thus the multiple trips. Between the heat and HE's sciatica (still having trouble with it), it's been slow going. I'll be cutting and wiring HC onto the cyclone fence dog run forever! Got one 7foot long side done so far, after re-assembling the whole thing, which was a pita. I'm not complaining! It was free in return for taking it apart and hauling it home!:clapIt'll be great when it's done. I'm putting a 6-7 ft pole in the center to hold the bird netting up from the 4ft tall sides. I should be able to get in there to do what I need to. I hope to add a more rigid and permanent way to cover it by next summer. Thinking maybe bending some aluminum conduit/tubing to shape supports for added height and span for a shade cover and net for raptor protection. WIP.
 
Here kitty, Kitty, KITTY! :eek:



Water well and transplant in the evening so they have the night time to recover. Try not to disturb the roots. Offer a little shade if you can for a few days. Should do nicely. :old

Pickles...sweet sour, bread and butter, Kosher dill, slab dill, regular dill, sweet gerkins, Senfgurken (made with the older yellow ones), chowchow, vinegar cold pickle.....the freeze some for the birds in winter...just cut lengthwise for winter or chop and freeze in a qt bag with water for early spring and hot summer treats.
Our two dogs are 13 and 9. Gracie has a huge in operable benign tumor on her neck and now another on her abdomen. She still is a bouncy Australian shepard and we are facing a grime future. Red, the Catahoula/lab is now recovering from a coyote attack when protecting a cow with a newborn calf. Had him in a wheelchair for a while, but now he is getting around nicely without it.
Picked 178 banana pepper yesterday (hubby counted them) and made 22 pints of salad peppers..finished at 10 pm.
Put some juvies outside in pens and something got one of the Cochin cockerels..got inside the pen, must have flushed one out under the screen, tried to pull it thru the 2x4 wire fence and since it couldn't just ate the baby in the pen. I didn't have the camera set. Thinking this is a skunk by the way the carcass looked.
Going to spend today with my younger sister....leaving shortly. Her scar tissue in her brain is acting up again after surgery in 2005...really depressed... balance is really off and she is using a walking stick even in her small garden. Taking her produce she cant grow in her tiny backyard. She can't drive now, so I'm taking her to lunch and to do a little shopping. Still running tests.

Life can suck when you get over 65, but you just keep plugging along and make the best of it. A garden keeps you healthy and rejuvenates your spirit each spring....will garden til I die
:th
Thanks for your advice about the pumpkins - should be able to follow most of it, but there's no shade to be found where we'll be transplanting them. Will have to keep them well-watered and hope for the best.
Wow, so sorry to hear about your sister, your two dogs, and the chick. Life can be so sad at times. I know what you mean about gardening - it's great therapy!
 
Thanks for your suggestion! That's what I'm hoping - that if they do go into shock, with some TLC they will spring back. I love pumpkins & squash, not only for eating, but for fall displays, as well. I'm also growing some Indian corn to add to fall decorations.
In TN there was a pumpkin field where when they harvested they left a lot out there. We used to fill up the truck and cart them home for the animals. I only eat the seeds, but i chop the pumpkins up for the goats and the chickens love the guts, that slimy stringy stuff. Pumpkin is a natural dewormer. Planted my pumpkin seeds in peat pots. Hope they do ok.
 
Gardening might not actually be any cheaper than a therapist, but it's got to be cheaper than a therapist, a gym membership, a tanning salon, and a trip to the farmers market added together.
We spent a lot on the garden this year, seeds, plants, fencing, posts, boards, but the fencing and raised bed boxes will be used for a long time. And it really is good therapy.
The kittens were escaping the bathroom so i had to stack up more boxes. Now i have a hard time getting in and out. Broke a toe once trying to step over a puppy gate. What a klutz. I told my parents i needed ballet lessons!
 
@chickmom3941 Lmao :lau I meant chow-chow. Yes, a spicy savory southern pickle/pepper/onion plus whatever relish. Good on red beans, and mostly anything else. I'll be watching for your transplant updates.
@NanaKat Great idea about freezing for treats! Thanks. :thumbsup Sorry to hear about your sister. My younger brother passed just over a year ago from brain cancer. He fought harder and longer than I could have myself. He was only 54. His son hadn't graduated from high school yet, his daughter in her sophomore year on a full college softball scholarship. His wife has Wilson's disease and is fully disabled. I guess he felt he needed to get more done before he could rest. It was all I could do to hold it together and support him in his battle. He loved fishing and we had the best talks of our lives together while holding poles. Then I'd go home to my garden and cry, get myself together. Gardening heals me and centers me. I understand. :hugs

Today in the garden I watered very early and deeply, harvested mostly cukes and beans. Several more cantaloupes have set. :celebrate

Still focused on the coop/run and got the foundation, floor, two walls, and the door done so far. Metal roof panels are here. Used up all my screws yesterday. Off to Lowes with the trailer today to get more, and another load of lumber. I can only find room to store so much lumber under cover, thus the multiple trips. Between the heat and HE's sciatica (still having trouble with it), it's been slow going. I'll be cutting and wiring HC onto the cyclone fence dog run forever! Got one 7foot long side done so far, after re-assembling the whole thing, which was a pita. I'm not complaining! It was free in return for taking it apart and hauling it home!:clapIt'll be great when it's done. I'm putting a 6-7 ft pole in the center to hold the bird netting up from the 4ft tall sides. I should be able to get in there to do what I need to. I hope to add a more rigid and permanent way to cover it by next summer. Thinking maybe bending some aluminum conduit/tubing to shape supports for added height and span for a shade cover and net for raptor protection. WIP.
So sad to lose loved ones. I dream of my Aunt and Dad a lot. Aunt had Alzheimer's for ten years, and Dad had heart surgery for triple bypass, heart valve replacement and aortic aneurysm repair all at once. We were trying to get moved to Florida to help my folks but he died a week after surgery, the same day we got our moving truck. I will always regret not being there to say goodbye to him. He was calling my name.
You might consider pvc for the frame for the top of your run. That is what i was considering. Or even 2x2 and plywood. I have the same issue.
 
3" in 2 hours. It washed out my pig pens. Cut trenches through the land. We have a lake in my pasture.
I will never recover from the damage to the last of the garden. See ya next year!
I checked on my egg pen after the storm last night. Yelled for hubby again!
IMG_20170720_205138.jpg

All the rain, rodents and snakes are bumming me out.
My container garden got slapped hard too.
Mother Nature is in a bad mood and it is rubbing off on me.
Oh well, don't sweat the small stuff right?
:barnie:th
 

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