Secondly a big thanks to all the people who put in a hard
days work every working day, and often don’t get paid enough to make a decent
living. And for the slick con artists
who design their elaborate gimmicky swindles inside their vaunted houses of finance,
contribute absolutely zero to a functioning society and screwing over those who
do, well I hope you get what you truly deserve.
Seems like one of your number is actually running for president this
year.
Another
good week with a selection of summer fare.
I pulled up the two rows of Provider beans that were looking worse for
the wear, then pulled off any beans worth keeping. That’s the easiest way to harvest bush beans
but it has a certain finality. The Diva
cucumber continues to produce and there’s even a Picolino in this picking, as
well as a Black Krim tomato. The lone
Diva plant has produced almost 20 lbs of cucumbers so far this year.
The two Red Burgundy okra plants are really producing well now. I’ve got to make some refrigerator pickled okra, maybe mixed with hot peppers, soon. The more recent Diva cucumbers are looking a bit rough. The plant is fighting some kind of disease and the fruit shows it. After peeling the skins they taste fine although some look bad enough to get relegated to the compost bin.
The tomatoes have been producing slowly but steadily. With the heat wave it’s been a down year for
tomatoes – only 12 lbs so far this year from two plants. Last year I had picked over 31 lbs by the end
of August. Then again last year I picked
one cucumber before losing the plants to bacterial wilt so I guess that evens
things out.
For the week:
Cucumber 4 lb 5 oz, okra 14 oz, snap beans 2 lb 12 oz, summer squash 1
lb, tomatoes 2 lb 15 oz; total 10.5 lb.
For the year 128.8 lb. Update
spreadsheet is in the 2012 tab.
I made salsa this weekend and forgot to post it. So it’s been posted today, just below
(before) this post. Cheers!
3 comments:
That okra is beautiful.
That's a lovely harvest, love those red okra!
Someone else I know is growing the Diva cucumbers and is having good success with them too. Have you grown this variety before?
So happy for you that you got a soaking rain to break your dry spell in a proper manner.
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