We’ve been pulling watermelon after watermelon out of the melon patch. They are finally ripe this time! The first one we picked sounded perfect, but when we cracked it open it was still only pale pink. It was still very sweet, which is something I like about this variety. These melons are perfect – one…
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Nature Finds: Bugs
Something about the air yesterday had just a hint of fall. The peach and black cherry leaves are turning beautiful colors already and the autumn flowers have buds. It is still very hot and humid, but there was just a little breath of change underneath it all. We found lots of good bugs…
Welcoming August
July was rough. I am so glad for August to be here, just for a chance for improvement. It’s not going to get any cooler weather-wise for at least another two or three months, but it has been dry. Thinking back through July, it was a month of desperately trying to get too much done…
Persian Feast
With all four baby boy goats now in the freezer and lots of eggplant, cucumber and pumpkin from the garden, my mom hosted a Persian feast with a bunch of friends from Iran. This was the Mokhalafat – the accompaniments to the main dishes with fresh chopped vegetables from the garden, lacto-fermented pickles, homemade goat…
In the Garden: Butterflies and a Melon
We got ONE casaba melon – just one, but oh my goodness, it is huge! It’s a cantaloupe-type melon, but the size of a watermelon. The plants set so many fruits and they were all tragically destroyed by the awful melon borer moths. I hate those things! They migrate through and can be avoided, but…
Visiting Maw Maw
Ethan’s grandmother recently had a bad fall and broke both her ankle and leg – one on each side. She was not doing very well, but is better now that she is out of the hospital and at home. We managed to finally go down for a short visit. We were all happy to see…
Nature Finds: Life on a Sow Thistle
There are about a dozen blooming sow thistles right near the milking shed, and every day I have seen so much life on and around them. There are at least twenty of these little butterflies at any given time. For some reason the name Horace’s Dusky Wing comes to mind, but that could be…
Frying Pan Crayon Painting
When I was a kid my mom would get out a hot plate and let us put pieces of paper on it to draw with crayons. The heat melted the crayons as you drew, so it was almost like painting with wax. I remember really enjoying drawing this way, almost like wet-on-wet watercolor in which…
In the Garden: Tassels
The corn is not only tasseling, but little ear tufts are out, too! These seem to have appeared overnight. I was even watching for them carefully this year. (you can get a little glimpse of the incredible jungle of squash vines in the background there). We got the first watermelon, too! I grew the…
Nature Finds: Toad-in-the-hole
For years now I had thought that all the little holes we saw every where were from mice, but we recently discovered that they are actually toad holes. That must be how they stay cool and hydrated during the hot day. One evening when we were out finishing the chores around dusk, one little toad…
High Water Mark
There’s been so much rain lately, the pig’s wallow is twice the usual size. You can see the high-water mark on Bee. The wallow is pretty deep. The pastures are growing back so well right now with all the rain, but it makes it hard to get the chores done and not be sopping wet…