With my hospitalization last week, I lost some time in the gardens. I am just now catching up, albeit slowly. Warren tended to things while I was unavailable, watering some, weeding more. I spent most of this week regaining lost ground, but yesterday morning I finally took a few tentative steps, literally and figuratively, into our back and looked at the kitchen garden. This morning, I did even more, visiting the Hej garden, doing some weeding in the behind-the-house flower bed, watering all of the gardens.
I am slow; it is wonderful.
In the Hej garden, the potatoes are flourishing. Several zucchini are making their presence known, as are a few cucumbers. The three red cabbages are just starting to think about forming heads. (Sorry, no photos; it was early and I had no pocket for a phone when I was out watering.)
Earlier this week, while I was still housebound for all practical purposes, Warren appeared in the front hallway and beckoned to me with his finger. "Come look."
Tomatoes!
Then, maybe that day, maybe the next, while I was sitting out on the back deck, he called over to me: "You have peppers!"
Peppers!
Ohio, like many states around us, is predicted to be under a strong heat dome over the next few days, starting today and extending into the week. High heat, oppressive heat. No breaks. The lettuce beds have flourished this year, the best they have been ever, but even if they were shaded (and they are not), they are likely goners. The lettuces hate the heat. So this morning I went out and cut a lot of leaves to get a precious salad or two. I told my dear neighbor Mary to do the same, and she grabbed some for her household too. We talked on the back deck a little bit later and I told her to pick more if (a big "if") the beds hold up. I doubt they will, but at least our two homes will enjoy some salad before the heat wipes it out.
I even managed to grab what are probably the last of the green onions and bring them in for cooking and salads. Not bad for basically giveaway prices!
For the next several days, assuming the forecast is even close to accurate, my gardening will be pretty much limited to early morning watering. I do not do well in heat even when I am in good shape, and I have no illusions about what kind of shape I am in right now. The gardens will do their thing and grow, especially the peppers, which thrive in hotter weather.
Life will roll on, despite the heat.
And so will we.
6 comments:
Glad you're back home. The garden looks absolutely wonderful. Take care. Chris
I am so happy 😊 that you are back home 🏡 April. Your garden is thriving ✨️ So lovely to see.
I have little lettuce leaves so not sure if they'll survive but not enough really to pick for a salad. I'm so new to any type of gardening. I'm glad your getting some real steps in and hope you keep recovering.
Thank you, Chris. It's been an interesting time (again). Thinking of you and what you and yours are living through. Hugs.
Thank you, dear Linda! As I sat outside earlier this morning with my neighbor, I pointed to the blooming milkweed: "Bees!" And lots of 'em. You would enjoy watching them.
Sam, I've grown lettuce (just hand-sowing the seeds, and, trust me, I do not sow precisely) for several years and this year's crop is the best. Apparently too good to be true if the heat dome hits as hard as they are saying. I know you folks up there in MN are facing it too: stay cool.
Post a Comment