Monday, August 11, 2025

The Good Wins



Hello, friends.  I hope you've been doing well.  My freezer was at it's limit for bags of veggie scraps.  I was thankful the weather turned to cooler, rainy days for a bit.  The first day, I canned veggie broth.  I'd used the last of our lentils, so canned some of these the second day.  It's so convenient having beans/legumes ready to heat and eat.   I dehydrated the leaves and inner bits of celery, which I grind into a powder, and add to the chicken mash, and also dehydrated bread ends for bread crumbs.  Figs were preserved by dehydrating and canning.  In the garden, I harvested cucumbers, tomatoes, peppers, carrots and eggplant.  Elderberries were harvested and dried.


cranefly orchid


As is often the case in life, there has been good and bad recently.  I'll get the bad out of the way first: 


- the kale patch I had made from volunteer plants was mowed.  In fairness, the stretch of mid-90's didn't do them any favors, and they were quite spindly at the time.

-despite planting 40 tomato plants, and replacing several of them early on as needed, there doesn't appear to be enough to can this year.  Plenty of rain has caused some rot and wilt, the leaf-footed bugs pierce them for their juice, which makes a soft spot, then rot.  I'm still finding worms and worm holes... mostly army worms, but the occasional small hornworm too.  

- the deer chomped the top out of my lone surviving roselle hibiscus.

- it's been the most meager harvest I can remember for August.  Some days, there is nothing to harvest.

-out of the five lettuce varieties I started, only one variety germinated, and no parsley did.



Now for the good: 


-we've picked up locally grown peaches, which were wonderful.

- it's been a great fig year.

- I've been able to freeze strips of sweet peppers, which was a goal this year.

- now that J is semi-retired, he's helping some with household tasks, such as laundry and food preserving, which is a blessing.

- J had placed some potatoes in the truck tool box planter in the spring, as back up plants, and harvested those this weekend.  We enjoyed them, along with tromboncino squash, and sweet peppers, which he grilled.

-chanterelle mushrooms have continued to show up.

-it appears we'll have a good winter squash harvest.

- I saved a monarch butterfly from a spider's web.  Looking out the window, I saw it struggling.  I don't usually interfere with nature, but it had only been caught on the tip of one wing.  I knew it would get further entangled, as it struggled to fly.  I figured monarchs could use some help these days.  It made me smile to see it fly up and over the house.  

- while filling the bird feeder, I noticed a new to me flowering plant close by, and found out it's a cranefly orchid.  It's not as showy as many orchids, but I love seeing another native plant on this land, and only yards from the house. 

- I've enjoyed watching the pollinators flock to the Joe Pye weed, golden alexander, and winged sumac.


anole lizard on Joe Pye weed


So, definitely more good than bad.  It was helpful to think about the good and bad, and realize the many things to be grateful for.  This is the first time we've canned whole figs.  I'm not sure how we'll use them, other than to try them in the fig bread I make.  I counted 22 jars of various homemade jams on the shelf, and was determined to get that number down, before canning any more.  If you can whole figs, I'd love to know how you use them.  We expect they'd be good on oatmeal, but that's the main way we plan to use the dehydrated ones, cooked with oatmeal, and we'll try them on salads.  I hope your "good" column outweighs the bad this week.  



8 comments:

April said...

Laurie, I love your wins, especially the peaches (yum!) and the new native orchid discovery. I wish you were just down the street: even under less than ideal (way too crowded) conditions, I have a lot of tomatoes and would gladly share!

Andrea said...

I'm glad the good won out! I've been giving away figs and I have froze some for future smoothies. I did make fig bread last year and it was good. They are so good fresh, that it is hard to think of what to do with them otherwise. I've been eating them each day and I'm almost tired of them, yet I will miss them when they are finished. Canning is a great idea! andrea

Staci said...

Such a wonderful reminder to look for (and appreciate) the good despite the bad that inevitably happens. That is wonderful that J can help out more around the house. A blessing for you both. Our tomatoes are slower this year at growth and ripening but I have hope they will turn out ok in the end. Happy you will have a nice amount of winter squash. I always struggle with it because we are inundated with squash bugs. Wishing you a wonderful week!

Laurie said...

How wonderful to think of you as a neighbor!

Laurie said...

We're eating them fresh, and I'm chopping them up for the dogs and chickens too! I'm going to see if neighbors would like any next.

Laurie said...

I hope your tomatoes will do well. I've squished a good amount of squash bugs, but only on certain plants. It's a bit of a jungle in that part of the garden, but it looks like there are quite a few squash, of different varieties. One looked huge.

daisy g said...

Ah, yes. We have to take the bad with the good in all things, gardening included. I, like you, seldom interfere with nature's process, but I would have done the same with the Monarch. They need all the help they can get.
Sounds like you still have lots of goodies to look forward to. This constant rain this week will no doubt be a great provider to those crops.
Congrats to J on his semi-retirement. Continued blessings to you both.

Laurie said...

I appreciate your support on the Monarch. Yes, plenty of rain!