Wednesday
(June 24), we left the old truck at an upholstery place on the highway to have
the driver’s seat reupholstered. From there we drove on to the farm, arriving
by 9:30. The temp in the shade was 72, but it warmed right
up, as we expect in the summer. It is overcast, though, due to the “weak system”
passing through.
In
town, this “experienced” north Idaho gal finally took the heavy electric
blanket off the bed with the hope that she wasn’t acting too hastily. The forecast is for another week of cool weather.
In
conversation the other night, brother Chuck questioned at what stage the canola
blooms, and so, here’s how it looks today. It blooms while it’s still young – the
stalks are 2-3 feet now – and then it grows to seven feet or so. It IS rather
spectacular when it’s in bloom but does not provide the effects we see as the
amber waves of grain reflect the sun. We will miss that this year.
I
pulled the spinach from the raised beds and cooked it. I guess it was about
four cups – not much considering the effort and the space it took up in the garden. It does
taste good when it’s garden-grown, but that's about all I can say. The strawberries – very few – are exceptionally
small, and I don’t know what to do about it. I’m really not a gardener.
4 comments:
Yay nature! What great photos!
I don't think success is a measure of the "gardener" title. If you like growing things, I say you're a gardener. I like gardening, but I wouldn't want to admit my failure rate. Sometimes it just takes time to figure out what a particular plant likes.
Mama Robin is still sitting on her nest.
Well, I do think there are many variables in gardening. Water and fertilizer are important, but sometimes the weather just isn't right.
Yay for the "experienced" Idaho gal. :-) Love that proud mama bird all fluffed out over her eggs.
We were tossing back our heavy bedspread, but with this cooler weather, we're pulling it up again and snuggling under. At least there's no lightning tonight!
The mama robin still sits on her eggs. We were just discussing that this cooler weather must be hard on her. She leaves the nest periodically to take care of her needs, and while she's gone, the eggs undoubtedly cool.
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