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Tuesday, June 24, 2025

Dealing With the Heat

78°f /25.5°C and humid at 7:30am, 92°f/33°C now with heat index of 101° and expected to get hotter this afternoon. No chance of rain.

We were out early again this morning, getting done what we can before it gets unbearable. I have finished my stringtrimming work for now, thank goodness, but haven't been in the vegetable garden in the last 2 days, so that will be tomorrow morning's work. So far everything looks okay, although I did have some watering to do for the pots and planters. I added a little liquid fish and seaweed fertilizer to the water to give them a little boost.

The rest of the morning, once I showered and rested a bit, was inside work. I did some organizing in our work/storage room, hung out some laundry, and started a pot of broccoli- cheese soup, which is simmering as I write. I used broccoli stems and leaves from the broccoli I harvested (and we ate) the other day, plus a couple packs of broccoli frozen last year that need to be used. This afternoon I plan to make black raspberry jam, and put the last coat of wax on the desk I have been working on. And maybe do a few easy listings. 

A little note here on the plastic bag dryer I use. I don't know if any of you reuse plastic bags, but this card displayed works great for me.


I am adjusting to this new staying-inside routine, but i do get restless. I want to be outside! But if course that's impossible in this heat. I did finish another book, an older title by Judith Guest called Errands. It follows the lives of a family before and after the father's death from cancer. I must say, it was a bit of a downer, yet at the same time hopeful. I don't know if the author has ever experienced what she was writing, but she certainly has a deep understanding of grief, and of how and person progresses through a cancer diagnosis. She was spot on, at least in my own observations of friends with cancer, and my own journey through deep grief. Now i am starting a book by one of my favorite authors,  Alice Hoffman, titled Here on Earth. I hope it is as good as others I have read by her 

A couple of you suggested hiring a lawn service to mow for us. Larry mows between an acre and 2 acres, it's just the way our place is laid out, and it's not easy.  I have no clue what lawn services cost, but I am sure it would be quite costly. I am thinking about it though, and about how we will manage as we get older. To pay for such a service would probably strap us very tightly financially,  if we could afford it at all. I really don't want to tie down my one son who lives closest to us either. But I do not want to move either. So trying to think this through

How are you managing the heat where you are? Iris, I know you are not warm at all! Right now I am kinda jealous of those of you with more moderate weather. It used to be that we might get a few days of extreme heat in mid-July, but never in June. 

I remember when I was a child in northern Virginia,  the local radio station would have a contest to guess the day and I think the time  when the temperature reached 100°. It happened almost every year, usually in July. Manassas had very humid, sticky summers, as I recall, even worse than here, and similar to that of Washington,  DC, which was only 25 miles away. We had no air- conditioning back then, almost nobody did. Mom would close up the living room and pull the curtains so that at least that room would stay somewhat cool. 

The rest of the house though, would really heat up. We children played outside under a big shady maple, or in the sheltered and shade side yard. Sometimes we were allowed to turn on the hose and run through the cold, cold water, or fill a galvanized metal tub to play in. What bliss. We would make Kool-Aid popsicles in ice trays, using sticks saved year to year. Dinner was often just sandwiches or something very simple, because who wanted to cook in that heat?

When I moved here, we had no electricity for about 15 years, so no fans or AC to cool off. We didn't have these big shade trees either, so the house would really heat up. Fortunately these hills cool down nicely at night usually, so sleep wasn't difficult, and mornings were not too bad. Even when we got electricity, we didn't get an air conditioner until 2003, when my parents were coming for a (very) rare visit.

Today we have 3 window units--a big one in the kitchen that cools the main part of the house, a small one in the log room, and another small one back in the work/storage room. Often these are all turned off at night, and we will open the bedroom window. Maybe it was all thosevyears of our lives without AC, but we both enjoy the night air, and the quiet music of summer nights.


Copyright Susanna Holstein. All rights reserved. No Republication or Redistribution Allowed without attribution to Susanna Holstein.

Monday, June 23, 2025

Morning


This morning starts quietly enough. 

My eyes open, feet hit the floor. Make the bed, into the kitchen to put on the kettle, step outside to see what the day is like. 

At 7 am it is already it is 76°f, and the humidity smacks me in the face. Sweat begins to bead on my forehead. 

Clyde, enjoying the cool concrete before it heats up.

I go back inside, turn off the kettle, go back to the bedroom to get dressed---socks, jeans, shoes, no dress or shorts right now---because I need to get the stringtrimming done before the heat surges.

45 minutes later and out of batteries, I am back on the porch, stripping off sweat-soaked clothes. I head for the shower. Ah, what bliss! 

Now it is 12:30 and the temperature is already 92°. A high of 96 is expected, with a heat index  of 101°. I will spend the rest of this day inside. I have cabbages to prepare for the freezer, that desk to finish painting, ebay to list. Dinner is already planned: ham, fresh broccoli, leftover mac and cheese from yesterday, a salad.

Given the forecast, this will probably be pretty much the model for the week: out early to do what we can,  then inside. Even the evenings stay too hot to get anything done.

Larry's morning was a little more exciting than mine. He was out even earlier than me to cut the cabbages (in this heat they would scorch on top, so even though they could have got bigger, we would have lost a good bit to sun damage). Then he got on the mower.

He is struggling with this mower. It is bigger and heavier than what he has had in the past, and the controls are different. And it needs chains on the tires. Our place is steep and no mower does well here without chains. Of course, there are none to be had anywhere apparently.  Derek tried to find some for us at 4 stores in different areas he drove through Saturday, and no one had any. So he ordered some online.

Meanwhile, Larry wants to mow what he can. It hasn't been easy. This morning there was dew on the grass and as he mowed one rather steep area, he rolled the mower, right over himself. God knows how, but he came out of it unscathed except for knowing he'll be sore later. I did not see it happen, probably would have had a heart attack. Had he had chains on the mower, he might not have had this happen, but I am not sure about that. He's going to have to do a serious re-think of how and where he mows with this mower.

Meantime, he has gone into town to buy an oil change for the mower because of course most of the oil dumped out when it rolled. Other than that the mower seems to be okay. 

This isn't the first time he's rolled one---once he cut his hand pretty badly. But dear Lord I do hope it's the last!

Here's hoping your morning has been a little less stressful!



Copyright Susanna Holstein. All rights reserved. No Republication or Redistribution Allowed without attribution to Susanna Holstein.

Sunday, June 22, 2025

In the Gardens

71°f/about 22°C, clear, humid. Supposed to reach 94 today, with a heat index of 108. 

A busy bee in the garden

This will be a good day to stay indoors.  As a matter of fact,  this whole week looks to be a stay-inside week, with temperatures in the high 90s predicted. Not fun. So we will be out early and maybe again late in the day until the weather improves.

Yesterday was nice, not too hot to be out most of the day. Larry and George put together the rose arbor I got for Mothers Day from George, and put it in place. I am going to love it. 

It's really level, just my picture taking is caddywhompus.

I did some weeding and picked things for a salad.  The other evening I planted more lettuce as this batch will soon get bitter in the heat, and also planted rhubarb chard, late squash and cucumbers. We got our first tomatoes,  little red and yellow cherry ones, which went into the salad.
Also got a second picking of broccoli, which is forming sprouts from the sides now. With care, these plants might produce all summer. 


This is Red Sails lettuce, my favorite.


In the afternoon George took me to town and bought a smart TV for my birthday! (He is such a good son---well, they all are, truly. I am a lucky woman.) We spent a good while trying to get it set up and have mostly accomplished that, just a few more odds and ends to sort out. Derek came over after helping his daughter move, and we all went out to dinner. Nice! Today the two guys are golfing, and Larry and I got outside early to do some stringtrimming before it got too hot. 



I stuck some sedum in an old meat grinder. I will have to keep it watered daily.




I have been pulling up handfuls of the Mexican primroses and yarrow, now that both are past their prime.





 These petuwas 3.00 for a large pot because they had no bloom on them and looked sad. Large planters and good dirt soon brought them out of it.


I have never grown this kind of begonia before, but I am in love with them! The iron rod is to keep the dogs from knocking over the planter, which they did as soon as I put it there. The rod works! No more overturned pots, thank goodness.




.I picked the blooms off basil and sage, then added a few coreopsis to make a fragrant house bouquet.


I continue my news boycott, but did hear through my son about the bombings last night. So, here we go again. It was justva matter of time before the Idiot-in-Chief used his power to push that button. He just couldn't wait, could he? We shall soon see what the repercussions will be.

Meantime, get out in your gardens, walk in the woods, read a good book or whatever will give you peace. It becomes even more important to hold on to that as our world,  and particularly our country, spins out of control. Hugs, friends, til tomorrow 

Copyright Susanna Holstein. All rights reserved. No Republication or Redistribution Allowed without attribution to Susanna Holstein.
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