I do not like July. It is my least favorite month of the year, and as far as I can see it's only redeeming features are the family birthdays this month, and the wildflowers all along the roadsides. The butterfly weed has been especially thick.
Daisies are one of my favorite flowers--so undemanding, so perfect.
My begonias were getting leggy in the heat, so I pruned them back a little, and enjoyed the clippings in a small windowsill bouquet.
We've about cleared up the clutter that we dragged home from the sale, too--it's almost more work to sort it all and figure out where to put it than it is to pack it up and haul out! We took several totes to the Goodwill, took a couple vanloads back to our booths and restocked there, and now there are just two pieces of furniture I bought at the sale and some random chairs to be put away. The house, as well as the gardens, is slowly returning to what passes for normal here.
This year the gardens are much slower coming along than last year. That's a blessing, really, with this heat. Last year by this time I was making pickles almost every day. We still have lots of pickles left, a good thing since the cukes are just now starting to produce. I put up a canner-load of beans and froze about the same amount, and Larry pulled the onions today and spread them out to dry. Tomorrow, I think he plans to dig the carrots. We need to replant a few areas but I'm not feeling too motivated. I just don't handle heat like I used to, that's a fact.
I am ready to get back to painting furniture now that the major pressures of performances and the flea market are over. I have a few storytelling things coming up in the next few weeks, but only one or two of them will require major study and planning. So I am feeling like I can relax a little, at least for a week or so. I got back to putting up ebay listings today;sales have been good even though I've neglected listing new items for a while. Time to get back into it--I'll need the dollars for my trip to England in August!
That's about all that's going on here--staying cool is at the top of the list each day, and we mostly manage it. I hope you're able to do the same!
Kitchen window at night |
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ReplyDeleteWe're in the same boat - hot and humid. Been over 90 most days. The deer flies and mosquitoes are driving the goats insane, despite all my efforts. My gardening is done in short, hurried spurts, early or late in the day.
ReplyDeleteI put up a little hanging basin for the wild birds, thinking they'd feel safer up high than on the ground, but after several days of filling it with fresh clean water every day, I have yet to see a single bird splash in it or even drink from it, though it's right between two feeders that they visit daily. I'm baffled!
Quinn, it's the humidity really that's so bad. It only reach over 90 yesterday (91) but with 80-90% humidity it's like being in a sauna! I can handle temps in the 80's as long as it's not humid. Today is better, rainy all morning and the humidity and temperature are dropping. Thank the saints. One thing for sure, the trees look as lush and green as I've ever seen them. And one silver lining--I've only had to water my container flowers once or twice. Small blessing!
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